Generated via Deepmind Antigravity AI
Curated catalog
Red swamp crayfish
Procambarus clarkii
The most famous (and controversial) crayfish in the world: bright red robust body with powerful claws — the Louisiana 'mudbug'. Extremely hardy and adaptable. BUT: aggressive, destructive (uproots plants, attacks fish), escape artist, and HIGHLY INVASIVE if released in the wild. Species-only tank MANDATORY. Illegal to own in many regions (EU included). Very easy and prolific breeding. NEVER release in the wild.
- Family
- Cambaridae
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
20 °C - 27 °C
7 - 8
Freshwater
Onnivoro/detritivoro — scavenger aggressivo
High: copper toxic
Description
Geographical Origin & Biotope:
Endemic to the warm, slow-moving freshwater rivers, marshes, swamps, and heavily vegetated floodplains of the southeastern United States (specifically the Gulf Coast and Mississippi River basin) and northern Mexico. Procambarus clarkii (universally known as the Red Swamp Crayfish or Louisiana Crawfish) natively colonizes shallow, intensely muddy environments. These specific micro-habitats are completely characterized by stagnant or extremely slow currents, massive beds of thick aquatic vegetation, and deeply submerged root systems where they dig extensive, complex burrow networks.
Taxonomy & Morphology:
Scientifically classified within the Cambaridae family, it is a spectacular, biologically indestructible, and massive freshwater crustacean. Morphologically, fully mature adults reach an imposing maximum of roughly 10.0 to 12.0 centimeters (4.0-4.7 inches) in body length, excluding their massive claws. It possesses a deeply robust, fiercely armored, cylindrical carapace. Its absolute defining, evolutionary signature anatomical features are its massively enlarged, extraordinarily powerful, spiky front claws (chelipeds) capable of crushing hard shells, tearing flesh, and inflicting painful pinches.
Social Behavior:
Unlike small, peaceful dwarf shrimp, Procambarus clarkii are highly intelligent, boldly active, fiercely territorial, and profoundly aggressive solitary predators. They possess zero tolerance for conspecifics (their own kind) and will ruthlessly fight to the death over territory if insufficient space is provided. In the aquarium, they possess a fascinating, highly destructive, and dominant lifestyle. They spend their day aggressively bulldozing the substrate, uprooting all live plants, digging massive pits, and actively stalking any fish foolish enough to sleep near the bottom.
Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:
Sexual dimorphism is absolute and unmistakable when fully mature; mature males possess vastly larger, massively overgrown, and heavily spined front claws (chelipeds), and possess specialized swimming legs (gonopods) for reproduction compared to females. The coloration of the wild-type Louisiana Crawfish is striking and formidable: the entire body is deeply saturated with a highly opaque, glowing dark red, crimson, or brownish-red hue. The massive claws are frequently covered in sharp, stark red or bright orange tubercles (spikes).
Care and observations
Tank Setup:
The aquarium architecture MUST flawlessly accommodate their massive size, immense physical strength, and profoundly destructive nature. A minimum 120-liter (30-gallon) tank is absolutely mandatory for a single adult. The absolute most critical requirement is overwhelming rocky hardscape and heavy-duty caves: massive, heavy PVC pipes, secured slate caves, or large terracotta pots are unconditionally required to provide a dark, secure fortress. ALL live plants will be instantly uprooted, shredded, and eaten; only heavy, inert rocks and massive driftwood should be used. A tightly secured lid is mandatory; they are notorious escape artists.
Diet & Feeding:
Procambarus clarkii are highly active, aggressive omnivores, opportunistic macro-predators, and voracious eaters. In the aquarium, their diet MUST be heavily protein-based and calcium-rich. They will indiscriminately consume absolutely anything edible. They strictly MUST be fed a high-quality meaty diet. Daily offerings of sinking large carnivorous pellets, frozen bloodworms, chopped earthworms, raw shrimp meat, and blanched vegetables (peas, carrots) are unconditionally mandatory. They possess massive claws and will actively hunt, dismember, and consume any tankmates they can catch.
Water Quality:
Originating from warm southern swamps, they are virtually indestructible and possess extreme adaptability to varying water conditions. They thrive in standard tropical to subtropical heat (20-28°C / 68-82°F) and can even survive in unheated indoor tanks. Crucially, 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. They produce massive amounts of physical waste; an immensely powerful, oversized canister filter and rigorous weekly water changes (40%) are unconditionally mandatory.
Compatibility & Tankmates:
Compatibility is strictly limited by their massive size, formidably powerful crushing pincers, and highly aggressive, nocturnal predatory nature. They are the perfect centerpiece for a dedicated, solitary species tank. They MUST NEVER be housed with ANY bottom-dwelling fish (Corydoras, Plecos), slow-moving fish (Bettas, Angelfish), or other crustaceans, as the crayfish will violently hunt, dismember, and consume them while they sleep. They can only theoretically be housed with incredibly fast, robust, upper-water-column fish (like large Danios or tough Cichlids), but housing them alone is strongly recommended.
Aquarium Breeding:
Breeding is highly prolific but intensely dangerous for the adults. Triggered by warm water and abundant meaty food, the male will aggressively pin the female to mate. Shortly after, the female will carry 200-500 distinct, dark black eggs under her massive tail (swimmerets) for roughly 3-4 weeks. When they hatch, the babies emerge as fully formed, miniature replicas of the adults and will cling to the mother for a few days. The carnivorous babies are aggressively, viciously cannibalistic; massive amounts of distinct hiding spaces are absolutely mandatory, and the adults must be removed.
Risks & Diseases:
The absolute greatest physical risk is rapid, lethal toxicity; like all crustaceans, 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 two adults in a small tank without distinct, massive hiding spaces will inevitably result in a violent death, especially during the highly vulnerable molting phase. Finally, they are extraordinary escape artists; a heavy, perfectly sealed lid is unconditionally mandatory to prevent them from crawling out of the tank and drying out.
Invertebrate profile
- Type
- Freshwater crayfish
- Diet
- Onnivoro vorace: pellet, wafer, chironomus, krill, lombrichi, verdure, pesce — mangia tutto
- Ecological role
- Onnivoro/detritivoro — scavenger aggressivo
- Minimum group
- 1
- Adult size
- 12 cm
- GH
- 6 dGH - 8 dGH
- KH
- 4 dKH - 6 dKH
- TDS
- n/a
- Copper
- High: copper toxic
- Shock sensitivity
- Bassa. Estremamente adattabile
- Calcium and minerals
- Con calcio per esoscheletro robusto
- Molting
- Mute regolari. Vulnerabile durante la muta — rifugi. Acqua moderatamente dura per esoscheletro
- Reproduction
- Facilissima. Prolifica. Uova sotto l'addome. Adulti cannibali — separare i piccoli. MAI rilasciare in natura.
- Compatibility
- Vasca MONOSPECIFICA. Aggressivo con tutto. Distrugge piante. Attacca pesci e gamberetti.
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Aquarium/live image selected via Openverse. Matched to Procambarus clarkii.
Aquarium/live image selected via Openverse. Matched to Procambarus clarkii.