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InvertebrateFreshwaterIntermediate

Curated catalog

White Pearl / Snowball shrimp

Neocaridina cf. zhangjiajiensis "White Pearl"

The living snow of the aquarium: translucent white body with white eggs visible like snowballs — hence the name Snowball. Related but distinct species from N. davidi. Hardy and very easy like classic Neocaridina. Visible white eggs in females are the distinctive trait. Very fast breeding. Excellent for beginners and nano-tanks. Dark substrate for spectacular contrast.

Family
Atyidae
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

18 °C - 28 °C

pH

6.5 - 8

Water type

Freshwater

Ecological role

Algivoro/detritivoro

Copper

High: avoid copper

Description

Geographical Origin & Biotope:

The wild-type Neocaridina palmata is endemic to the fast-flowing, highly oxygenated mountain streams and sluggish river margins of southern China and northern Vietnam. The "White Pearl" or "Snowball" variety is a highly stabilized, extremely popular aquarium mutation selectively bred in Germany by Ulf Gottschalk. The wild ancestors colonize clearwater streams characterized by dense submerged aquatic vegetation, fine gravel substrates, and massive tangles of submerged roots where they continuously graze on algae and biofilm.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Atyidae family, it belongs to the phenomenally popular Neocaridina genus (the same genus as the famous Cherry Shrimp). Taxonomically, while often confused with N. davidi, the Snowball shrimp is a mutation of N. palmata. Morphologically, it possesses the classic, robust dwarf shrimp profile, reaching 2.5 to 3.0 centimeters. It features a rigid carapace, long sensory antennae, and tiny, bristle-equipped chelipeds (claws) designed exclusively for constantly sweeping and picking biofilm from surfaces.

Social Behavior:

They are entirely peaceful, utterly defenseless, and endlessly active invertebrate scavengers. They completely lack any aggressive capabilities and rely absolutely on the security of a large colony (minimum 10-15 individuals) and a heavily planted environment. In a predator-free tank, they are incredibly bold, spending 24 hours a day relentlessly exploring every surface—from the deepest substrate to the highest floating plant roots—furiously grazing on microscopic algae with highly synchronized claw movements.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is absolute upon maturity. Females are significantly larger, possess a vastly deeper, rounder underbelly (for carrying eggs), and are generally much bolder in color. Males are noticeably smaller, sleeker, and more torpedo-shaped. The coloration is the defining feature: the entire body is completely translucent, glowing with an icy, pearlescent white. The common name "Snowball" perfectly describes the female's unfertilized and fertilized eggs, which look exactly like a cluster of brilliant, opaque white snowballs.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture must provide absolute security and massive surface area for biofilm cultivation. A dedicated nano-tank (minimum 20-30 liters) is ideal. The substrate should be inert (like fine gravel or specialized shrimp sand); unlike Caridina species, they do NOT require active buffering soils that lower pH. The layout MUST feature extensive, dense thickets of moss (Java Moss, Christmas Moss) to protect newborn shrimplets, branching driftwood, and a continuous supply of dried Indian Almond leaves to generate essential feeding biofilm.

Diet & Feeding:

They are continuous, highly opportunistic omnivorous detritivores. They constantly sweep hard surfaces for microscopic bacteria, fungi, and soft green algae. In a mature, heavily planted tank, biofilm provides the vast majority of their diet. This MUST be supplemented 2-3 times a week with specialized, high-quality sinking shrimp pellets, algae wafers, and blanched organic vegetables (zucchini, spinach, nettle leaves). Providing calcium-rich mineral blocks is highly recommended to ensure successful, perfect molting.

Water Quality:

Originating from the robust Neocaridina genus, they are incredibly hardy, forgiving, and widely adaptable, making them the absolute perfect beginner shrimp. They thrive in standard room temperatures (18-25°C / 64-77°F) and do not require a heater; temperatures exceeding 28°C cause severe stress. They highly prefer slightly alkaline, hard water (pH 7.0 - 8.0, GH 6-12) as they require abundant calcium for their exoskeletons. They have absolute zero tolerance for ammonia, nitrites, and specifically, copper. Use a mature sponge filter.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

Compatibility is the single greatest challenge. Because they are tiny, defenseless, and represent the natural base of the food chain, they MUST ideally be kept in a strict, dedicated species-only setup to achieve massive colony growth. If housed with fish, virtually any fish with a mouth large enough (including Guppies and Betta fish) will hunt and eat them, entirely eradicating the newborn shrimplets. The only truly acceptable tankmates are ultra-peaceful herbivores (like Otocinclus) and harmless snails.

Aquarium Breeding:

Breeding is explosive and virtually unstoppable if water parameters are stable and predators are absent. They are direct developers (no planktonic larval stage). The female develops a distinct, brilliant white "saddle" of unfertilized eggs. Upon molting, she releases pheromones, causing males to dart frantically around the tank. Following fertilization, she carries 20-40 "snowball" eggs under her tail, vigorously fanning them for 3-4 weeks. The eggs hatch into perfectly formed, microscopic, icy-white replicas of the adults.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest physical risk is physiological collapse and failed molting (the "Ring of Death") caused by keeping them in extremely soft, acidic water completely lacking the calcium and minerals they require to rebuild their shells. The second major risk is lethal copper poisoning; even microscopic trace amounts of copper from old tap water pipes, plant fertilizers, or fish medications will exterminate the entire colony instantly.

Invertebrate profile

Type
Freshwater shrimp
Diet
Onnivoro pascolatore: alghe, biofilm, detrito. Pellet per gamberetti, verdure sbollentate
Ecological role
Algivoro/detritivoro
Minimum group
6
Adult size
2.5 cm
GH
6 dGH - 10 dGH
KH
2 dKH - 6 dKH
TDS
n/a
Copper
High: avoid copper
Shock sensitivity
Moderata
Calcium and minerals
Mineralizzazione stabile per mute corrette
Molting
Mute regolari
Reproduction
Facilissima e rapida. Sviluppo diretto. Uova bianche distintive. Non mescolare con N. davidi.
Compatibility
Pacifico. Nano-acquari. Non mescolare con N. davidi per purezza.

Image gallery

Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.

Representative live aquarium/natural image from Atyopsis moluccensis (same family Atyidae) because no reusable exact aquarium photo was found for Neocaridina cf. zhangjiajiensis "White Pearl".