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#1
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I've read quite a lot of bad press about snails in freshwater tropical
aquariums. Does anyone have anything good to say about them, and recommendations? |
#2
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![]() "rapdor" wrote in message ... I've read quite a lot of bad press about snails in freshwater tropical aquariums. Does anyone have anything good to say about them, and recommendations? If you have no plants, (most snails will nibble them) and you don't mind how they look, by all means, let them be! They really do help keep the tank clean, and add to the variety of creatures in your little ecosystem. |
#3
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Apple Snail (Pomacea bridgesii), Malasian Trumpet Snails
They really do help keep the tank clean, and add to the variety of creatures in your little ecosystem. |
#4
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"rapdor" wrote in message
... I've read quite a lot of bad press about snails in freshwater tropical aquariums. Does anyone have anything good to say about them, and recommendations? I have voluntary snails of several varieties, including the dreaded great pond snail, all brought in on plants. They were my excuse to buy my first ever loaches and now I have small loaches in two of my three tanks. I cull some snails every other day or so (feed the loaches) and keep them in check that way. But they do reproduce like mad. They don't seem to hurt the plants and the glass is cleaner than when I only had otos (which I still have, fat & happy). And snails can be interesting to watch. On balance, I like having snails. And yeah, the loaches get other kinds of food, not just snails. Gail |
#5
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"rapdor" wrote:
I've read quite a lot of bad press about snails in freshwater tropical aquariums. Does anyone have anything good to say about them, and recommendations? I have a heavily planted 20 gallon. Along with the plants came the inevitable 'pond snails', as well as a ramshorn. I have also intentionally introduced a lot of Malaysian Trumpet snails, and a 'true' apple snail, Pomacea bridgesii. All of these snails eat algae, and none of them has damaged any plants in my tank. In addition, the Malaysians constantly churn through the gravel, keeping it from developing dead pockets. All of these snails, then, are beneficial. In my experience, the only snail that I've had trouble with is another species of apple snail, Pomacea canaliculata, which was highly destructive. -- www.ericschreiber.com |
#6
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The pond snails that invaded my 20 gallon tank feed on green algae and
debris, as far as I can tell. The snails don't eat all of the algae off the rocks, plants etc., but they do keep the glass immaculately clean; and they don't bother any of my plants. One thing to be careful of is that pond snails breed like rabbits. When I first noticed the snails, I had been trimming my plants back every water change (every 2 wks) so the plants were mostly small. Once the snails started breeding, the tank looked pretty gross. There were snails on every flat surface, more than I could count. My solution was to first stop trimming the plants back. Once the vegetation had grown in, the snails moved (mostly) off of the rocks and the glass and onto the plants, where I can only see a few of them at a time. A few snails is very pretty, where 60 or so snails visible at once was kind of unsettling. Second, I reduced the number of shrimp pellets I was feeding to my catfish. I had been feeding 4 pellets daily and the snails on average got 1 or 2. More food = more snails. I now feed only 2 pellets, and the snail breeding rate has slowed appreciably. |
#7
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The pond snails that invaded my 20 gallon tank feed on green algae and
debris, as far as I can tell. The snails don't eat all of the algae off the rocks, plants etc., but they do keep the glass immaculately clean; and they don't bother any of my plants. One thing to be careful of is that pond snails breed like rabbits. When I first noticed the snails, I had been trimming my plants back every water change (every 2 wks) so the plants were mostly small. Once the snails started breeding, the tank looked pretty gross. There were snails on every flat surface, more than I could count. My solution was to first stop trimming the plants back. Once the vegetation had grown in, the snails moved (mostly) off of the rocks and the glass and onto the plants, where I can only see a few of them at a time. A few snails is very pretty, where 60 or so snails visible at once was kind of unsettling. Second, I reduced the number of shrimp pellets I was feeding to my catfish. I had been feeding 4 pellets daily and the snails on average got 1 or 2. More food = more snails. I now feed only 2 pellets, and the snail breeding rate has slowed appreciably. |
#8
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In article ,
"rapdor" wrote: I've read quite a lot of bad press about snails in freshwater tropical aquariums. Does anyone have anything good to say about them, and recommendations? Yes. Malaysian trumpet snails - wouldn't be without them: http://mike-edwardes.members.beeb.net/plant/lotech.html I also like ramshorns in coldwater tanks (MTS do well in coldwater tanks too!). Mike. -- Mike Edwardes Tropicals http://mike-edwardes.members.beeb.net |
#9
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Xref: 127.0.0.1 rec.aquaria.freshwater.plants:75616
"Aqua" wrote in message ... Apple Snail (Pomacea bridgesii), Malasian Trumpet Snails Do the MTS consume algae? IME, they just disappear into the substrate. |
#10
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I'm convinced that my MTSs are eating holes in my plants. I've had
the snails for at least a year now and I didn't have a problem until recently. My guess is that the population has gotten so big that there isn't enough food for them and they eat the plants. They've turned many, many leaves into lace. I've started picking lots of snails out - about 50/day - and the plants don't seem to be eaten as much. Anybody else had the same experience? Cris On Fri, 05 Sep 2003 07:24:07 +0100, Mike Edwardes wrote: In article , "rapdor" wrote: I've read quite a lot of bad press about snails in freshwater tropical aquariums. Does anyone have anything good to say about them, and recommendations? Yes. Malaysian trumpet snails - wouldn't be without them: http://mike-edwardes.members.beeb.net/plant/lotech.html I also like ramshorns in coldwater tanks (MTS do well in coldwater tanks too!). Mike. |
#11
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Yes, but they prefer fish food and will eat that before the algae.
Cris On Fri, 5 Sep 2003 05:09:02 -0700, "Dinky" wrote: "Aqua" wrote in message ... Apple Snail (Pomacea bridgesii), Malasian Trumpet Snails Do the MTS consume algae? IME, they just disappear into the substrate. |
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