Monomanie : Sorte de trouble mental dans lequel une seule idée semble absorber toutes les facultés de l’intelligence.

Slideshow

Get the Flash Player to see the slideshow.

Les plus lus

Une p’tite vidéo ?

Get the Flash Player to see the wordTube Media Player.

Utilisateurs en ligne

1 451 lecture(s)

So this is how it looks like…

A Benibachi certificate of authenticity:

CertifBeniSS_HG

It’s a lady, and she berries eggs right now.

1 677 lecture(s)

Dinner time

This food drives my mosura totally crazy. This is what happens just after 10 seconds, at real speed :

2 812 lecture(s)

25 months later

And it is still running perfectly, including mosses!

K14_130401

From time to time, I have to move some shrimplets to another tank to give them more space.

CRSJuv_160428

Although I try to reproduce the recipe of this set-up on every new tank, I can not reach the same success…It seems like every tank has its own history, its own biological balance, which suits more or less our beloved and mysterious crystal shrimps.

Other articles on this tank:

Secrets de Crystal

Secrets de Crystal, le(s) retour(s)

Sélection Crystal Red, oui mais…

4 095 lecture(s)

Tridacna maxima

Under the « tridacna spot« :

TridacnaMaxima_130501_01 TridacnaMaxima_130501_02 TridacnaMaxima_130501_03

The story:

A good friend of mine knew that I was looking for a blue Tridacna crocea with a « reasonable » size. So, when he saw 4 tridacna in his LFS, he kindly took pictures and sent them to me. The LFS owner told him that they were actually Tridacna crocea, and that all become blue when they get adult. Hummm, sounds weird…

Although I promised to myself that I would never buy a too small tridacna again, and also intrigued by what was just reported, I could not resist…I told Fabrice to get 2 of them for me.

One of the reasons why young and small tridacna are not recommended is because of their light weight. Indeed, they can be easily shaken (or worse) by other inhabitants in the tank, especially crabs…

When Fabrice brought them to me, they were even smaller than I thought: about 4 cm. But they looked beautiful!

Before I started acclimatizing them, I had a doubt that they were not Tridacna crocea as the LFS owner claimed. Indeed, although identifying a Tridacna crocea is not an easy task, the shape from above doesn’t look like a crocea. Moreover, it was mentioned « Tridacna maxima » on the CITES!

TridacnaMaxima_130501_04

It is much easier to differentiate a crocea from a maxima by looking at the byssus (I learned alot by reading James Fatherree’s articles):
Left : crocea

TridacnaMaxima_130501_05

I am wondering whether the LFS owner lied, or maybe it’s just incompetence? The CITES is pretty clear though.

Why do I prefer crocea to maxima? Well, it’s just their potential adult size, 15 cm versus  45 cm, or something like that. Anyway, it’s not such a big deal, because the maximum size is just theoretical and many things can happen before…

I have my 2 Tridacna maxima since 21/04/2013, and I love them :)

1 693 lecture(s)

Fissidens adianthoides, or bryoides ?

I thought I lost it forever. But when I cleaned my 60L tank filter yesterday (after many many months…), here is what I discovered in a sponge:

Fissidens_adianthoides_1304_01 Fissidens_adianthoides_1304_02 Fissidens_adianthoides_1304_03

Please help me correctly identify it. I bought it as Fissidens adianthoides. Many thanks folks