Hey all! I noticed today that on the glass of my water portion of the crab tank, there is alot of khaki scum-like algae. It's also on the rocks etc. Went to the petshop today and bought two 'freshwater snails' (no idea of species). Will these guys eat this scum?
Was going to buy a feeder crayfish (only small) in the hope he'd eat scum too but the pet store bloke reckoned the crayfish would attack the snails. Thoughts?
Random Freshwater Snails and Crabs?
- Neonshrimp
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- badflash
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Water changes and general cleaning are the best answer to this problem. Otherwise you end up like me. I started with a 10 gallon tank growing triops. I went to a pond to get them some live food. I ended up witha very interesting plant (riccia) that grew like crazy and started selling it. Then it got algae, so I got some shrimp to eat the algae. They didn't work, but got hooked on the shrimp. Then I got some endler's live brearers, got hooked on them too, and they didn't work either. Got some dwarf crayfish for planaria and pest snails. That didn't work and got hooked on them. Once you start down this road, no telling where it will end. I have a 300 gallon pool in my basement and more tanks than I'm willing to admit too.
- Neonshrimp
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Talk about being WAY late on this topic I haven't been on these boards lately.
What worries me is this: the word "freshwater" and "crabs" in the same paragraph. RARELY will you ever get a TRUE freshwater crab. Most, if not all, are brackishwater crabs. What species, exactly do you own? I would advise, for their long-term well-being and avoidance of premature death, that you slowly increase the salinity of your water over a few weeks until you convert to low-end brackish.
That being said, the only easily-available snails that can be acclimated to brackish are malaysian trumpet snails. They are OK as far as algae eaters goes.
What worries me is this: the word "freshwater" and "crabs" in the same paragraph. RARELY will you ever get a TRUE freshwater crab. Most, if not all, are brackishwater crabs. What species, exactly do you own? I would advise, for their long-term well-being and avoidance of premature death, that you slowly increase the salinity of your water over a few weeks until you convert to low-end brackish.
That being said, the only easily-available snails that can be acclimated to brackish are malaysian trumpet snails. They are OK as far as algae eaters goes.
They are 100% freshwater crabs. They are found 100s of kilometres inland from the coast in Australia. The nearest saltwater is 100s of kilometres away. They live in dried up creek beds that flood annually during the wet season.fishbone wrote:Talk about being WAY late on this topic I haven't been on these boards lately.
What worries me is this: the word "freshwater" and "crabs" in the same paragraph. RARELY will you ever get a TRUE freshwater crab. Most, if not all, are brackishwater crabs. What species, exactly do you own? I would advise, for their long-term well-being and avoidance of premature death, that you slowly increase the salinity of your water over a few weeks until you convert to low-end brackish.