Side-by-side

Cherry Shrimp vs Amano Shrimp

Tank size, water parameters, diet, temperament, reef-safety, and which species fits which keeper. All data cross-checked against vetted Fast Aquatics vendor records.

Reviewed by the Fast Aquatics husbandry team

Cherry Shrimp

Neocaridina davidi
Min tank size5 gallons
Care difficultyintermediate
DietOmnivore
TemperamentPeaceful
Reef-safen/a
Temperature74-80°F
Full Cherry Shrimp care guide →

Amano Shrimp

Caridina multidentata
Min tank size10 gallons
Care difficultybeginner
DietOmnivore
TemperamentPeaceful
Reef-safen/a
Temperature74-80°F
Full Amano Shrimp care guide →

Which is better for...

Use caseRecommended
Best for beginnersAmano Shrimp
Best for nano tanks (under 30 gallons)Cherry Shrimp
Hardiest in established tanksAmano Shrimp

Cherry Shrimp pros and cons

Pros: Adult size fits 5 gallons tanks well. Easy to feed on standard pellet/flake/frozen diets. Reef compatibility: n/a.

Cons: Requires intermediate-level husbandry experience. Sourcing premium specimens can require waiting for charter breeder drops.

Amano Shrimp pros and cons

Pros: Hardier than Cherry Shrimp for first-time keepers. Adult size fits 10 gallons tanks well. Easy to feed on standard pellet/flake/frozen diets. Reef compatibility: n/a.

Cons: Sourcing premium specimens can require waiting for charter breeder drops.

Compatibility - can they live together?

Mixing Cherry Shrimp and Amano Shrimp in one tank depends on adult size overlap, territory needs, and water-chemistry match. Peaceful/Peaceful pairing means both species share similar temperament so direct fights are rare, but resource competition (food, territory, hiding spots) is common. Both species need water parameters within 74-80°F and 74-80°F. If keeping together, introduce the more peaceful species first by 2-4 weeks, provide multiple hiding spots, and feed at separate ends of the tank.

Sourcing and price expectations

Both Cherry Shrimp and Amano Shrimp sell at three tiers on Fast Aquatics and competitor sites. Budget tier (pet-store grade): $5-50. Mid-tier (LFS or online vendor stock): $25-200. Premium tier (named lines, charter breeders): $100-2,000+. Captive-bred or aquacultured specimens cost more upfront but ship healthier than long-supply-chain wild-caught. Browse Cherry Shrimp and Amano Shrimp live availability on Fast Aquatics for current vendor pricing with carrier-tracked Buyer Protection on every order.

Frequently asked questions

Is Cherry Shrimp or Amano Shrimp better for beginners?

Amano Shrimp is the better choice for beginners. Cherry Shrimp requires intermediate-level experience.

What is the minimum tank size for Cherry Shrimp vs Amano Shrimp?

Cherry Shrimp requires 5 gallons minimum, while Amano Shrimp needs 10 gallons. Both should be planned around adult size, not juvenile size.

Can Cherry Shrimp and Amano Shrimp be kept in the same tank?

Compatibility depends on adult size, temperament, and territory overlap. Both are typically considered peaceful (Cherry Shrimp) and peaceful (Amano Shrimp) species. Always quarantine both, introduce the more peaceful species first, and monitor for aggression in the first 30 days.

Which costs more, Cherry Shrimp or Amano Shrimp?

Pricing varies by source and grade. Budget specimens from pet-store-grade vendors run $5-50 for both species. Mid-tier specimens run $25-200. Premium grades (charter breeders, named lines) reach $100-2,000+. Browse Fast Aquatics for current market pricing.

Which is more reef-safe?

Cherry Shrimp is rated n/a and Amano Shrimp is rated n/a. For mixed-reef setups, prefer the species rated reef-safe; species rated "with caution" or "no" need careful tankmate planning.

What do Cherry Shrimp and Amano Shrimp eat?

Cherry Shrimp: Omnivore. Amano Shrimp: Omnivore. Diet match-up matters for compatible feeding schedules and nutritional needs.

More comparisons

Browse the full comparison library for more side-by-side species breakdowns. See full care guides for Cherry Shrimp and Amano Shrimp for the complete husbandry breakdown of each.