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A rare native dwarf crayfish from Texas — small, personable, and one of the few crayfish genuinely compatible with shrimp-safe planted setups.
The Brazos Dwarf Crayfish (Cambarellus texanus) is a rare, small-footprint crayfish native to the Brazos River drainage of Texas — one of the few truly dwarf Cambarellus species available in the hobby and among the most personable freshwater invertebrates you can keep. Adults max out under two inches, making them genuinely manageable in mid-sized planted aquariums where larger crayfish would cause destruction. They are active, curious, and surprisingly bold — moving confidently through hardscape, botanicals, and plant cover throughout the day, picking at biofilm, detritus, and food with the characteristic crayfish energy that makes them fascinating to observe. Housing with shrimp requires careful consideration — see the notes below — but in well-structured tanks with dense cover, peaceful cohabitation is achievable.
If keeping Brazos Dwarf Crayfish with shrimp, the single most effective precaution is dense, layered planting — particularly low mosses and foreground plants that create a ground-level refuge shrimp can dart into instantly. The crayfish simply cannot pursue shrimp efficiently through dense plant cover, and most cohabitation failures happen in sparse, open tanks where shrimp have nowhere to retreat.
Dense planting is the most effective way to create a balanced tank where dwarf crayfish and shrimp can coexist. Browse our Aquatic Plants collection.