Post by MADMIKE on Sept 26, 2006 16:14:46 GMT -5
Mystery Snail
Origin South America
Albino Origin Reared in captivity
Sexing Monoecious
Temperature Immaterial
Attitude Eats day and night
Security Carries it on back
Foods Any food on bottom
Water Needs hard water
Incubation 2 to 3 weeks
Brood Size About 100 eggs
Breeding Eggs laid above water
Appeal. Mystery snails add an element of intrigue to your aquaria. Their waving tentacles and ever-chewing radula (scraping tongue) look rather interesting. They also clean up excess food – a service that keeps tanks healthy. Cleaning up excess food puts them in the "must keep" category.
Food. In the wild, mystery snails eat algae, plant leaves, and anything else they find on the bottom. In captivity, mystery snails eat the same thing (if they have to) but prefer fish food – a much more nutritious menu. Oddly enough, they do best in planted aquaria. They chew on plant leaves a little bit but much prefer fish food.
Good Competers. Mystery snails can smell food in the water. They quickly learn to climb to the top and skim food off the surface. They form a food gathering funnel with their foot and pull food into it.
Good Mixers. Mystery snails get along with anything except fish eggs. (They will finish off a spawn of angel eggs overnight.) On the other side of the coin, nippy fish torture them unmercifully by chewing on their tentacles and eyestalks. Keep them away from snail eaters such as clown loaches, cichlids, and puffers.
Apple Snails: Ampullaria gigas looks just like a mystery snail but grows much larger – as big as a standard baseball. Apple snails are unbelievably prodigious plant eaters. Apple snails eat plants AND sponge filters.
Trapdoor Snails. The trapdoor snails <Bug,%20Snails,%20Trapdoor.htm> (livebearing snails kept in fish ponds) also look much like mystery snails. Trapdoor snails, unlike the Ampullariae, breathe underwater thru their gills. They are also destructive plant eaters in your aquaria. Trapdoor snails do fine in plant-free aquaria. Pond keepers use them to control algae.
Water. Mystery snails thrive in hard, alkaline water (like comes out of our Des Moines faucets -- carbonates 220 ppm). Soft, acid water tends to dissolve their shells (make pits in them or turn them white). Add NovAqua to remove the chlorine and any heavy metals. Salt and copper both will stress and/or kill mystery snails.
Snail Killers. The commercial snail poisons (and some medications) kill mystery snails because they contain copper. We find these only partially effective. And when they work, you have a layer of dead snails on your aquarium floor. Most people want to kill the little fast-reproducing pond snails as opposed to the more desirable mystery snails.
Snorkelers. Since they breathe air, mystery snails can live in low oxygen waters. Still, they prefer clean water. They take in oxygen at the water’s surface thru an extendible air tube.
Breeding. Two mystery snails kept together will usually figure out how to breed on their own. The secret? Lower your water level three to five inches. They crawl out of the water and lay their eggs above the water line. The egg mass looks like pink froth nearly as large as your little finger. Keep them humid and they hatch in two to three weeks. The babies fall into the water and rock and roll from day one. They grow best when kept in tanks separate from the adults. Little ones crawl inside the shells of adult mysteries and irritate them. Typical kids.
Origin South America
Albino Origin Reared in captivity
Sexing Monoecious
Temperature Immaterial
Attitude Eats day and night
Security Carries it on back
Foods Any food on bottom
Water Needs hard water
Incubation 2 to 3 weeks
Brood Size About 100 eggs
Breeding Eggs laid above water
Appeal. Mystery snails add an element of intrigue to your aquaria. Their waving tentacles and ever-chewing radula (scraping tongue) look rather interesting. They also clean up excess food – a service that keeps tanks healthy. Cleaning up excess food puts them in the "must keep" category.
Food. In the wild, mystery snails eat algae, plant leaves, and anything else they find on the bottom. In captivity, mystery snails eat the same thing (if they have to) but prefer fish food – a much more nutritious menu. Oddly enough, they do best in planted aquaria. They chew on plant leaves a little bit but much prefer fish food.
Good Competers. Mystery snails can smell food in the water. They quickly learn to climb to the top and skim food off the surface. They form a food gathering funnel with their foot and pull food into it.
Good Mixers. Mystery snails get along with anything except fish eggs. (They will finish off a spawn of angel eggs overnight.) On the other side of the coin, nippy fish torture them unmercifully by chewing on their tentacles and eyestalks. Keep them away from snail eaters such as clown loaches, cichlids, and puffers.
Apple Snails: Ampullaria gigas looks just like a mystery snail but grows much larger – as big as a standard baseball. Apple snails are unbelievably prodigious plant eaters. Apple snails eat plants AND sponge filters.
Trapdoor Snails. The trapdoor snails <Bug,%20Snails,%20Trapdoor.htm> (livebearing snails kept in fish ponds) also look much like mystery snails. Trapdoor snails, unlike the Ampullariae, breathe underwater thru their gills. They are also destructive plant eaters in your aquaria. Trapdoor snails do fine in plant-free aquaria. Pond keepers use them to control algae.
Water. Mystery snails thrive in hard, alkaline water (like comes out of our Des Moines faucets -- carbonates 220 ppm). Soft, acid water tends to dissolve their shells (make pits in them or turn them white). Add NovAqua to remove the chlorine and any heavy metals. Salt and copper both will stress and/or kill mystery snails.
Snail Killers. The commercial snail poisons (and some medications) kill mystery snails because they contain copper. We find these only partially effective. And when they work, you have a layer of dead snails on your aquarium floor. Most people want to kill the little fast-reproducing pond snails as opposed to the more desirable mystery snails.
Snorkelers. Since they breathe air, mystery snails can live in low oxygen waters. Still, they prefer clean water. They take in oxygen at the water’s surface thru an extendible air tube.
Breeding. Two mystery snails kept together will usually figure out how to breed on their own. The secret? Lower your water level three to five inches. They crawl out of the water and lay their eggs above the water line. The egg mass looks like pink froth nearly as large as your little finger. Keep them humid and they hatch in two to three weeks. The babies fall into the water and rock and roll from day one. They grow best when kept in tanks separate from the adults. Little ones crawl inside the shells of adult mysteries and irritate them. Typical kids.