fine marron illustration* |
They are active mainly at night, and are opportunistic feeders that will eat whatever they find. In the wild the majority of the food comes from plant material, small living and dead beasties, and detritus (decomposing plant matter colonized by fungi and bacteria.
They thrive in water temperatures ranging from around 13 deg C to 25 deg C. Water temperatures over 30 deg C will result in deaths.
Marron need a quarter of a square metre of space each when grown in a conventional dam or similar, but it may prove possible to increase the possible population density by using a multi level hi-rise approach, or with the addition of a stack of short lengths of PVC tubing to increase the available surface area, and allow lots of places to live and hide.
In order to grow, marron find a safe place to hide, then spend some time shedding their hard shell. Once shed, they expand into their new softer shell and go back to their normal lives until outgrowing themselves again. They may appear sluggish and generally disinterested in the world when about to shed their shells. If this happens, leave them alone and don't try to cheer them up by feeding them. When changing shells they go off their food for a while, and continued feeding runs the risk of fouling the water. As with all aquaponics feeding, feed only what is eaten right away, and stop feeding if food is left uneaten.
Marron can be grown in tanks or ponds as shallow as 20 cm, but beware their climbing and escaping abilities. Like other similarly shaped critters, they can walk on land and will wonder off in search of a good time if allowed to do so.
Marron don't like the sores they get on their undersides from bare concrete tanks so add something soft like sand, or fill the bottom of their tank with PVC tubing.
Apparently marron like to eat worms.
They also enjoy the type of pH levels found within aquaponics systems, and have a particular fondness for pH levels of between 7.0 and 8.5. They are found growing in the wild in water ranging from pH 6.0 to as high as pH 9.0.
Fresh water is best but they can tolerate saline levels of up to 15 parts per thousand. They thrive in salinity levels of less than 5 parts per thousand, and wont breed in higher salinity water.
*actual marron may have legs.
I really like this blog with good writing skills. Thanks for sharing such a nice information with us.
ReplyDeleteAwesome! ive been researching the feasability of including standard or blue marron,(cherax cainii, i believe) in a home Aquaponics system. Redclaw is out.. they need warmer water than the cherax cainii- but i will much appreciate any words of wisdom especially on the possibility of brooding young in tanks. Any leads on where i can find breeders in the US? i live in Missouri ty :3
ReplyDeleteI never went any further with marron, and I cant help you with sourcing them in the US, but if you have a look on BYAP, there's a member "charlie" http://www.backyardaquaponics.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=14722 who might be a good place to start. mI'm pretty sure they are easy to breed. When I was a kid I had friends that could breed yabbies, and I think they work the same as a marron.
DeleteGood luck :)
there are a few other posts of mine on marron or similar animals
http://120thingsin20years.blogspot.com.au/2010/07/aquaponics-marron.html#uds-search-results
Including this one that I never built and have a bit of an ethical dilemma with the idea of a battery farm, but I think everything with claws fight so there will always be problems with high stocking density.
http://120thingsin20years.blogspot.com/2010/12/aquaponics-high-density-marron-farm.html
thanks good info
ReplyDeleteI recently stocked a small desktop aquarium with around 30 baby yabbies (things that are a lot like marron) and found a lot of problems with cannibalism at every opportunity. The plan was to raise them for a while inside to study them, then transfer them into a large tank to grow them to size, but I now have one large 12cm one, and a few survivors that are still around 1cm. No doubt this is similar to what happens in nature, as proven by the fact that our waterways are not choked with them.
ReplyDelete-120thingsin20years
Would love to chat, please call me if you have a minute-0451507526
ReplyDeleteI'd be happy to chat as long as it's not just about you trying to sell me something :)
ReplyDeleteYou can contact me privately at
disposablejunkmail@hotmail.com.au
to give some extra information