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The snails and shrimp look nice. Glad they weren't all DOA.
Scarecrow : I haven't got a brain... only straw.
Dorothy : How can you talk if you haven't got a brain?
Scarecrow: I don't know... But some people without brains do an awful lot of talking... don't they?
Dorothy: Yes, I guess you're right.
If you get these snails to multiply, will you be sharing with fellow GHAC members? hmmm? :wink:
No, they would not be puffer or hummingbird tetra food! 8O
Once the start doing their thing, I will offer up some for a price. These guys only have one baby at a time the way I understand it. The don't lay a whole bunch of eggs like others do.
I read up a bit on them...if they are Tylomelania towutica, like the website says, I think they have one baby at a time, but are pretty much always carrying one on the way. I'm a bit confused, though. The few papers that I did read over cite the differences between the over 30 species found in the Malili lakes as being mainly in the shells, and not the skin. I didn't see anything about some of the crazy colors, like the yellow ones. Unless of course there's some scientific terminology that means "yellow" that I didn't understand.
Well, did a bit more reading last night. Apparently the couple of papers I've been over have not yet tried to describe individual species characteristics, only species types. As a whole, Tylomelania have a great variety of appearances. I did see a mention in the paper I was reading last night of a few types of morphologies with white or yellow dots on their "skin," and even that some are yellow.
Also read that these guys are livebearing, well, in a sense (technically, they're ovoviviparous - learned a new word, lol). Depending on the species, they can carry quite a group of babies growing in them. They are nourished within the mother, and are "born" in an almost assembly line fashion. Pretty cool!
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