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Curated catalog
Chocolate / Red rusty shrimp
Macrobrachium dayanum
The aggressive Himalayan prawn: robust body in chocolate/rust color with developed claws. Native to the Himalayan region and southern India. Opportunistic omnivore/carnivore: hunts sleeping fish, snails and smaller shrimp. Territorial and aggressive — males fight. Nocturnal. NOT suitable for peaceful community tanks. Many hiding spots mandatory for molts. Freshwater breeding with large eggs and fully formed offspring.
- Family
- Palaemonidae
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
20 °C - 30 °C
7 - 8.5
Freshwater
Predatore/scavenger — onnivoro opportunista notturno
High: copper toxic
Description
Geographical Origin & Biotope:
Endemic exclusively to the pristine, intensely cool, high-altitude mountain rivers and fast-flowing rocky streams of the Himalayan foothills across northern India and Nepal. Macrobrachium dayanum (universally known in the hobby as the Himalayan Chocolate Shrimp or Rusty Shrimp) natively colonizes the fiercely turbulent, highly oxygenated shallow rapids. These specific micro-habitats are completely characterized by extreme water currents, massive beds of smooth, water-worn river stones, and a substrate entirely devoid of fine silt or heavy aquatic vegetation.
Taxonomy & Morphology:
Scientifically classified within the Palaemonidae family, it is a spectacular, biologically robust, and highly active "long-arm" shrimp. Morphologically, fully mature adults reach a substantial maximum of roughly 6.0 to 8.0 centimeters (2.5-3.2 inches) in length, making them significantly larger than any standard dwarf shrimp. It possesses a deeply robust, heavily armored, slightly arched body structure. Its absolute defining, evolutionary signature anatomical features are its exceptionally long, heavily built front arms (chelipeds) ending in functional, distinct pincers.
Social Behavior:
Unlike communal dwarf shrimp, Macrobrachium dayanum are highly intelligent, boldly active, and intensely territorial benthic invertebrates. They possess a strict hierarchical social structure and can be aggressive toward conspecifics (their own kind) if insufficient space is provided. In the aquarium, they possess a fascinating, highly dominant, and deliberate foraging lifestyle. They spend their day aggressively patrolling the substrate, confidently moving massive pieces of gravel with their strong arms, actively hunting small prey and aggressively defending their chosen rocky cave.
Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:
Sexual dimorphism is absolute and unmistakable when fully mature; mature males are significantly larger, possess vastly longer, massively overgrown, and heavily armored front arms (chelipeds), and possess a narrower abdomen compared to the females. The coloration of the Himalayan Chocolate Shrimp is striking, entirely natural, and designed for rocky camouflage. The entire body is deeply saturated with a highly opaque, glowing reddish-brown, copper, or deep "chocolate" hue. The shell is frequently accented by stark, distinct reddish or rusty-orange horizontal bands.
Care and observations
Tank Setup:
The aquarium architecture MUST flawlessly accommodate their large size, aggressive territoriality, and high-current riverine nature. A minimum 80-liter (20-gallon) tank is absolutely mandatory for a small group (1 male, 2-3 females). The absolute most critical requirement is overwhelming rocky hardscape: massive piles of smooth river stones and specifically, numerous distinct PVC pipes or slate caves to provide individual territories and prevent lethal fighting during molting. A powerful powerhead or oversized canister filter is unconditionally mandatory to simulate high-velocity river currents.
Diet & Feeding:
Unlike standard dwarf shrimp, Macrobrachium dayanum are highly active, aggressive omnivores and opportunistic macro-predators. In the aquarium, their diet MUST be heavily protein-based. While they will scavenge decaying plant matter, they strictly MUST be fed a high-quality meaty diet to prevent aggression. Daily offerings of sinking carnivorous pellets, frozen bloodworms, live blackworms, chopped earthworms, and specifically, raw shrimp or fish meat are unconditionally mandatory. They possess large claws and will actively hunt and consume any slow or weak tankmates.
Water Quality:
Originating from pristine, high-altitude Himalayan rivers, they are incredibly robust but possess specific, uncompromising temperature requirements. They strictly demand highly oxygenated, intensely COOL water (18-24°C / 64-75°F); prolonged exposure to temperatures above 26°C will cause severe stress and drastically shorten their lifespan. They absolutely require moderately hard, heavily mineralized water (GH 8-15) and a neutral to alkaline pH (7.2 - 8.2) to maintain their massive, thick exoskeletons. Rigorous weekly water changes (30-40%) are unconditionally mandatory.
Compatibility & Tankmates:
Compatibility is strictly limited by their large size, formidable pincers, and highly aggressive, predatory nature. They are the perfect centerpiece for a dedicated, high-flow river biotope. They MUST NEVER be housed with standard dwarf shrimp (Neocaridina), small peaceful bottom-dwellers (Corydoras), or slow-moving fish (Bettas), as the Macrobrachium will violently hunt, dismember, and consume them at night. They can only be housed with fast-moving, robust, upper-water-column river fish (like large Danios or Hillstream Loaches) that can evade their grasping claws.
Aquarium Breeding:
Breeding is highly prolific and surprisingly straightforward in a dedicated, cool-water aquarium. Unlike many large shrimp, they are direct developers; they do NOT have a marine larval stage. Triggered by clean, highly oxygenated water and abundant meaty food, mature females will carry roughly 30-60 large, dark brown eggs under their abdomen for roughly 4-6 weeks. When they hatch, the babies emerge as fully formed, miniature replicas of the adults. The carnivorous babies are aggressively cannibalistic; massive amounts of rock rubble are absolutely mandatory for the babies to hide.
Risks & Diseases:
The absolute greatest physical risk is rapid, lethal toxicity; they possess absolute zero tolerance for Copper, heavy metals, or chemical medications (especially fish Ich treatments). The second major risk is lethal conspecific aggression (cannibalism); keeping too many males in a small tank without hundreds of distinct rocky hiding spaces will inevitably result in violent deaths, especially during the vulnerable molting phase. Finally, maintaining them in standard tropical heat (above 26°C) will rapidly induce physiological collapse.
Invertebrate profile
- Type
- Freshwater shrimp
- Diet
- Onnivoro/carnivoro: pellet, chironomus, artemia, lombrichi, pezzi di pesce, lumache, cibo vivo
- Ecological role
- Predatore/scavenger — onnivoro opportunista notturno
- Minimum group
- 1
- Adult size
- 5 cm
- GH
- 6 dGH - 18 dGH
- KH
- 3 dKH - 15 dKH
- TDS
- n/a
- Copper
- High: copper toxic
- Shock sensitivity
- Moderata
- Calcium and minerals
- Acqua moderatamente dura. Corallo tritato o osso di seppia
- Molting
- Molto vulnerabile durante la muta. Rifugi essenziali. Calcio per esoscheletro
- Reproduction
- In acqua dolce. Uova grandi, piccoli nascono già formati. Vasca separata per i piccoli — gli adulti sono cannibali.
- Compatibility
- Aggressivo. Vasca monospecifica o con pesci veloci di mezzo-acqua. Caccia lumache, gamberetti nani, pesci di fondo lenti.
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Exact licensed live observation photo selected from iNaturalist for Macrobrachium dayanum.
Exact licensed live observation photo selected from iNaturalist for Macrobrachium dayanum.
Exact licensed live observation photo selected from iNaturalist for Macrobrachium dayanum.