Jump to content

Incubating Nerite Snail Eggs


Chiquarius

Recommended Posts

Hello,

I have two zebra nerite snails who have been busy laying eggs. I have learned that these will not hatch unless they are incubated in brackish water. I’d like to give that a try, if realistic.

Last week, I noticed a nice trail of eggs on one of the rocks. I was hoping to place this rock in a gallon jar of brackish water to incubate.

For one, the eggs are already at most two weeks old, currently immersed in fresh water. I was wondering, can anyone tell me if they are still viable?

Also, how much salt should I add to water? Can I use untreated pure sea salt from the grocery store, or do I need a special aquarium brand?

Are there other conditions I need to aim to meet in my incubation column/jar? (oxygenation, temperature, etc.)

I would love any wisdom from anyone who has had luck hatching nerite snails before.

Thanks,

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I had a look in my book and to summarise, it may be easy to get the eggs to larvae stage but then it is unlikely to work 'they feed on microscopic unicellular organisms' at that stage. They like a PH over 7. Of coarse there are quite a few vids out there claiming that they can breed in freshwater but I think these claims are definitely false, one had some very tiny snails (probably introduced with plants etc and looked like common pond snails) which looked a different shape and obviously weren't, and what happened to the larvae stage????

I can't even see much out there on the www even, so it must be difficult and probably not generally worth doing, but this seems to have some good info to help you decide whether to give it a go,

https://www.fishkeepingworld.com/nerite-snails/

Hopefully someone may be on here that has successfully bred them but it is a real long shot! Fingers crossed though!

Simon

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for the link!

It’s worth a shot transferring the eggs to brackish.

In case they hatch, are there any ideal larval food products out there anyone know of I should have to make sure I can feed them? I was thinking of getting one designed for my baby shrimplets anyhow, but not sure if the hat hadn’t the diatoms and things the entire larva would need.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

As you say, worth a try! The eggs may not be fertilized of coarse?

I found this and it is rather long but nearer the bottom it has quite a bit about the larvae etc

https://aquariumbreeder.com/nerite-snails-detailed-guide-care-diet-and-breeding/

Most sites I saw they think it won' t work beyond getting to the larvae stage BECAUSE of problems feeding them at this stage?

Simon

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

Thanks sdiTBfan,

I’m setting up a one gallon tank for the nerites with my daughter. We’re going to slowly add a bit of reef salt each week and monitor gravity levels. We’ll see if they breed and hatch.

if they do, I hope the First Bites fish food will work for them. I’ve read the snail larvae like fish food and especially Artemis/diatoms, things baby fish like. I’m a little worried because I saw copper as one of the nutrients. Perhaps too negligent an amount for damage, but I don’t think I should be feeding any copper to snails!

If anybody know I’d any great snail larvae food, please let me know.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Join Our Community!

    Register today, ask questions and share your shrimp and fish tank experiences with us!

  • Must Read SKF Articles

  • Posts

    • sdlTBfanUK
      It has been a few weeks now and I have done a couple of large water changes. I tested the water parameters this morning, GH6 and KH2, TDS 140 and PH 7.5. Obviously the PH is off but there isn't anything in the tank that should cause the PH to rise to this figure so I will just run the tank for another month with 10% weekly water changes (probably just with RO water) and see where we are at that point. The RO water tests at PH6, and the KH and GH in the tank could come down as they are at the upper limits for Caridina shrimps! There are only about 10 very small snails in there at this point, but they seem to be doing well enough.
    • sdlTBfanUK
      I believe these to be very rare in Australia so you may even consider making it a longer term plan and produce your own by starting with the best CRS you can get as that is where the pure lines started! Depends how patient and interested in the project you are, but would save money as well? If I recall correctly it takes from 8 generations of selective breeding? They sell them at micro aquatic shop but do not ship to Western Australia, but that means they are available in Australia. https://microaquaticshop.com.au/products/pure-red-line-grade-ss-shrimp Good luck and just maybe smeone on here may point you in the right direction or be able to supply you with some.
    • Jimmy
      Hi Guys,  Does anyone know where to buy PRL shrimps in WA, not the CRS please. Thanks Regards  
    • Subtlefly
      Yes it’s super accurate to position where I want now and stay there- I am satisfied.  All the fish and shrimpers are doing excellent! Coming up on 4 years running!
    • sdlTBfanUK
      You must be pleased with that, it looks better and is much more robust and less likely to damage or leaks! The tank looks very natural now it has been running for a time. I see the ember tetras, how are the blue shrimp doing, I see a few? The cat and dog look very content and unimpressed, lol.
×
×
  • Create New...