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![]() Dr. Shimek, who is kind of the expert on these things says they are not OK.
They are predators. They search the sand and rock and eat all the small critters that are necessary for the sand bed including the larvae of pods which are essential food for some of the fish like mandarins who need they to survive. I don't know why some LFS continue to stock them. Thanks for asking before you buy. |
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#3
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![]() [quote=phyto4life;460017]thanks for the info I'll look into it so I can start picking them out of my tank I just noticed them in my tank in the last 30 days they really spread fast
This is a bubble bee snail. http://www.liveaquaria.com/product/p...565&pcatid=565 |
#4
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![]() This is a bubble bee snail.
http://www.liveaquaria.com/product/p...565&pcatid=565 yes those are the one's I have I read the same thing recently and I am getting rid of all the ones I have by just picking them out when I see them but I think I'll have to keep turning rock's around to to get them all out because they are every where I have noticed a huge decline in slugs and copepods over the last few month's since I really noticed that they spread Last edited by phyto4life; 11-05-2009 at 05:03 PM. |
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#6
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The live aquaria site is an online fish/coral seller. The information always underestimates, the size requirements, difficulty to keep etcetera as they are in the business of selling reef stuff. Bristle worms are a good for a reef tank as they eat all the detritus and dead stuff. |
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![]() I've seen something similar to a bumblebee snail in my tank on occasion, although most of the time it's out of sight in the rockwork or sand. I believe mine has a yellowish shell with only a single black stripe, not multiple. It does have the 'proboscis' like appendage at the front though. It's been a while since I researched anything on similar specimens but I recall my findings were that it is a nassarius, stays relatively small and is considered generally beneficial. I also found that they can be mistaken for something called a 'whelk' which can grow relatively large and is much more of a hazard in our systems. I think if yours are nassarius, you shouldn't be overly concerned unless they are overwhelming in numbers, which as mentioned, could decimate other beneficial life in your sandbed, LR, etc.
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