Aquarium Co-Op
Member
Hi everyone, I'm the owner of Aquarium Co-Op. We are a freshwater only store. That being said I've added Live brine shrimp to our live food offerings on top of everything else. I feel I can come up with a better system than what stores are typically doing which is the buy and die method.
Current method advised by wholesalers of the shrimp. Put 1 pint of shrimp into a tank on Friday, and sell it all before it dies Sunday. Sometimes this is just a 5 gallon bucket or two.
My current method keeps them for as long as I need too really but I want to really beef up the system.
75 gallon tank stacked over a 90 gallon tank. The top 75g has an overflow. I've got some chaeto up top, and a few pieces of live rock.
90 gallon on the bottom is bare bottom.
I can pump water between the two tanks using a canister filter with a sponge on the intake, but even at very slow flows it'll suck up some brine shrimp.
This setup will keep the shrimp alive thus far but with high levels of ammonia/nitrite/nitrate. Which the brine shrimp tolerate, but is not sustainable long term. The more shipments of brine that go in will add to this.
The problems I see.
I'd like to design a closed system where the only new water coming in is from the water that has left from selling the brine shrimp. Please add any ideas you have to any portion of the system. I think lots of different people have experience with different setups and can lend some info.
I think this is the order I need to address issues before building a new system.
1. Shrimp Containment. If I can keep the shrimp in 1 vessel, exterior vessels can be used for filtration etc.
This is just a start, I full believe there will be more things to design in the system and trial and error. I can have things custom fabricated etc, but it is costly and will be done if proof of concept is achieved.
Materials I prefer to use for this type of project would be rubbermaid tubs, 55 gallon barrels and laguna ponds, 6x4x2 340 gallon ponds. I have access to all of these and can plumb them together.
I've read many studies etc on brine shrimp aquaculture. The methods used there are too intensive for a store owner. There isn't enough time to change the collection plates etc to filter out the shells once a day etc. Also many places run the salinity so high that bacteria can't form which keeps things sterile, but would be hard to break down waste. All these places have access to an ocean to pump water directly from though so it's a non issue.
Thank you ahead of time for any input, feel free to mull it over for a few days as this I feel is a complex problem as I've spent months googling trying to find something like already done and shared online. I fully believe it's been achieved by people before, but not written up on how to accomplish it.
Current method advised by wholesalers of the shrimp. Put 1 pint of shrimp into a tank on Friday, and sell it all before it dies Sunday. Sometimes this is just a 5 gallon bucket or two.
My current method keeps them for as long as I need too really but I want to really beef up the system.
75 gallon tank stacked over a 90 gallon tank. The top 75g has an overflow. I've got some chaeto up top, and a few pieces of live rock.
90 gallon on the bottom is bare bottom.
I can pump water between the two tanks using a canister filter with a sponge on the intake, but even at very slow flows it'll suck up some brine shrimp.
This setup will keep the shrimp alive thus far but with high levels of ammonia/nitrite/nitrate. Which the brine shrimp tolerate, but is not sustainable long term. The more shipments of brine that go in will add to this.
The problems I see.
- Brine Shrimp molt at an incredible speed. Lots of waste here. Need to remove shells from time to time?
- Keeping shrimp where I want them. I'd like a way to contain shrimp to 1 vessel. Be it a tank, 55 gallon barrel etc.
- Nutrient export. Without water changes. Being freshwater only, there is no reef tank saltwater waste to do water changes on brine shrimp tanks. So all water changes is purely a cost adding to brine shrimp cost.
- Is heat a concern? The extra space that I have them in now is at 55 degrees. Is heating up the water worth it?
I'd like to design a closed system where the only new water coming in is from the water that has left from selling the brine shrimp. Please add any ideas you have to any portion of the system. I think lots of different people have experience with different setups and can lend some info.
I think this is the order I need to address issues before building a new system.
1. Shrimp Containment. If I can keep the shrimp in 1 vessel, exterior vessels can be used for filtration etc.
- Ideas: Huge filter sock type device used as a barrel liner. - worried about clogging and overflow.
- Mattenfilter, basically large sponge walls to block shrimp from an overflow or intake pump. - Worried about clogging up and how long, depends on flow rate?
- Designing a system where shrimp can move throughout. This requires pumps without impellers. Air lift tech, maybe something else?
- Skimmer, will this help reduce ammonia/nitrite/nitrate in a meaningful way. This has it's limitations, shrimp must be contained somewhere and feeding the brine, might require this to be shut off etc?
- Refugium. Chaeto, macro algaes, mangroves etc? Upkeep? Do mangroves have to be misted a few times a week to keep the salt off the leaves? Will this even make a big enough dent in the bio load vs how much space it takes up.
- Shell removal, if I have all brine shrimp in a top tank and install a sock filter in the bottom tank/sump. I could use a siphon to siphon water and shells into the sump sock. The sock collects all the debris, and lets the water back into the system.
- Green Water - Thus far is has been hard to keep going and seems like more work than it's worth. In freshwater live daphnia culturing, the cultures I get going can consume 300 gallons of green water a day, not sustainable.
- Yeast/spirulina power - Blend this into water and feed. My brain tells me a skimmer will skim this out, because with an airstone in freshwater in a bottle, it'll bubble out of the bottle.
- Maybe a liquid addivtive to the system I don't know about, that won't be skimmed out and isn't crazy expensive?
This is just a start, I full believe there will be more things to design in the system and trial and error. I can have things custom fabricated etc, but it is costly and will be done if proof of concept is achieved.
Materials I prefer to use for this type of project would be rubbermaid tubs, 55 gallon barrels and laguna ponds, 6x4x2 340 gallon ponds. I have access to all of these and can plumb them together.
I've read many studies etc on brine shrimp aquaculture. The methods used there are too intensive for a store owner. There isn't enough time to change the collection plates etc to filter out the shells once a day etc. Also many places run the salinity so high that bacteria can't form which keeps things sterile, but would be hard to break down waste. All these places have access to an ocean to pump water directly from though so it's a non issue.
Thank you ahead of time for any input, feel free to mull it over for a few days as this I feel is a complex problem as I've spent months googling trying to find something like already done and shared online. I fully believe it's been achieved by people before, but not written up on how to accomplish it.