Animals (Apr 2021)

All Shades of Shrimp: Preferences of Colour Morphs of a Freshwater Shrimp <i>Neocaridina davidi</i> (Decapoda, Atyidae) for Substrata of Different Colouration

  • Zuzanna Plichta,
  • Jarosław Kobak,
  • Rafał Maciaszek,
  • Tomasz Kakareko

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11041071
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. 1071

Abstract

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An ornamental freshwater shrimp, Neocaridina davidi, is popular as an aquarium hobby and, therefore, a potentially invasive species. There is a growing need for proper management of this species to determine not only their optimum breeding conditions, but also their ability to colonise novel environments. We tested habitat preferences of colour morphs (brown, red, white) of N. davidi for substratum colour (black, white, grey shades, red) and fine or coarse chess-board patterns to recognise their suitable captivity conditions and predict their distribution after potential release into nature. We conducted laboratory choice experiments (n = 8) with three individuals of the same morph exposed for two hours to a range of backgrounds. Shrimp preferred dark backgrounds over light ones irrespective of their own colouration and its match with the background colour. Moreover, the brown and red morphs, in contrast to the white morph, preferred the coarse background pattern over the finer pattern. This suggests that the presence of dark, uniform substrata (e.g., rocks, macrophytes) will favour N. davidi. Nevertheless, the polymorphism of the species has little effect on its total niche breadth, and thus its invasive potential.

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