![]() |
|
#1
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() I need a CUC for my 90g, Only snails no hermits, no crabs.
They will need to be big cuz I vacuum my sand. Plus they'll need to eat detritus, fish waste and algae ![]() ![]() Thanks in advance! |
#2
|
||||
|
||||
![]() I use lots of brittle stars; black ones, pink ones, marbled ones. Just not the big nasty green ones.
__________________
This and that. |
#3
|
||||
|
||||
![]() I love my sand-burrowing snails. Some of them are very pretty with orange spots on their shells, others just plain cream color. They have the bonus of being pretty entertaining.
They remain in the sandbed until there's food around, then they all erupt from the sand bed like little tanks and crawl extremely quickly (amazing speed!) to the food. Once I dropped a clam in (food) and they were all over it in no time. The trigger only got a few bites. So pretty good at searching out dead/extra food stuff. Be careful when siphoning the sandbed. But you can usually see them and their siphons poking out. They are usually about a nickel-size at the store. They grow very slowly, too. |
#4
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() Perfect! Thank you for the answers.
I need the names of the snails I should buy ![]() BUMP! |
#5
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() Get an abalone if you can (Haliotis sp.). I have two in my 120gal and they are hands down the best snail there is. In fact they are now the only snails (apart from some small hitchhikers) that I have in that tank and I've had turbos, astreas, trochus, nassarius, ceriths and a conch. At up to 3" they're quite large but they don't have a huge shell so they don't knock anything over and they wont get stuck on their backs. They also move quite fast (for a snail) and consume more film algae than any other snail I've kept.
__________________
"We shall dive down through black abysses... and in that lair of the Deep Ones we shall dwell amidst wonder and glory forever." - H.P. Lovecraft Old 120gal Tank Journal New 225gal Tank Journal May 2010 TOTM The 10th Annual Prince George Reef Tank Tour |
#6
|
||||
|
||||
![]() tonga nassarius are the fast moving sandbed dwellers. only eat dead things so if u see it on something its dead/dying.
do a grest job of stirring the sand. cerith snails also stir the sand. but they flip easily. margaritas are good for rock/glass. except once it finds glass it usually wont go back to rock. turbos are the biggest next to abalone. but they can also bulldoze so make sure frags are anchored. |
#7
|
||||
|
||||
![]() I have Tigertail cuc, tonga and small nassa snails, fighting and other small conchs(Love these guys), Olive snails, mudflat snails, Cerith snails, brittle stars, red stripe trochus snails, star and other astrea snails, annular ring cowries and abalone. . I have enough of all these that there is no need to vacume or clean anything other than the glass once and a while. I can't even remember the last time I vaccumed the tank. I has to be at least a couple of years.
I'm not a big fan of turbos because of the size they get and they turn into bulldozers. Urchins? Well depends on the urchin(benifits/risks). Most margarita snails come from cooler water so usually don't do well.
__________________
72 gal bowfromt mixed reef sps dominated, 25 gal mineral mud type sump/refugium Skimmerless 2x250 14000k phoenix hqi 2x96 pc actinic, 50x flow |