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#1
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In our 29 gallon tank, we have a freshwater puffer that eats pond
snails too quickly for us to establish a snail population there. Once upon a time, we placed an Apple snail in the tank, but the puffer ate pieces of it so slowly that it was too painful to watch. So, we picked up a 6 gallon Eclipse tank from a friend and are using it to grow feeder pond snails. To add some color to the tank, we've added two Apple snails that evidently are male and female. Because the Eclipse tank has a large lid that closes the tank off, we thought that the Apple snails wouldn't have enough room to lay eggs out of the water. This week, we noticed hundreds of Apple snail babies in the water with our pond snails, but we had not ever noticed an egg sac. After some investigation, we found that at night when the light turns off, the female apple snail has been crawling into the DOME-SHAPED LID and laying her eggs up ABOVE and BESIDE the light. So, we now have two large egg sacs that will hatch any day now. DOES ANYONE have a suggestion about HOW to control the Apple snail population in this Eclipse tank? The problem is the convex and hollow lid. Thoughts? -- Ted |
#2
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On Jun 4, 9:56*am, Ted Pavlic wrote:
In our 29 gallon tank, we have a freshwater puffer that eats pond snails too quickly for us to establish a snail population there. Once upon a time, we placed an Apple snail in the tank, but the puffer ate pieces of it so slowly that it was too painful to watch. So, we picked up a 6 gallon Eclipse tank from a friend and are using it to grow feeder pond snails. To add some color to the tank, we've added two Apple snails that evidently are male and female. Because the Eclipse tank has a large lid that closes the tank off, we thought that the Apple snails wouldn't have enough room to lay eggs out of the water. This week, we noticed hundreds of Apple snail babies in the water with our pond snails, but we had not ever noticed an egg sac. After some investigation, we found that at night when the light turns off, the female apple snail has been crawling into the DOME-SHAPED LID and laying her eggs up ABOVE and BESIDE the light. So, we now have two large egg sacs that will hatch any day now. DOES ANYONE have a suggestion about HOW to control the Apple snail population in this Eclipse tank? The problem is the convex and hollow lid. Thoughts? -- Ted Yep, a freshwater puffer is a misnomer, and they are only freshwater for a short period of their lives. YOu would be better off and be better for the puffer as well to acclimate it over a period of time to sal****er of at least 1.021 SG or better yet 1.023. You can basically go right past the brackish water stage and go from freshwater to 1.023 in a period of approx 1 month or so. Just add a bit of synthetic marine salt(not aquarium type salt) each day (about 1 TSP of it) until the corect SG is achieved. If you have the typical figure 8 or spotted or leopard or green puffers they do so much better and live so much longer in sal****er than they do fresh or brackish water. It will be like a totally different fish. Then you can feed it the proper foods, and have a piece of liverock in there to help keep its teeth trimed down. YOu can feed all kinds of marine foods as well. Those puffers are actually a sal****er species that is sold in the LFS as freshwater types. |
#3
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Yep, a freshwater puffer is a misnomer, and they are only freshwater
.... freshwater types. Thanks for your response, but my question had nothing whatsoever to do with the puffer. The puffer is fine in the 29 gallon freshwater tank, and it has been for years. My question is about the Apple snails (also known as "(colored) mystery snails") in my SECOND 6 gallon Eclipse tank that I use for raising feeder pond snails. Because the Eclipse tank comes with everything built into the lid, the lid has a HUGE CONVEX HOLLOW DOME shape that EVIDENTLY is a great substrate for Apple snail egg sacs. If the silly Eclipse tank was like my 29 gallon tank, with a flat cover just above the water's surface, the Apple snail population would be self controlled because the snails would have no place to attach the eggs. I'm looking for suggestions about how to control the Apple snail population. The pond snails reproduce quickly enough to satisfy my puffer feeding needs, and so I don't need hundreds of small Apple snails too. Thanks -- TEd |
#4
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much longer in sal****er than they do fresh or brackish water. It will
be like a totally different fish. Then you can feed it the proper foods, and have a piece of liverock in there to help keep its teeth trimed down. YOu can feed all kinds of marine foods as well. * Those puffers are actually a sal****er species that is sold in the LFS as freshwater types. Also note that we've never had a problem feeding the puffer. It eats snails, worms, and about everything else that we've heard is normal for a (freshwater) puffer. --Ted |
#5
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On Jun 4, 2:41*pm, Ted Pavlic wrote:
much longer in sal****er than they do fresh or brackish water. It will be like a totally different fish. Then you can feed it the proper foods, and have a piece of liverock in there to help keep its teeth trimed down. YOu can feed all kinds of marine foods as well. * Those puffers are actually a sal****er species that is sold in the LFS as freshwater types. Also note that we've never had a problem feeding the puffer. It eats snails, worms, and about everything else that we've heard is normal for a (freshwater) puffer. --Ted Well in a way my reply had to do with care and feeding of the puffer without the need to fiddle with apple snails or any other snail that can get our of control fairly easily. A few large nassarus snails that have young in a marine environement would be all that puffer ever needed...but evidently the "correct and propper" way to care for those puffers is not a concern of yours. |
#6
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Also note that we've never had a problem feeding the puffer. It eats
snails, worms, and about everything else that we've heard is normal for a (freshwater) puffer. Well in a way my reply had to do with care and feeding of *the puffer without the need to fiddle with apple snails or any other snail that can get our of control fairly easily. A few large nassarus snails that have young in a marine environement would be all that puffer ever needed...but evidently the "correct and propper" way to care for those puffers is not a concern of yours. I am giving the proper care of that puffer. It is a freshwater puffer. It isn't a brackish puffer. You're correct that many fish stores market brackish buffers as freshwater puffers, but this fish *IS* a FRESHWATER species. I'm sure this puffer would TOLERATE brackish water, but PROPER care would be to put it in a freshwater environment (like mine). I'm not having a problem with the puffer. It's a freshwater puffer, and it's a freshwater tank. The Apple snails are *NOT* meant to be feeder snails. I *LIKE* invertebrates. I especially like invertebrates like Apple snails that have very different characteristics. I CHOSE Apple snails BECAUSE of their amphibious characteristics -- that was what was going to control their population. In fact, apple snails are preferred for aquariums SPECIFICALLY BECAUSE they lay their eggs out of the water -- it makes it easy to control their population provided that you don't have some silly Eclipse tank. I appreciate your help with the puffer. I just don't need it. I'm looking for some novel advice on what to do with a crappy Eclipse tank. Thanks -- Ted |
#7
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On Jun 4, 3:34*pm, Ted Pavlic wrote:
snip . I'm looking for some novel advice on what to do with a crappy Eclipse tank. Thanks -- Ted Toss it in the freaking trash then! Buy a decent tank they are cheap.problem solved! |
#8
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DOES ANYONE have a suggestion about HOW to control the Apple snail
population in this Eclipse tank? The problem is the convex and hollow lid. FYI, here are two pictures of the female laying an egg sacs on the inside of the Eclipse lid: http://phaseportrait.blogspot.com/20...n-mystery.html I've never seen a picture of apple snails laying eggs. I've found plenty of pictures of their egg sacs (and them mating), but I've not found any of them actually laying the eggs. Perhaps those pictures will help illustrate the problem. It seems like we need to modify the lid to prevent access to its internals. I don't want to throw away the tank -- it was given to us by someone who was too busy to manage it but didn't want to throw it out. Additionally, because it's an Eclipse tank, throwing it away means throwing away its filter, pump, bio-wheel, and light (all incorporated into the lid). |
#9
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![]() "Ted Pavlic" wrote in message ... FYI, here are two pictures of the female laying an egg sacs on the inside of the Eclipse lid: http://phaseportrait.blogspot.com/20...n-mystery.html ==================== What are you feeding them? Mine never lived more than a week. -- RM.... ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
#10
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FYI, here are two pictures of the female laying an egg sacs on the
inside of the Eclipse lid: http://phaseportrait.blogspot.com/20...pple-snail-gol... ==================== What are you feeding them? Mine never lived more than a week. We drop several algae wafers into the tank every other day. Otherwise, the tank has a few healthy plants (e.g., java ferns) and a small piece of driftwood draped with java moss. We watch the apple snails crawl all over these, but I don't think they're eating them. In particular, we don't notice any holes in the plant leaves. Additionally, we've watched each of the apple snails *devour* a single algae wafer. When the snails aren't eating the wafers (or mating or laying eggs), they crawl all over the tank. We also use the small tank for feeder pond snails (for a freshwater puffer in a different tank). So, there are lots of pond snails in the tank. The apple snails *can* eat dead pond snails, and so that's another possibility. It's worth noting that now that we have the population problem, the pH of the tank is way off. We're working on that. Additionally, because the Eclipse tank is so small and the light is so warm and directly over the surface of the water, the tank is usually at the upper end of the acceptable range for tropical fish. In fact, even at night when the light is off, the temperature seems to hover around 80 degrees Fahrenheit. I can think of no reason why these conditions would be *GOOD* for these snails. In the past, in a larger tank with neutral pH and comfortable temperature, we had no trouble keeping an apple snail alive. [ Additionally, we sprinkle some fish flakes and occasionally some shrimp pellets, but that's mainly for some freshwater shrimp that are also in the tank. I can't imagine the snails are eating those. ] My guess is that the algae thins are the thing that's keeping them alive now. --Ted |
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