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#1
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I would like to share with you my recent observation...
And ask a question later to who might know the answer :-) I have a very small, 10g "experimental" tank with one bag of Southdown sand on the bottom (yes, it is deeeep)... Inside I have a lot of snails, macroalgae and some rock. Since the main purpose of this tank is to observe the sand dwellers like spaghetti and other worms, snails and nothing super-delicate I do not have any automatic top-off system... Unfortunately it happens often I neglect my manual top of routine and I see sometimes evaporation like 1" which makes big salnity fluctuations in a small tank like this one... Everytime it happens I see strings of snail eggs on glass, plants, rocks... everywhere. I have three kinds of snails and all of them seems to react to salnity increase with eggs. Some of them ("dark cerith" - Cerithium atratum) glue long white strings of eggs sacs, others (unidentified black ones) glue single sacs with eggs in random places of the tank... The reason I link snail eggs with salnity is that one time I have observed same snails laying eggs and it was also the time I went for a week leaving the tank with no top off. Why would be increased salnity the stimulus for snails?? What do they "think" happens... why are they tempted to lay eggs, and does it happen in nature? I was thinking the salnity of the ocean is pretty constant all the time... |
#2
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"Pszemol" writes:
I was thinking the salnity of the ocean is pretty constant all the time... Actually, salinity in the ocean is not constant, though the swings are definitely smaller than in your tank. Evaporation and precipitation can each result in rather substantial salinity changes to surface seawater. I wish I could speak with some authority as to how large these were... Anyway, that's a really cool observation about your snails. I suspect that Ron Shimek over at reefcentral.org could give you great answers to your snail questions (since he's a scientist specializing in marine invertebrates and a fanatic reef aquarist to boot). If you do head over there, I'd really appreciate it if you could repost anything you learn back here... Regards, Ross -- Ross Bagley http://rossbagley.com/rba "Security is mostly a superstition. It does not exist in nature... Life is either a daring adventure or nothing." -- Helen Keller |
#3
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In the land of rec.aquaria.marine.reefs, the word of the Lord came
to Ross Bagley and verily he spoke saying: Good advice, I'm sure Dr Sand can shed some light. I wonder if they think its a season change (IE rainy season= salinity change etc) and base their mating seasonally. That would be my Guess, and just a wild guess at that. -- -John Because it makes things difficult to understand. Why shouldn't I top post? |
#4
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![]() "Christ's Soldiers" wrote in message . 1.4... In the land of rec.aquaria.marine.reefs, the word of the Lord came to Ross Bagley and verily he spoke saying: Good advice, I'm sure Dr Sand can shed some light. I wonder if they think its a season change (IE rainy season= salinity change etc) and base their mating seasonally. That would be my Guess, and just a wild guess at that. -- -John Because it makes things difficult to understand. Why shouldn't I top post? I guess that would make a good science fair project, or biology lesson. |
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