10g Lobster?

Originally posted by Casper
I have a blue lobster aka crayfish/crawdad.. :)
and he cost me $30.00 and I have him in a 10 gallon with a small cave and he uses his pinchers to carry rock and he has made a block to one of the entry ways to the cave..lol
mine is constructing the crayfish equivalent of the great pyramids! he's been molting with renewed ferocity since i've moved to florida (probably just because of increased metabolism due to warmer room temps since his tank is unheated), and i believe he is plotting to take over the world. HAIL BITEY!
 
i believe there is a reasonable probability that bitey will soon develop a rudimentary system of writing and, after that, who knows! the sky is the limit for his size and intelligence. he seems to be evolving at an alarming rate, and i'm just trying to stay in his good graces, so that when he emerges from the primordial stew (ie, his tank) and takes to the land and conquers (read: eats) all in his path i myself am not devoured.
 
I've gone through more crawdads than I can count...

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They are a great clean up crew for a messy tank, they eat anything, dead plants, live plants, dead fish, live fish, any prepared foods, any fish deficate (yes, even that!). The ones that survived the longest seemed to prefer the shrimp pellets I feed my bristlenoses.

Be forewarned - if there is any way to escape the tank they will. They climb plants, cords, anything. If they do get out they always seem to make it to the one spot far away from the tank that you don't think of checking and then die.

They are an awesome live food source. No invertabrate to vertabrate parasites to worry about, high in color producing agents, and the ones that live for a while eat the dead pieces! Out of at least fifty these past two months I'm down to four I think.

This one was the biggest I've ever caught...each claw was about 3" and "it" (on a side note, anyone know how to breed these guys?) was 7" long. Didn't even fit in my hand. He lasted two months until he got caught out of his log one morning. The oscars only ate "its" tail, as it was all they could fit in their mouths :mad:

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Yep, a good ol' tiger oscar. Whose sensory pits really stand out with that pic...

Both the fish are oscars, and you can see a firemouth and pleco as well. :p
 
Wild type? Heck no, it's a lutino oscar. Selectively bread to lack pigment, but they still have black pupils and some black on the unpaired fins. Not an albino, but close. The "wild type" are a more olive green and lack most of the red, but have one, two, or three ocelli spots on the body. (There is some debate as to if the different numbered spots denote different species.)
 
25 years ago I gave a guy with Oscars and Pirhana in the same tank :eek: a crayfish I had caught in an Ontario lake. The fish thought they would make a tasty snack of the crustaceon but the 4" crayfish had other plans. He took a few aggressive pinches at the predators snout while advancing, not retreating, and proceeded to find a small rock cleft to make a home in. I asked about him a couple of months later, and it turns out he was more or less a permanent resident.

Guess they're just made of tougher stuff up here in Canada ;)
 
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