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Theodoxus - my love

Posted: Sun Feb 03, 2008 10:01 am
by muschi
Hello gang,
I'm new around, so please don't pull out the guns!
I thought I will start a clear separate topic only on Theodoxus, so it can be dealed with it separately from other Neritid species.

Allex, Anna and the Deutsche Herrn ( with a long nickname), thank you for your interesting posts. Here is what I can contribute with:

a. Theodoxus fluviatilis can reach very large densities in nature. If you are in the right place you can collect it by pounds. Their shell design is splendid and they go perfectly with our shrimp tanks. Long time ago I've seen huge populations in the Danube Delta. Took some home and they breed nicely in plain tap water (average hardness).
b. They can be collected in land locked freshwater habitats, so no need for any marine stage or such.
c. They were reported also upstream Danube into Hungary, Austria and Germany.
c. For the Swedish members there is a paper on Theodoxus which mentions thousands of individuals per sq meter. I just emailed the author for a copy of the full article. The abstract mentions the name of the lake they studied, so maybe some of the Swedish members live in the vicinity :?:
d. I will do a scientific database search and report back on findings.
e. As Anna implied, Theodoxus can become an obsession!
f. Does anyone keep Theodoxus in US?

kind regards to all good people around
dami

Re: Theodoxus - my love

Posted: Sun Feb 03, 2008 12:47 pm
by muschi
The post refers (initially) to Theodoxus fluviatilis. Sorry for not being specific.

Re: Theodoxus - my love

Posted: Sun Feb 03, 2008 1:02 pm
by badflash
I don't know of anyone in the USA. but they seem like wonderful snails. I've seen the topic a few times in the past. Try the searce for Theodoxus fluviatilis and see what you get.

Re: Theodoxus - my love

Posted: Wed Feb 06, 2008 12:37 am
by Mustafa
I've had them when I was in NYC and they bred for a while. I lost them (along with my shrimp in that tank) when the tank got unbalanced (biologically) and the water parameters went haywire. They are very small snails and reproduce quite slowly in aquaria. I'm not aware of anyone having and/or regularly breeding these snails here in the US.

Re: Theodoxus - my love

Posted: Wed Feb 20, 2008 7:07 pm
by shadohfrog
There are some good pictures of this species on the following link: http://snailstales.blogspot.com/2007/01 ... doxus.html
Image

Re: Theodoxus - my love

Posted: Mon Mar 03, 2008 1:12 pm
by Neonshrimp
:o Very nice picture, I am thinking about keeping a snail only planted tank with the many different types of snails out there. I will need to figure out a way to control the population as we know how it can boom with overfeeding :roll:

Re: Theodoxus - my love

Posted: Sat Mar 08, 2008 3:57 pm
by JK
One of the things I like about Theodoxus is the way their population is limited by the availability of algae. Mine breed like mad until the glass is spotless.......the self limiting snail... perfect. :D

Re: Theodoxus - my love

Posted: Sun Mar 09, 2008 1:00 pm
by Neonshrimp
JK wrote:One of the things I like about Theodoxus is the way their population is limited by the availability of algae. Mine breed like mad until the glass is spotless.......the self limiting snail... perfect. :D
:o This just makes them even attractive and useful addition to tanks. Thanks for sharing your experience with them :-)