I asked this question on another forum and I got an interesting reply from a member that actually has an aquatic shop.
Well, there are possible situations, when your fishes get shocked for example.
Water change with different parameters, or just crazy shy fishes (amandae fishes sticking in the ground mimic that they are dead etc.. typical).
In this case if you have large amano shrimps (3-4 yrs old ones which are pretty large) and there are a real group of them, they immediatelly catch the fish which act a bit differently.
I've seen it in our tank 2 years ago, when we had like 50 Popondetta Furcata (which is a pretty energetic fish with good movement) in a 240L tank. The fishes got a shock at water change and 6-8 of them fell to the ground in a second. In 2-3 seconds! the srimps caught them and they ate them immediatelly! We had 40 large amano shrimps in this tank.
So after a few minutes you could only see the skeleton of these fishes. They just did not have a chance to get out from the shock. I've never seen this before, but just with anything else and as many tanks we have there could be unlimited situations.
So yeah, if you do not feed these shimps and they are in an adult form with a good number of them, strange things can happen sometimes. Their appetite is huge! But I never saw this since that time.
Of course they eat the fallen ones very quickly as they are good housekeepers
but this was probably the most shocking moment that i've seen on this topic.
Well, there are possible situations, when your fishes get shocked for example.
Water change with different parameters, or just crazy shy fishes (amandae fishes sticking in the ground mimic that they are dead etc.. typical).
In this case if you have large amano shrimps (3-4 yrs old ones which are pretty large) and there are a real group of them, they immediatelly catch the fish which act a bit differently.
I've seen it in our tank 2 years ago, when we had like 50 Popondetta Furcata (which is a pretty energetic fish with good movement) in a 240L tank. The fishes got a shock at water change and 6-8 of them fell to the ground in a second. In 2-3 seconds! the srimps caught them and they ate them immediatelly! We had 40 large amano shrimps in this tank.
So after a few minutes you could only see the skeleton of these fishes. They just did not have a chance to get out from the shock. I've never seen this before, but just with anything else and as many tanks we have there could be unlimited situations.
So yeah, if you do not feed these shimps and they are in an adult form with a good number of them, strange things can happen sometimes. Their appetite is huge! But I never saw this since that time.
Of course they eat the fallen ones very quickly as they are good housekeepers