badflash wrote:I'm sure that isn't the case here.
What isn't the case? That she might have failed and not reported it? Why are you so sure about that? You don't need to be a gulf coast "wacco" to have issues with failures. Most "normal" people actually do. Whatever she did with the colors of the brigs etc. has nothing to do with facing failures.
It's just common sense that someone who really has bred these animals would report it, even if it takes one or two pictures and a short post. Takes just a few minutes. You will find a few minutes in 8 months to do this no matter how busy you are. Looks like she had no problem making another 163 posts since she first posted the "Nerite Success" story.
When I look at a given setup/situation, I don't really care about the qualifications or reputation of the person. I use my common sense, experience and logic to evaluate the setup/situation. And I am telling you that no nerite snail veliger will make it to adulthood in that setup with no phytoplankton feedings and a hungry goby scouring the tank for zooplankton (which is what the snail veligers are). It's just not going to work. Would that work for shrimp larvae? No. So why should it work for snail veligers?
Plus, don't give people credit automatically just because there is nobody around to correct them. After I showed you how to acclimate MTS to full saltwater (which at that point nobody in the hobby had a clue about...and I mean nobody, snail "expert" or not) and you went and talked about it in the snail forum, she did not believe it was possible that they could live in saltwater and then proceeded to tell you that if it is possible that they should be acclimated over months.

(It only takes a few days...just like in nature). All it would have taken to not make such uninformed comments would be to 1. search the scientific literature about the salinity tolerance of thiarid snails 2. do some experiments yourself. Now go back to your thread there and see for yourself if she even made a *single* post congratulating you or admitting she was wrong after you successfully acclimated the MTS to full saltwater using my method AND they started breeding like I said they would. She never made such a post. Besides running this forum here I am also quite adept at human psychology so I notice such patterns as they will undoubtedly repeat themselves in the future...as they have in her "Nerite Success" thread without followup. Many people just don't like to be proven wrong or admit failures/mistakes (especially if they have a "reputation" to hold up and "followers" looking up to them). It's a real psychological issue and probably the No. 1 reason why such people will never really get the whole picture. To learn and advance you NEED to make mistakes (after you have done all the research and preparation of course), ADMIT them, LEARN from them and move on. It's really the only way.
I'm not here to bash anyone. I'm just saying that just relying on someone's "reputation" is just not enough when it comes to hard proof. The proof just needs to be there. Nobody in science accepts someone's reputation, over hard proof either. So, unless I see a setup that actually makes sense from a common sense and scientific point of view AND I see pictures of baby nerites from veliger state through young adults (as I show on my Halocaridina rubra page for example) then I (and most others with common sense and scientific background/thinking) will say/assume that nobody has bred them yet.
The bottom line is that the most challenging issue in keeping any larvae alive is the diet in combination with keeping the water clean despite the copious feedings. If those problems have not been solved, then you can forget about putting a goby and macroalgae in a tiny tank and hoping that little snails will magically appear after having survived the lack of food and the appetite of the goby.