I purchased a Peppermint Shrimp to help out with some aiptasia. I ill-advisedly let AN aiptasia that came in on some added rock remain because I didn't have but a couple of corals. Now that I have expanded my coral collection, with more planned, I looked deeper and found some smaller ones on my rocks. I tried the epoxy over them. But a smaller of the two was on the sand line on one of my base rocks. The other was in a medium size "pit" on the top of that rock. I wasn't able to get the epoxy over the one on the side good enough and it popped out underneath the epoxy. I didn't get the pit covered good enough and evidently left a crack that the aiptasia saw light from and came out. Go figger, I know. I think that all I did was to make them mad at me. They signed a contract with one another and decided to spit out some smaller aiptasia onto another rock. I will now likely find more.
I thought I was getting an L. wurdemanni but I am doubting now. So, I have the shrimp in the back chamber of my AIO sump (Coralife Biocube 32) until I find out for sure. I am thinking, from the pictures I saw of six different species of Peppermint Shrimp that it is possible that I do have the right kind of Peppermint Shrimp. However, I want to make sure because I do not want a coral or snail snipping monster on my hands. Things that make me believe it is a L. wurdemanni is that the rostrom (?) on mine is closed/together as opposed to open/separated as in the pictures I have seen. But this may just be a timing of the photographs I have taken and have looked at. My shrimp also has shorter pincers in comparison to the length of its rostrom (?) in comparison to an L. borgessi which is the most common Peppermint shrimp sold according to some sources. Mine also has white tips on its pincers, at least the one that shows in the photo. Here are a couple of pictures I took. BTW, I found out the growth under its carapace was a parasitic isopod. It has been removed and destroyed. I think I heard Shrimpy say, "Thanks Big Guy!" after I took it off. It wasn't too happy being caught (shrimp nor isopod) though.

I thought I was getting an L. wurdemanni but I am doubting now. So, I have the shrimp in the back chamber of my AIO sump (Coralife Biocube 32) until I find out for sure. I am thinking, from the pictures I saw of six different species of Peppermint Shrimp that it is possible that I do have the right kind of Peppermint Shrimp. However, I want to make sure because I do not want a coral or snail snipping monster on my hands. Things that make me believe it is a L. wurdemanni is that the rostrom (?) on mine is closed/together as opposed to open/separated as in the pictures I have seen. But this may just be a timing of the photographs I have taken and have looked at. My shrimp also has shorter pincers in comparison to the length of its rostrom (?) in comparison to an L. borgessi which is the most common Peppermint shrimp sold according to some sources. Mine also has white tips on its pincers, at least the one that shows in the photo. Here are a couple of pictures I took. BTW, I found out the growth under its carapace was a parasitic isopod. It has been removed and destroyed. I think I heard Shrimpy say, "Thanks Big Guy!" after I took it off. It wasn't too happy being caught (shrimp nor isopod) though.
