5.0
Aiptasia Eating Peppermint Shrimp

Aiptasia Eating Peppermint Shrimp

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Lysmata sp.

The name Peppermint Shrimp applies to a variety of Lysmata species that are distributed along the Eastern Seaboard, Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean. This attractive shrimp is named for the red stripes running the length of its transparent to cream-colored body. It grows to a maximum size of 2 inches.

The Peppermint shrimp serves two important functions in a reef system. It is a cleaner shrimp, meaning it cleans the parasites off its tankmates. It is also a scavenger; sifting sand for food and promoting a healthier aquarium. The Peppermint Shrimp is famous for eating the nuisance Aiptasia anemone. In a reef system, the shrimp can control the spread of aptaisia by eating the small, developing anemones. This shrimp will not eat corals. During the day the shrimp will generally hide in live rock and come out at night to forage for food. The Peppermint Shrimp is non-aggressive with fish and other invertebrates, and groups of them can cohabitate peacefully in the same reef aquarium. It is not uncommon for peppermint shrimp to spawn when kept in groups of 2 or more. The newly hatched shrimp larvae are great food for corals and small fish.

Customer Reviews

Based on 8 reviews
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Ryan Jones
Aptasia will never scare me again.

Wow! I would say my experience could not be normal. I bought 2 of these little guys last Saturday. I had astasia on everything. Just about every square inch of my little 10 Gallon nano had astasia growing on it including glass rock and filters. I was actually thinking that my tank was so bad that the anemones would continue to multiply before the shrimp would even make a dent in them. Today is Tuesday, 3 days later, and the anemones are gone. I have no idea how these little shrimp fit all that aptasia in their little intestines but I am literally blown away and so is my wife. I would have never thought. I was so impressed that I couldn't help myself. I had to brag on these guys. Aptasia will never scare me again.

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Donald Miller
Peppermint Shrimp review

Shrimp all doing great in our tank!

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Dave
Austria shrimp

First day I thought it died, saw what looked like the shell of the shrimp. Then it appeared from behind a rock at feeding time, it molted overnight. Good for the tank but don’t count on seeing it much if you have a large amount of rock. They are very shy.

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Lamont Holland
Excellent

Cleared all the aiptasia in my refugium in a couple of days!

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David Halpern
What a work horse!

All Aiptasia gone the first night! Very active little
Shrimp. Fun to watch. As always Staff is super helpful

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