Ramshorn Snails
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Ramshorn Snails
Rams-horn snails are a wonderful addition to any aquarium. Their shell is a beautiful natural, ancient shape and they come in a variety of colors and sizes. I have seen varieties of blue, red, brown, golden, yellow, and pink. They eat algae and left over fish food that can make the water dangerous for fish. Snails are great at revealing water quality too. If you see your snails remaining at the surface at the water line and actually trying to climb out of the water then you know the water is not safe for your fish and it is time for a change.
There is a lot of negativity towards aquarium snails because they can over populate easily. Overpopulation usually occurs when there is an over abundance of food, and or there are no natural predators of the snails in the tank. The fact is that most fish will eat the baby snails and the snail eggs if you let them. Even the grown snails will eat their own babies! If over population of snails is ever a problem there is no need for poisons to eradicate them. All one needs to do is put a Clown Loach, which is a type of fish sold at almost any pet store, in the tank with the snails and it will eat all the snails that are smaller than itself. Clown Loaches are passionate when it comes to snails.
Another myth about snails is that they eat all your aquarium plants. This is simply not true. Some smaller snails do eat aquarium plants but not to the point that the plant is destroyed. Rams-horn snails do not eat live plants but dead plants or plant decay. This is very beneficial for keeping your water quality in your fish tank at its optimum levels.
Ramshorn snails have been known to carry a parasite through its life process and eventually end up usually infecting and killing fish. This happens in the wild because the parasite is given the chance to complete it's life process which takes about 30 days. Most aquarium snails you buy have come from aquariums and have been isolated over 30 days so the parasite has not completed its life cycle there fore eraticated. You should always be careful of disposing of aquarium water. Never throw it in storm drains or rivers or lakes. That can lead to introducing foreign plant and wildlife into the natural eco-system which can cause a lot of problems, even lead to the extiction of native species. As always, be clean about things and wash your hands before you work with your fish, or snail tank, and after.
All in all aquarium snails, especially Rams-horn snails for their beauty, are fun safe pets that enhance the aquarium experience. They add a necessary element to your personally created Eco-system.
Ramshorn Facts
Ramshorn Snails breath through lungs and have to go up to the surface for air. They also can carry a bubble of air inside their shell which they can use like a ballast to pop up to the surface of the water or sink down to the bottom of the tank when needed. Ramshorn Snails can live about two years or longer with luck. Most types of these snails grow to be about the size of a quarter or larger. Ramshorn Snails can live in slightly brackish water which make them good tank mates with guppies. Fish that are on the aggressive side usually harass snails endlessly. Sometimes they are even harassed to death by starvation because they won't come out of their shell to eat.
Even though these snails are fun pets some find it beneficial to keep Ramshorn's and breed them to supplement the diet of their other aquatic pets. As already mentioned before, Clown Loaches eat snails, but many other fish like them. Another known snail eater is the Puffer fish.
Snail Eggs
The first snail of this clutch of eggs, in the picture to the right, is ready and will leave the others to make its first trip the the surface for air. The Ramshorn Snails eggs are laid sometimes as duds as you can see in the picture to the right. The egg cluster will simply look empty or jumbled up. Unfortunately, sometimes things just are not meant to be.
Ramshorn snails are hermaphrodites, which means they carry both male and female sex cells in which to create offspring. They do however, need another snail to exchange these cells with so these snails mate. They lay their eggs almost anywhere. On the sides of the fish tank, on the filter, on plants, and even on the backs of their fellow snails shells. The eggs are covered in a tough jelly like substance and are laid below the water line. They will hatch anywhere between 12-40 days depending on water temperature and water conditions.
Care for your snails
Ramshorn Snails appreciate a temperature range of 75-80 degrees. These snails will eat a wide array of vegetables and any decaying plant material, fish food, algae wafers, other snails and fish or snail eggs. Favorites are spinach, romaine lettuce, and algae wafers. Their water should be changed as you would a normal fish tank except when something goes wrong and they start climbing out of the water, then you know its time for a change. Tap water should be treated with aquarium water products to remove toxins and metals. I like the people and pet safe variety like AmQuel+ and NovAqua plus. You will have to keep an eye out for dead snails too, because as they decay they release toxins into the water which can make conditions in the tank unhealthy.
Calcium is important for snails to maintain a healthy strong shell. The water can be supplemented with calcium in several ways. Some people use cuttle bone in the gravel of the tank. Cuttle bone is sold in most stores for birds to get calcium by scratching their beaks on it. You can just bury the cuttle bone half way in the gravel and soft side up, and the snails will absorb the calcium through their foot. Or you can crumble it and distribute it through the gravel so it is not as noticeable. Another way to supplement calcium is with products found at your local pet store like, "Kent Marine Liquid Calcium". Another inventive way to supplement calcium in your fish tank is to bake eggs shells at about 350 degrees until they are brittle and then they can be broken up and sprinkled in the snail tank.
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Insightful Snail Links
- Robyn\'s Snail Species Page
This page is about snails, but it is a large site with a lot of information about the aquatic environment and other species of snails and aquatic animals. - Freshwater Aquarium: Snails Are they safe???, ramshorn snails, mystery snails
This site touches on healthy safe snail raising. - Ramshorn snail Summary
Ramshorn snail. Ramshorn snail summary with 3 pages of encyclopedia entries, research information, and more. - http://images.google.com/images?q=ramshorn+snails&oe=utf-8&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&am
Here are some pictures of all the different kinds of looks Ramshorn snails take on. - www.aqua-fish.net/show.php?h=ramshornsnails









