Complete Shrimp Keeping Guide 2026: Cherry, Amano & Beyond
Freshwater shrimp have revolutionized the aquarium hobby, offering vibrant colors, fascinating behaviors, and valuable algae-eating services. From the beginner-friendly Cherry Shrimp to the specialized Crystal Red Shrimp, these invertebrates add movement, color, and ecological balance to planted tanks. This comprehensive 2026 guide covers everything from basic care to advanced breeding techniques.
2026 Update: Neocaridina (Cherry Shrimp) color variants have expanded exponentially with new “fancy” patterns fetching premium prices. Caridina shrimp breeding has become more accessible with stable commercial lines. Amano shrimp remain the gold standard for algae control, though availability fluctuates seasonally.
Why Keep Shrimp?
Benefits of Freshwater Shrimp
Ecological Advantages:
- Algae control: Constant grazing on biofilm and algae
- Detritus removal: Clean up uneaten food and organic waste
- Biofilm cultivation: Their presence indicates healthy ecosystem
- Plant health: Remove dead plant matter
- Water quality: Low bioload compared to fish
Aesthetic Appeal:
- Vibrant colors: Reds, blues, yellows, greens
- Active behavior: Constant movement and foraging
- Breeding interest: Watch colonies grow
- Size appropriate: Perfect for nano to large tanks
- Peaceful nature: Community-safe invertebrates
Educational Value:
- Life cycles: Observe complete reproductive process
- Molting: Fascinating process to witness
- Social behavior: Colony dynamics
- Sensitivity: Excellent indicator species for water quality
Popular Shrimp Species
1. Cherry Shrimp (Neocaridina davidi)
The Starter Shrimp: Hardy, colorful, prolific breeders
Color Variants (2026 Prices):
- Red Cherry: $3-5 (original, most common)
- Sakura/Fire Red: $4-6 (deeper red)
- Painted Fire Red: $5-8 (intense solid red)
- Bloody Mary: $6-10 (translucent red)
- Blue Dream/Velvet: $5-10 (vivid blue)
- Blue Jelly: $4-8 (lighter blue)
- Yellow/Golden Back: $4-8 (bright yellow)
- Orange: $4-8 (vibrant orange)
- Green Jade: $5-10 (emerald green)
- Black Rose: $5-10 (dark/black)
- Rili variants: $6-12 (colorful patterns)
- Fancy/Mixed: $8-15 (unique patterns)
Specifications:
- Size: 1-1.5 inches
- Temperature: 65-80°F (optimal 72-76°F)
- pH: 6.5-8.0 (optimal 7.0-7.5)
- Hardness: 3-15 dGH
- Lifespan: 1-2 years
- Difficulty: Beginner
- Breeding: Easy, live young
Best For: Beginners, community tanks, breeding projects, algae control
2. Amano Shrimp (Caridina multidentata)
The Algae Specialist: Legendary algae-eating ability
Specifications:
- Size: 2-2.5 inches
- Temperature: 65-78°F
- pH: 6.5-7.5
- Hardness: 5-15 dGH
- Lifespan: 2-3 years
- Difficulty: Beginner-Intermediate
- Breeding: Requires brackish water for larvae
Special Notes:
- Best algae eater: Hair algae, green spot, general cleanup
- Larger size: Less likely to be eaten by small fish
- Brackish breeding: Cannot breed in freshwater
- Availability: Seasonal, sometimes hard to find
- Price: $4-8 each
Best For: Planted tanks, algae issues, community tanks with peaceful fish
3. Crystal Red Shrimp (Caridina cantonensis)
The High-End Showpiece: Stunning red and white patterns
Color Grades:
- C: 20-40% white (lowest grade)
- B: 40-60% white
- A: 60-80% white
- S: 80-90% white
- SS: 90-95% white
- SSS: 95%+ white (highest grade)
Specifications:
- Size: 1-1.2 inches
- Temperature: 68-74°F (optimal 70-72°F)
- pH: 5.8-6.8 (optimal 6.0-6.5)
- Hardness: 2-6 dGH
- Lifespan: 1-2 years
- Difficulty: Intermediate-Advanced
- Breeding: Moderate (sensitive to parameters)
Price Range:
- C grade: $5-10
- B-A grade: $10-20
- S-SSS grade: $20-100+
Best For: Dedicated shrimp tanks, experienced keepers, specialized parameters
4. Crystal Black Shrimp (Caridina cantonensis)
The Yin to CRS Yang: Black and white contrast
Specifications: Same as Crystal Red Price: Similar to CRS, sometimes slightly lower Difficulty: Intermediate-Advanced
5. Tiger Shrimp (Caridina mariae)
The Striped Beauty: Bold tiger striping
Variants:
- Regular Tiger: Orange/brown stripes
- Super Tiger: Enhanced striping
- Tangerine Tiger: Orange base
- Blue Tiger: Blue stripes
- Red Tiger: Red stripes
Specifications:
- Size: 1-1.5 inches
- Temperature: 68-76°F
- pH: 6.5-7.5
- Hardness: 4-12 dGH
- Difficulty: Intermediate
- Price: $6-15 depending on variant
6. Bee Shrimp (Caridina cantonensis var. “Bee”)
Classic Black and White: Traditional pattern
Specifications: Similar to Crystal Red/Black Price: $5-15 Difficulty: Intermediate
7. Ghost Shrimp (Palaemonetes paludosus)
The Budget Option: Clear, inexpensive, feeder alternative
Specifications:
- Size: 1.5-2 inches
- Temperature: 65-80°F
- pH: 7.0-8.0
- Hardness: 5-20 dGH
- Difficulty: Beginner
- Price: $0.50-2 each
- Lifespan: 1 year
Note: Often sold as feeders, hardier than reputation suggests
8. Bamboo Shrimp (Atyopsis moluccensis)
The Filter Feeder: Unique fan-feeding behavior
Specifications:
- Size: 3-4 inches
- Temperature: 72-78°F
- pH: 6.5-7.5
- Hardness: 3-15 dGH
- Difficulty: Intermediate
- Price: $8-15
Special Requirements:
- Filter feeding: Needs fine particles in water column
- No algae eating: Doesn’t clean surfaces
- Strong current: Position in flow
- Supplemental feeding: Powdered foods, microorganisms
Tank Setup for Shrimp
Minimum Tank Requirements
| Species | Minimum | Recommended | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cherry Shrimp | 5 gallons | 10+ gallons | Colonies grow fast |
| Amano Shrimp | 10 gallons | 20+ gallons | Larger, more active |
| Crystal Shrimp | 10 gallons | 20+ gallons | Stable parameters crucial |
| Tiger Shrimp | 10 gallons | 20+ gallons | Room for colony growth |
| Bamboo Shrimp | 20 gallons | 30+ gallons | Needs flow and space |
Essential Equipment
Filtration:
- Sponge filter: Shrimp-safe, excellent for biofilm
- Hang-on-back with pre-filter sponge: Prevents intake of babies
- Canister filter with sponge: Effective and safe
- Avoid: Strong currents (shrimp like calm areas)
Critical: All filter intakes MUST have sponge pre-filters. Baby shrimp are tiny and will be sucked into standard filters.
Heating:
- Adjustable heater: Required for most species
- Redundancy: Small tanks heat/cool rapidly
- Sizing: 25-50W for 5-10 gallons
Lighting:
- Moderate: Promotes algae and biofilm growth
- LED preferred: Less heat, controllable
- Duration: 8-10 hours (algae is food!)
Air Pump (Optional):
- Sponge filter needs air
- Gentle surface agitation: Oxygen exchange
- Not essential: With good filtration
Substrate Selection
For Cherry Shrimp (Neocaridina):
- Any inert substrate: Gravel, sand
- Active substrates: Optional, not necessary
- Dark colors: Enhance shrimp colors
- Smooth gravel: Protects delicate legs
For Crystal/Tiger Shrimp (Caridina):
- Active substrates REQUIRED: Buffer pH appropriately
- Recommended: ADA Amazonia, Fluval Stratum
- Alternative: Akadama (bonsai soil)
- pH buffering: Essential for Caridina species
For Amano Shrimp:
- Any substrate: Very adaptable
- Planted tank substrates: They thrive in planted tanks
- Hardscape-heavy: Provide climbing surfaces
Hardscape and Plants
Hardscape:
- Driftwood: Biofilm magnet, grazing surface
- Smooth rocks: Chasing surface
- Caves: Hiding spots, especially when molting
- Cholla wood: Shrimp favorite for grazing
- Almond leaves: Tannins, biofilm source
Essential Plants:
- Mosses: Java, christmas, peacock—shrimp heaven
- Anubias: Broad leaves for perching
- Java Fern: Biofilm collector
- Floating plants: Security, biofilm
- Cryptocoryne: Hiding spots
- Stem plants: Cover and foraging
Avoid:
- Strong fertilizers: Copper-based products toxic to shrimp
- Heavy CO2: Can cause pH swings
- Pesticides: Always buy “shrimp-safe” plants
Water Parameters
General Shrimp Parameters
Temperature by Species:
| Species | Min | Optimal | Max |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cherry (Neocaridina) | 65°F | 72-76°F | 80°F |
| Amano | 65°F | 70-75°F | 78°F |
| Crystal (Caridina) | 68°F | 70-72°F | 74°F |
| Tiger | 68°F | 72-74°F | 76°F |
| Bamboo | 72°F | 74-76°F | 78°F |
pH Requirements:
- Neocaridina (Cherry): 6.5-8.0 (optimal 7.0-7.5)
- Caridina (Crystal/Tiger): 5.8-7.0 (optimal 6.0-6.5)
- Amano: 6.5-7.5 (optimal 7.0)
Hardness:
-
GH (General Hardness):
- Cherry: 4-15 dGH
- Crystal: 2-6 dGH
- Amano: 4-15 dGH
-
KH (Carbonate Hardness):
- Cherry: 2-8 dKH
- Crystal: 0-4 dKH
- Amano: 2-8 dKH
Critical Parameters:
- Ammonia: 0 ppm (extremely sensitive)
- Nitrite: 0 ppm
- Nitrate: <20 ppm (preferably <10)
- Copper: 0 ppm (toxic even in trace amounts)
- TDS (Total Dissolved Solids):
- Cherry: 150-250 ppm
- Crystal: 100-180 ppm
- Amano: 150-300 ppm
Water Quality Management
Testing Schedule:
- Weekly: pH, ammonia, nitrites
- Bi-weekly: Nitrates, GH, KH
- Monthly: TDS, copper (if concerns)
Water Changes:
- Cherry/Amano: 25-30% weekly
- Crystal/Tiger: 10-20% weekly (prefer smaller changes)
- Always match parameters: Temperature, GH, pH
- Drip acclimate: When adding new shrimp
TDS Management:
- Top-off: Use RO or distilled water
- Replenish: Minerals with shrimp-specific products
- Monitor: TDS meter essential for Caridina
Feeding Shrimp
Natural Foods (Primary Diet)
Biofilm and Algae:
- Primary food source: Occurs naturally in established tanks
- Encouragement: Driftwood, rocks, mosses
- Benefits: Complete nutrition, constant availability
- Light management: Moderate light promotes biofilm
Decaying Plant Matter:
- Leaf litter: Indian almond leaves, oak leaves
- Vegetables: Decomposing plant matter in tank
- Benefits: Fiber, microorganisms
Supplemental Feeding
Commercial Shrimp Foods:
2026 Top Brands:
- Bacter AE: Biofilm enhancement
- Shrimp King: Complete foods (multiple varieties)
- GlasGarten: Premium foods
- Salty Shrimp: Mineral and food products
- Hikari: Shrimp Cuisine
Food Types:
- Complete diets: Daily staple
- Protein: 1-2x weekly for breeding
- Vegetable: 2-3x weekly
- Mineral: For shell development
- Snowflake: Soybean hulls, long-lasting
Vegetables:
- Blanched vegetables: Spinach, zucchini, cucumber
- Process: Boil 1-2 minutes, cool, add to tank
- Remove: After 24 hours
- Frequency: 2-3x weekly
Other Foods:
- Algae wafers: Occasional
- Repashy gel foods: Excellent nutrition
- Frozen foods: Small amounts (brine shrimp, daphnia)
- Leaf litter: Indian almond leaves (natural)
Feeding Schedule
Daily:
- Small pinch: Complete shrimp food
- Observation: Watch if they find it
- Remove uneaten: After 2-3 hours
Weekly Rotation:
- Monday: Complete food
- Tuesday: Blanched vegetable
- Wednesday: Complete food
- Thursday: Protein food
- Friday: Complete food
- Saturday: Mineral food
- Sunday: Snowflake or leaf litter
Important: Overfeeding is the #1 cause of shrimp problems. They primarily eat biofilm—supplemental feeding should be minimal.
Breeding Shrimp
Cherry Shrimp Breeding (Neocaridina)
Sexing:
- Females: Larger (1.2-1.5 inches), rounded underbelly, saddle (eggs visible through body)
- Males: Smaller (0.8-1 inch), slimmer, no saddle
Breeding Requirements:
- Stable parameters: No sudden changes
- Good water quality: 0 ammonia/nitrite
- Adequate food: Biofilm plus supplements
- Security: Plants, mosses, hiding spots
- Ratio: 1 male to 2-3 females optimal
The Breeding Process:
1. Mating:
- Female molts (releases pheromones)
- Male pursues female
- Fertilization occurs
- Happens constantly in healthy colonies
2. Egg Carrying (Berried):
- Eggs visible under tail (looks like berries—hence “berried”)
- 20-30 eggs typical
- Female fans eggs for oxygen
- Carries 2-3 weeks
3. Hatching:
- Fully formed miniature shrimp emerge
- No larval stage (unlike Amano)
- Immediately independent
- Hide in moss/plants initially
4. Colony Growth:
- Females mature at 3-4 months
- Each female breeds every 1-2 months
- Colonies double every 2-3 months
- 10 shrimp → 100+ in 6 months easily
Breeding Tips:
- Don’t separate: Breed naturally in community
- Let colony establish: Don’t remove babies
- Provide cover: Mosses essential for survival
- Feed appropriately: More food when population grows
- Cull selectively: Remove poor color/pattern if breeding for quality
Crystal/Tiger Shrimp Breeding (Caridina)
More Demanding:
- Strict parameters: pH and TDS critical
- Lower temperature: 70-72°F optimal
- Stable GH: 4-6 dGH for crystals
- Purity: No cross-contamination with Neocaridina
Process: Similar to Cherry Shrimp but more sensitive to water quality
Success Factors:
- Active substrate: Maintains proper pH
- TDS monitoring: Essential
- Minimal changes: 10% water changes
- Patience: May take time to establish
- Selective breeding: Higher grades need careful selection
Amano Shrimp Breeding (The Challenge)
Why It’s Difficult:
- Larvae require brackish water to develop
- Freshwater hatching results in undeveloped larvae
- Commercial Amanos are wild-caught
Simplified Breeding Process:
1. Spawning:
- Occurs in freshwater
- Female carries 1000-2000 eggs
- Eggs hatch as larvae (not miniature shrimp)
2. Larval Stage:
- Must transfer to brackish water (15-25 ppt salinity)
- Feed plankton/infusoria
- Duration: 30-45 days
3. Metamorphosis:
- Develop into miniature shrimp
- Gradually acclimate to freshwater
- Extremely challenging for home aquarists
Reality: 99% of Amano shrimp are wild-caught. Breeding at home requires dedicated brackish setup and is rarely successful for hobbyists.
Tank Mates and Compatibility
Safe Tank Mates
Best Fish Companions:
Top Tier (Completely Safe):
- Otocinclus catfish: Peaceful, similar size
- Pygmy Corydoras: Too small to eat shrimp
- Small rasboras: Ember, Chili, Strawberry
- Small tetras: Ember, Green Neon, small Cardinals
- Endlers/Guppies: Generally safe, may eat babies
- Dwarf Gourami: Peaceful, unlikely to hunt
Acceptable with Caution:
- Regular Corydoras: Usually safe, may eat babies
- Neon Tetras: Generally safe, some individual hunting
- Platies: Usually peaceful
- Mollies: Can be nippy
- Bettas: Individual temperament varies (some ignore, some hunt)
Fish to Avoid
Will Definitely Eat Shrimp:
- Any cichlids: Even “peaceful” dwarf cichlids
- Angelfish: Shrimp are food
- Goldfish: Will eat any shrimp they can catch
- Large tetras: Serpae, Congo, Bleeding Heart
- Barbs: Tiger, Cherry (nippy)
- Gouramis: Larger species (Pearl, Blue)
- Loaches: Most species hunt shrimp
- Larger Plecos: May eat shrimp
Risk Assessment:
- Cherry Shrimp: Breed fast enough to sustain some predation
- Amano Shrimp: Large enough for most community tanks
- Crystal Shrimp: Too valuable/expensive for risky tanks
- Bamboo Shrimp: Large enough to be safe
Invertebrate Tank Mates
Safe with Shrimp:
- Nerite snails: Excellent tank mates
- Mystery snails: Peaceful, different zone
- Ramshorn snails: May breed, but harmless
- Malaysian Trumpet Snails: Beneficial, nocturnal
- Other shrimp species: If parameters compatible
Caution:
- Crayfish: Will eat shrimp (avoid)
- Large snails: Can outcompete for food
- Carnivorous snails: Assassin snails may eat baby shrimp
Common Problems and Solutions
”My Shrimp Are Dying”
Immediate Checks:
- Water parameters: Test ammonia, nitrite immediately
- Copper: Any copper medications used?
- pH swing: Recent water change?
- Temperature: Heater malfunction?
Common Causes:
- Copper exposure: Medications, plant fertilizers, tap water
- Ammonia/nitrite: Uncycled or crashed tank
- pH crash: Active substrate exhausted
- Temperature swing: Failed heater or rapid change
- Predation: Check for missing shrimp
”Shrimp Not Breeding”
Possible Causes:
- Water too soft: Check GH (especially for Neocaridina)
- Poor nutrition: Increase biofilm and protein
- Predation: Babies being eaten
- Unstable parameters: Fluctuating temperature/pH
- Not enough time: New colony needs 2-3 months to establish
Solutions:
- Test GH: Add minerals if too low
- Add leaf litter: Natural food and tannins
- Check hiding spots: Ensure plenty of moss
- Verify sexes: Need both males and females
- Patience: Shrimp colonies take time
”White Ring of Death”
Description: White band around shrimp body, failed molt
Cause: Calcium/mineral deficiency, GH too low
Solution:
- Increase GH: Add minerals (Wonder Shell, Salty Shrimp)
- Feed mineral supplement: Shrimp-specific mineral foods
- Add cuttlebone: Natural calcium source
- Check TDS: Ensure adequate dissolved solids
”Shrimp Hiding All the Time”
Normal Behavior:
- New shrimp: Hide for first few days
- Molting: Hide 24-48 hours during molt
- Lighting: Too bright?
Concerning:
- Water quality issues: Test immediately
- Predators: Check for hunting fish
- Parameter swings: Recent changes?
”Algae is Gone but Shrimp Seem Hungry”
Explanation: Shrimp eat biofilm, not just visible algae
Solution:
- Bacter AE: Supplement biofilm
- Add driftwood: Promotes biofilm
- Don’t overclean: Some algae is food
- Feed appropriately: Small amounts of quality food
Advanced Shrimp Keeping
Selective Breeding
For Neocaridina Color Enhancement:
Culling:
- Remove low-color specimens: Sell or separate
- Keep best coloration: Breed from best specimens
- Isolate new colors: Separate variant lines
- Generational improvement: Each generation should improve
Line Breeding:
- Pure lines: Maintain color purity
- Cross-breeding: Create new variants (results unpredictable)
- Record keeping: Track parentage for quality control
CRS/CBS Grading
Improving Grades:
- Start with higher grades: S grade minimum
- Selective breeding: Only breed best patterns
- Cull heavily: Remove low-grade offspring
- Patience: Takes multiple generations
Cross-breeding:
- CRS × CBS: Produces Pinto patterns
- Tigers × Bees: Various Taiwan Bee patterns
- Advanced: Requires extensive knowledge
Shrimp-Specific Equipment
TDS Meter ($15-30):
- Essential for Caridina keeping
- Monitor mineral content
- Track evaporation vs. mineral accumulation
Shrimp-Safe Filter:
- Sponge filter: Best for shrimp tanks
- Pre-filter sponges: Essential for other filters
- Intake guards: Stainless steel or sponge
Shrimp Net:
- Fine mesh: Regular nets injure shrimp
- Soft material: Prevents damage
- Small size: Easier to maneuver
Cost Analysis
Cherry Shrimp Starter Setup (10 Gallons)
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Tank | $20-40 |
| Sponge filter + air pump | $25-40 |
| Heater | $15-25 |
| Light (basic LED) | $20-40 |
| Substrate | $15-30 |
| Hardscape | $20-40 |
| Plants | $30-50 |
| 10 Cherry Shrimp | $30-50 |
| Food | $15-25 |
| Test kit | $25-35 |
| Total | $215-375 |
Crystal Shrimp Setup (20 Gallons)
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Tank | $40-80 |
| Filter | $50-100 |
| Heater | $20-30 |
| Light | $50-100 |
| Active substrate | $60-100 |
| Hardscape | $30-60 |
| Plants | $40-80 |
| 10 CRS (mixed grades) | $80-150 |
| Food | $30-50 |
| TDS meter | $20-30 |
| Test kits | $50-80 |
| Minerals | $20-30 |
| Total | $490-790 |
Ongoing Costs (Monthly)
Cherry Shrimp:
- Food: $5-10
- Occasional plants: $10-20
- Minerals: $5
- Total: $20-35
Crystal Shrimp:
- Food: $10-20
- Minerals: $10-15
- Test supplies: $5-10
- Total: $25-45
Conclusion
Freshwater shrimp keeping offers an engaging, colorful, and ecologically beneficial addition to any aquarium. From the forgiving Cherry Shrimp perfect for beginners to the demanding but rewarding Crystal Red Shrimp, there’s a species for every skill level and interest.
Key Takeaways:
- Start with Cherry or Amano shrimp for beginners
- Maintain stable water parameters above all else
- Copper is lethal—even in trace amounts
- Biofilm is their primary food source
- Successful breeding happens naturally in good conditions
- Patience is essential—colonies take time to establish
- Pre-filter sponges are non-negotiable
The sight of a thriving shrimp colony with females carrying eggs, babies exploring moss jungles, and the constant activity of these colorful invertebrates brings a unique dimension to aquarium keeping that fish-only tanks cannot match.
Last Updated: January 2026
Next Review: July 2026
This guide reflects current shrimp keeping practices and best practices as of 2026.