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  • Snail-free plant advice?

    Whenever I see live plants in the LFS, there are always snails in the tank with the plants.
    I don't want snails. Not ever (again).
    So far, I've gotten the prepacked plants from places like Petco and Petsmart (yes, I know ... you have to be careful 'cuz they will sell plants that aren't fully aquatic) but I'd like more variety and, frankly, the quality of these plants seems to be lacking.
    So ... what to do? How do I make sure that the snails don't make it into my tank? I don't want to use any chemicals.
    -j-

    Don't ask me, I don't know. I'm just visiting the reality and can't wait to go home.

  • #2
    Someone with more experience may be able to chime in shortly, but many use baths/dips. I've heard of everything from a potassium permangenate bath to a salt dip.
    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.

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    • #3
      Re: Snail-free plant advice?

      Originally posted by armthehomeless View Post
      Someone with more experience may be able to chime in shortly, but many use baths/dips. I've heard of everything from a potassium permangenate bath to a salt dip.
      +1, just google: aquatic plant snail dip.
      30Long: L134 Leopard Frog Plecos X16, Corydoras Sterbai X9, Endlers X4

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      • #4
        Tim is being modest. He knows the ropes of plants.
        210gPetrochromis Macrognatus Green 'Nsumbu
        125g Mdoka White Lip

        "Success is the willingness to fail"

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        • #5
          Tim does have some nice plants and snails but not them little roach snails. I'm sure those are the ones you are talking about... Tim has snails that eat those....
          Nothing Kills Evil Like a Sharp Stick...

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          • #6
            Originally posted by TexSun View Post
            +1, just google: aquatic plant snail dip.
            Thanks, did that. Potassium permangenate seems decidedly unpleasant. I guess I'll give the salt bath a shot. I also have botias in both tanks so hopefully they'll find any survivors tasty. And it'd be cool to see them eat the snails also.
            -j-

            Don't ask me, I don't know. I'm just visiting the reality and can't wait to go home.

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            • #7
              2 things. Get some assain snails. or don't plant them in your tank right away. Put them in a holding tank so you can get rid of the snails before they go to your main tank.
              Guppies:
              Hi-fin pepper Cory's, Black Cory's, Long Fin Golden Aneus, Swordtails, some lyretail(RREA's, Red, Albino Koi, Red & Gold Tux), Different types of BN plecos(albino, calico, long fin, blue eyed short & long fin)
              Mystery Snails, Yellow Shrimp, CPDs

              HAS Master Aquatic Gardener awarded 1997
              HAS Master Fish Breeder awarded 1998

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              • #8
                PP isnt that bad but and works well but i have never justified rebuying it for the occasional dip. i tend to do a fast bleach dip and for the pond snails and let assassins take out the MTS. make sure you rinse the plants well after dipping.
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                • #9
                  You won't be able to fully eradicate snails in a planted tank. Accept them.
                  Houston Area Aquatic Plant Society
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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Roujin View Post
                    You won't be able to fully eradicate snails in a planted tank. Accept them.
                    i'm not sure about that. i dont consider myself an expert but i can honestly say that i have never introduced a pest species of snail into my aquariums if i took the time to process the plants. i can also honestly say that although i infested a couple aquaria with MTS a number of months ago, i now doubt if even a single one exists in there due to the diligence of the assassin snails and snail traps. i currently have a pond snail population that i introduced in one tank from a wild collected plant, and as they grow out the assassins take care of them too. with some patience on my part, i expect them to be gone in a couple months as well.

                    one note on assassins, i have never noticed them taking prey much different in size from them until last night when one took a huge ramshorn that was four times its mass. thats another sign that the MTS are gone. i am curious if they will go after nerites now or just eat each other. or maybe i should feed them lol.
                    75G Standard - High Light Planted Community Fish
                    28G Aquapod - Medium Light Planted Shrimp & Microrasboras
                    12G Eclipse - Bonsai Planted Betta & Shrimp
                    29G Standard - Vivarium w/ Red Devil Crabs
                    45G Exo-Terra - Terrarium w/ Hermit Crabs (in progress)
                    33G Cubish - Vivarium w/ D.auratus 'blue & bronze'

                    GHAC Member

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                    • #11
                      I used to use a bleach dip. The more hardy plants can tolerate about 5 minutes in a 20:1 solution (20 parts water to 1 part bleach). But this will kill the more tender plants. A good remedy that I used is a 40:1 and that seemed to work for everything except a few of the less common pests (ostracods, for example, and some of the thicker alga). Just be sure to rinse very well and then dip into plain water mixed with dechlorinator before adding into the tank.

                      A more labor intensive method is to meticulously inspect each leaf/stem for any eggs or snail and hand remove.
                      Houston Area Aquatic Plant Society
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                      • #12
                        If you dont want to deal with chemicals and you regularly buy plants. Set up a 5 gallon tank with 3-5 dwarf puffers and some snail eating loaches. leave the plant for about 4 weeks in the tank, even if you dont see snails. The eggs will hatch and the young snails will all be eaten.

                        I've not tried this but I did have a dwarf puffer tank and I never seemed to have enough snails for them.
                        Emerald Green Rainbowfish
                        Yellow Rabbit Snails

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Totenkampf View Post
                          i'm not sure about that. i dont consider myself an expert but i can honestly say that i have never introduced a pest species of snail into my aquariums if i took the time to process the plants. i can also honestly say that although i infested a couple aquaria with MTS a number of months ago, i now doubt if even a single one exists in there due to the diligence of the assassin snails and snail traps. i currently have a pond snail population that i introduced in one tank from a wild collected plant, and as they grow out the assassins take care of them too. with some patience on my part, i expect them to be gone in a couple months as well.

                          one note on assassins, i have never noticed them taking prey much different in size from them until last night when one took a huge ramshorn that was four times its mass. thats another sign that the MTS are gone. i am curious if they will go after nerites now or just eat each other. or maybe i should feed them lol.
                          Mine have never actually attacked a significantly larger snail (ie Tylomelania or Mystery). Mine do breed very well, but as I get a wave of young offspring only a few seem to make it to adulthood, so I assume they predate on each other. If I hand off a few then others grow larger and there seems to be a perfect median number of them in the tank. I have added tons of plants to this tank and have never seen anything survive their onslaught. MTS did survive in the Pea puffer tank, though those were buried in the substrate. Any that surfaced for long were quickly dispatched.
                          In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king.
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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Roujin View Post
                            You won't be able to fully eradicate snails in a planted tank. Accept them.
                            Not true. I have a moderately-planted 125 gal with no snails... except the one nerite I put in it. The tank was infested with ramshorns and mts. I replaced the substrate and dipped all the plants in a salt dip.

                            Mark
                            What are the facts? Again and again and again--what are the facts? Shun wishful thinking, ignore devine revelation, forget what "the stars foretell", avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable "verdict of history"--what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your only clue.

                            Robert Anson Heinlein

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                            • #15
                              I love my snails,just grow a carpet and you'll never see them

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