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Freshwater
About
Snails
Many
beginning hobbyists think snails are essential as scavengers, only to
find that some red ramshorns, after a day or two in the tank, will get
their antennae nipped by fish every time they poke their head out, and
eventually starve inside their shell. It’s one of life’s ironies
that if you want to keep snails they seem to be easily killed off, and
if you don’t want them they multiply like crazy.
Most snails do best in harder/alkaline
water. If the hardness/pH drops below a certain point, their shells will
start to dissolve and/or grow improperly.
Malaysian trumpet snails seem the hardiest, showing little adverse
effect from soft water. The Ramshorn snails shell will start to
dissolve, and gaps will form in the new shell growth. Mystery snails
will form gaps. Most of these problems can be corrected by hardening the
water, and the snails will recover, although exterior shell damage from
dissolving will remain. Here are four popular species:
Ampullaria or Pomacea
(Mystery or Apple snails):
If you’re breeding fish, this snail provides some great advantages.
However, there are at least four distinct
species of Ampullaria, three of which are ravenous plant eaters and
should be kept out of planted aquaria. All are sometimes known as
infusoria snails, and when kept in unplanted aquariums should be fed
lettuce. Their droppings create ideal conditions for the production of
infusoria, the first food of new hatched fry. If cared for properly,
these snails can grow to tennis ball size. At the Aquatic Critter we
carry the Mystery snail, which doesn’t eat plants.
Melanoides tuberculata
(Malaysian live bearing snail):
The Malaysian snail is an interesting creature. These small snails
rarely exceed ¾ inch in length, and have long sharp cone shells. They
have two advantages: They dig deep in the sand for food, keeping it
loose, and they reach food inaccessible to other snails. During the day
they hide under the sand but at night they come out. It’s a
livebearing snail and reproduces quite readily. The aquarist may
experience a shock to wake up at night and see hundreds of them on the
aquarium walls. However, it’s considered beneficial to a plant tank
and doesn’t seem to harm plants, even in large populations.
Planorbis and Helisoma
(ramshorn snails):
These shells take the form of flat spirals like the mainspring in a
watch. They are generally in black but there is a red variety. These
snails are usually seen in tropical aquariums. Red ones may add a little
color to a tank, but have virtually no other advantage. In breeding
tanks they are a nuisance, they consume eggs and eat most of the food
fed to the fish. They breed profusely through the year and lay eggs in
small yellow tinted balls of jelly.
Viviparus/Trapdoor
Snail (Japanese live bearing snail):
These give birth to fully formed young snails and do not lay eggs. The
snail is quite a large one and may be confused with Ampullaria, but the
spiral of the Viviparus is much more raised, and the shell is wider than
high. This snail is not hermaphrodite, so for breeding, male and female
are necessary. Sex may be distinguished, as the male has a shorter and
curved right antennae in comparison with the female. Their eggs hatch
inside the females shell and look like tiny pearls. It doesn’t like
high temperatures and is not altogether happy in a tropical aquarium. A
great advantage is that it’s not a plant eater.•••
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