![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I wrote last week about my apple nail just floating. Well, it still is
floating and now the shell which is usually a yellowish color is now getting speckled white. I took the snail out and touched it and it moved, so it is still alive. But 1-1/2 weeks of constant floating? |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() ChristyLynn wrote: I wrote last week about my apple nail just floating. Well, it still is floating and now the shell which is usually a yellowish color is now getting speckled white. I took the snail out and touched it and it moved, so it is still alive. But 1-1/2 weeks of constant floating? As stated in an earlier reply, apple snails do have a tendancy to "float", but in my experience (I am not an apple snail expert), this seems excessive. What is your KH? Calcium is the main ingredient of KH and without a proper KH above 80 ppm (or more), any snail will have difficulty generating a healthy shell. You may also have an infection, of which you are limited in what you can treat with for this; I would suggest Pimafix, but others here may have better suggestions. Carl |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"carlrs" wrote
What is your KH? Calcium is the main ingredient of KH and without a proper KH above 80 ppm (or more), any snail will have difficulty generating a healthy shell. I have well water and I just did a test for the KH and it is very very low. My test kit stated to count how many drops of test solution would make the aquarium water in the test tube bright yellow. It was medium yellow at 35.8 and brighter yellow at 53.7. So I am to assume I probably should not have snails. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"ChristyLynn" wrote in
: "carlrs" wrote What is your KH? Calcium is the main ingredient of KH and without a proper KH above 80 ppm (or more), any snail will have difficulty generating a healthy shell. I have well water and I just did a test for the KH and it is very very low. My test kit stated to count how many drops of test solution would make the aquarium water in the test tube bright yellow. It was medium yellow at 35.8 and brighter yellow at 53.7. So I am to assume I probably should not have snails. Get some aragonite sand, normally used as substrate in sal****er aquariums. Rinse thoroughly 1/4 to 1/2 cup of sand per 10 gallons of tank volume, and sift it over the surface of your regular substrate. As the aragonite dissolves, it'll slowly adjust your KH upwards. The extra buffering capacity can also help mitigate future pH problems with your tank. If you have fish species that prefer soft, acidic water (discus, cardinal tetras, others) don't tinker with your KH, just make do without invertebrates. With your apple snail in the state its in, its questionable whether you can save it, but the above can be a general path to take. A bit more buffering capacity is always a good thing, too. Good luck! Regards, DaveZ Atom Weaver |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() ChristyLynn wrote: I have well water and I just did a test for the KH and it is very very low. My test kit stated to count how many drops of test solution would make the aquarium water in the test tube bright yellow. It was medium yellow at 35.8 and brighter yellow at 53.7. So I am to assume I probably should not have snails. Well water is common here in So. Oregon too. There are many ways to correct this problem. My preferred method (which I have used for years on my aquarium service route) is Wonder shells. They add needed calcium and many necessary electrolytes too. Another often misunderstood point is that ALL fish need calcium too, even soft water fish, which means water totally depleted of calcium is unhealthy for them. I have kept discus for years, and Always made sure calcium was bio available to them (there are ways to do this without drastically altering the pH upwards). For more information about calcium, please read this URL: http://kh-aquarium.blogspot.com/ Carl |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "carlrs" wrote in message ups.com... ChristyLynn wrote: I have well water and I just did a test for the KH and it is very very low. My test kit stated to count how many drops of test solution would make the aquarium water in the test tube bright yellow. It was medium yellow at 35.8 and brighter yellow at 53.7. So I am to assume I probably should not have snails. Well water is common here in So. Oregon too. There are many ways to correct this problem. My preferred method (which I have used for years on my aquarium service route) is Wonder shells. They add needed calcium and many necessary electrolytes too. Another often misunderstood point is that ALL fish need calcium too, even soft water fish, which means water totally depleted of calcium is unhealthy for them. I have kept discus for years, and Always made sure calcium was bio available to them (there are ways to do this without drastically altering the pH upwards). For more information about calcium, please read this URL: http://kh-aquarium.blogspot.com/ Carl When making up my fish food I put a scoop of calc carb powder in to simulate the 'bones' of the fish food. For snails you can often feed types of chook (chicken) food. Often the layer pellets have shell grit in them too. I would probably feed the floater to a puffer/cray or big loach.... after I tinkered around with it to figure out what it's problem is. Not exactly what you wanted to hear tho I imagine. The cheapest substrate you could probably get would be coarse shell grit for poultry to eat. A good rinse and a few kg in the tank or a smaller bag in the filter and you would be set keep water changes below 50% and the water should stay nicely buffered. consider putting shellgrit/coral/limestone/marble in the tank, even a small amount can help slow a dangerous ph crash. too much as mentioned before can be detrimental to some acid water loving fish but they are way way in the minority hey to change the ph really fast you can use epsom salt for GH and bicarb soda for KH. test, calculate, then mix in aquarium water and add a small amount over a few days. try avoid more than .3pH shifts in 24 hours if it can be avoided for delicate fish. apple snails are quite hardy creatures when given a varied diet too, applesnails escaping the tank is usually split between wrong water temp/pH and them being hungry in my experience. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
strange apple snail behavior | Peter Demski | General | 2 | May 9th 05 02:12 AM |
Apple Snail laying eggs | Scott M. | General | 11 | July 29th 04 04:00 AM |
Apple snail eggs----. question???// | WilsonKKW | General | 2 | July 20th 04 02:38 PM |
Added Apple Snail to Malawi tank. | Jeff Spicoli | Cichlids | 1 | October 23rd 03 02:14 AM |
Zone 5 - Apple snail eggs | Heather | General | 5 | September 29th 03 08:04 AM |