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#1
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![]() Hey bought a crocea clam and have never owned one before. It small and I have it on the sandbed trying to get it attach to a frag disk. I have dremmled out of the frag disk for it to sit in but over the course of a day it is off the disk sittin in the sand again. From my understanding these should not be sitting right in the sand. Any ideas on how to get this bugger to attach without moving?
I have now placed it in a small Tupperware on the frag disk hoping it attached. This a good idea? |
#2
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![]() I think it ok as long as you lighting is strong enough but I'm no expert on clams
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150 gallon reef mostly softies/lps. 50 gal sump with bubble magnus skimmer/ Led fuge light/refugium/ 1200 return and tunze powerheads. Dual pharoah main tank led.4 pump dosser. 550 gallon stingray tank water drip system 150 bowfront. 75 turtle tank, many others |
#3
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![]() Lighting is very strong I actually have it in a little bit lower light right now to acclimate. I'm thinking it might be the flow that is not allowing it to attach so I turned down my flow in the tank for now. It was rocking back and forth on the frags plug in the Tupperware container. It's not swaying now.
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#4
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![]() I have always kept clams in my sand bed with no issues at all I think people are worried about them being hurt in some way thru the foot by a worm or something.
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#5
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![]() Quote:
http://www.jlaquatics.com/thrive-aquatics-clam-kit.html |
#6
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![]() Quote:
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#7
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![]() Clams don't like it when the current moves the mantle. If the current is rocking the clam then find a different spot or change flow pattern.
Several reasons I avoided putting clams on sand; worms attacking the clam from underneath, they blow the sand around when they suddenly close and they will attach to the bottom of the tank unless you have a 3"+ deep sandbed. It's best to give the clam something small to attach to. A small rock up to 4" or shells are fine. This is so that if you need to manually remove parasitic snails the clam can be easily removed from the tank. Clams can firmly attach in 16hrs if they are healthy and happy. New clams will jerk their shells closed if a fish passes near, this can cause them to tip over etc. Cleaner shrimp may irritate clams. Crocea's like the most amount of light. I have seen them under full sun in 6" of water. I would put it in a brightly lit spot within a day. If your clam is smaller than 2" I would feed it some phytoplankton. Hope that helps.
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www.oceanfreshaquarium.com/foz-down.html - Foz Down - an easy way to eliminate algae outbreaks caused by Phosphate and bring back the fun of reef keeping. |
#8
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![]() wll heres the update. I ended up buying that thrive clam kit and placed the clam in on of the concaved stones provided. It was quite happy for the few days. Was feeding the tank with phyto as well. This morning i found it on its side in the sand beside the concave stone. I placed it back in the stone but it looks to be a goner.... Oh well $200 bucks down the drain haha just part of the hobby.
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#9
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![]() Sorry for your loss.
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www.oceanfreshaquarium.com/foz-down.html - Foz Down - an easy way to eliminate algae outbreaks caused by Phosphate and bring back the fun of reef keeping. |
#10
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![]() That sucks, I hope my maxima doesn't end up the same.
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