Snails in a piranha tank... a problem? or a solution?

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Snails have an upside and a downside depending on the variety. I've had tons of unwanteds come in on live plants.They definatly don't solve algae problems but do eat leftover foods. Currently I use Assassin Snails w/ my P's to clean up the unwanted snails. The best defense against algae is good surface agitation, fresh oxygenated water, no direct sunlight, no organic build up, and lighting control.
 
what ever you do don't get snails they will over run your tank, had it happen to me a couple times now had to break the whole tank down and clean it to get rid of them....
 
Fishermoe14;3857820; said:
magfloat should work just fine if its only algae that is on there...

snails dont really clean well either..

I dis agree i had 2 mystery snails they never stopped cleanin
 
fishy12;3862313; said:
I dis agree i had 2 mystery snails they never stopped cleanin


ive kept prob 10 apple (mystery) snails... they dont stop cleaning but they only rasp on the glass in certain spots... leaving close to 50% of the stuff behind... dont get me wrong.. they were super cool and got huge :D but dont do as well a job at cleaning algae as a magfloat...

i would say bristlenose pleco but in a P tank thats risky.. without a P they are great :D able to clean a 75 single handedly in less than 3 days...
 
BigShawn;3862264; said:
what ever you do don't get snails they will over run your tank, had it happen to me a couple times now had to break the whole tank down and clean it to get rid of them....

An overpopulation of snails is a good indicator of (sorry to single you out here) poor tank hygiene, as their propagation is directly proportional to leftover fish food. Instead of trying to get rid of them you should've been grateful that they prevented that leftover food from rotting and ruining your water.

Bottom line: There is a reason why there are snails in nature. Biodiversity is beneficial, and fishkeepers should embrace it.

HarleyK
 
HarleyK;3865303; said:
An overpopulation of snails is a good indicator of (sorry to single you out here) poor tank hygiene, as their propagation is directly proportional to leftover fish food. Instead of trying to get rid of them you should've been grateful that they prevented that leftover food from rotting and ruining your water.

Bottom line: There is a reason why there are snails in nature. Biodiversity is beneficial, and fishkeepers should embrace it.

HarleyK


id embrace it if they didnt clog my filters... lol
 
HarleyK;3865303; said:
An overpopulation of snails is a good indicator of (sorry to single you out here) poor tank hygiene, as their propagation is directly proportional to leftover fish food. Instead of trying to get rid of them you should've been grateful that they prevented that leftover food from rotting and ruining your water.

Bottom line: There is a reason why there are snails in nature. Biodiversity is beneficial, and fishkeepers should embrace it.

HarleyK


Thank you, I don't mind if its to teach, that was in my late teens (42 now) I still won't get any, good or bad water...........

Today I would say if you need them then maybe you not cleaning you tank properly, just a thought....mo
 
Otherone;3862127; said:
Snails have an upside and a downside depending on the variety. I've had tons of unwanteds come in on live plants.They definatly don't solve algae problems but do eat leftover foods. Currently I use Assassin Snails w/ my P's to clean up the unwanted snails. The best defense against algae is good surface agitation, fresh oxygenated water, no direct sunlight, no organic build up, and lighting control.

any ideas about where to get the assassin snail?
 
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