Jump to content

Mojie

Members
  • Posts

    21
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Feedback

    0%

1 Follower

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

Mojie's Achievements

Apprentice

Apprentice (3/14)

  • One Year In
  • Collaborator
  • Reacting Well
  • First Post
  • Conversation Starter

Recent Badges

17

Reputation

  1. One final update for anyone else in my situation - all of the snails are now back in the tank and thriving! I think the March introduction may have been a bit fast (nerite started asking a little strange) so I ended up running carbon for another month, but looks like we are now fully in the clear from both a planaria and a snail perspective.
  2. If multiple berried females hatch their eggs out in your quarantine tank you’re going to have to keep it running for months longer than planned because catching 1 million speck-sized babies one at a time with a pipette just isn’t going to happen. 🤠
  3. That’s too bad - they’re cool critters but I understand the concerns about invasive species. I’m in Ontario where they’re hard to find (maybe subject to an import ban?), but every once in a while they pop up at pond centres. I’ve never found the elusive blue ones though… maybe one day!
  4. Coming back with an update! The No-Planaria worked beautifully, and I haven’t seen a single one since the last treatment. I just reintroduced one nerite to the tank today, and so far so good! She is cruising around very happily, disturbing decor and generally being her chaotic self. I’m keeping a very close eye, but I’m hopeful that I’ll be able to move the remaining snails back soon!
  5. While I’m a Japanese trapdoor lover at heart, I also have zebra and marbled limpet neritres that I adore. Both are great algae eaters and pretty active, but the limpet nerite tends to stick to glass and rocks (she’s a great glass cleaner), while the zebra cruises the whole tank, including plants, wood and substrate. The limpet does lay eggs, but probably at about 1/3rd of the rate of the zebra. Her only drawback is that she’s damn near impossible to move - you really can’t pry them off the glass without risking serious injury to the snail. When I had to relocate her to another tank to treat for planaria, I had to wait until she was on the glass near the bottom of the tank. Once I found her there, I wedged a shot glass over her, and checked multiple times per day until I caught her climbing on the shot glass, at which point I was able to relocate the whole shot glass, snail and all, to the temporary tank. It was a multi-day process, so if you’re looking for a nerite that you can move between tanks they’re definitely not the one for you. Otherwise, I think limpet nerites are a really cool, under-appreciated option for keeping your glass squeaky clean!
  6. I appreciate the sympathy - it was a tough, guilt-inducing reminder to quarantine everything, especially if you live somewhere that makes meds hard/impossible to come by. Salt is definitely a good call, but luckily for me the h2o2 did the trick in my case. Hopefully if OP *is* dealing with something bacterial they’ll have similar luck turning it around.
  7. Did you introduce any new shrimp, fish, or inverts recently? I had a bad experience previously with some sort of bacterial infection absolutely ravaging my tank after introducing a few new shrimp without quarantine (never again). I couldn’t figure it out until I noticed one of the resident guppies had also developed severe fin rot despite seemingly great parameters, presumably caused by whatever bacteria was running amok. I’m in Canada where antibiotics aren’t available OTC so I resorted to several high doses of hydrogen peroxide over a few days and big water changes, which saved the fish and the small handful of surviving shrimp. ETA: I pulled my nerites before treating the tank because I can’t find consistent info about their hydrogen peroxide tolerance.
  8. I love having a few amanos mixed in with my neos for exactly this reason. The scale difference make them both look even more amazing.
  9. That’s a great tip for the future! This time around I’m going to just repurpose mine in a terrarium and switch to something inert for the tank - between this and a planaria outbreak my poor supreme pumpkins have been through it lately!
  10. Hey all! Just wanted to post this here in case anyone faces a similar mystery. I noticed some molting problems in my neocaradina recently in my 15 gallon planted cube. I originally chalked it up to diet because I’d been experimenting with some different foods, but stepping up their calcium didn’t help, and the losses were piling up. Then I realized my GH was through the absolute roof! I think I stopped counting at 22. My water is hard, but not that hard. I did a series of big water changes, including using some RO water and got it down, but it kept shooting back up. Last week I realized the culprit - the huge pile of seiryu stone in my tank. My best guess is that it was leeching a little calcium carbonate at first which was fine, but as the tank aged and humic substances built up, the rate of leeching accelerated rapidly. I’ve pulled the stone, am continuing the high frequency water changes and things are already trending in the right direction. I just wanted to post this here because while I knew it could increase your hardness a bit, I had no idea how significant the changes could be and wanted to flag it for anyone else trying to save their little friends from the white ring of death!
  11. No Planaria has been ordered, as well as a sponge filter for the snail jail and carbon. I’ll let you all know how it goes in case anyone else finds this helpful/useful in the future. Thank you all so much for the help - I really appreciate it!
  12. Thank you - this is exactly the kind of intel I was hoping for.
  13. Thank you - I’ve got the traps going now. My concern with the no planaria is keeping my pet snails alive. Would you have a sense of how long I would have to run carbon, water change, etc. before I could put the snails back in the tank after treating? I’d have to keep them in a vase or bucket in the meantime.
  14. Yeah - I’m losing about a shrimp per day to them. I have a big colony so it’s not a crisis yet, but I feel so bad for the little guys. 😞
  15. It’s a 15 gallon cube, I’ve got a small school of guppies in it but they don’t seem interested. Do you think it’s worth holding back food for a few days and seeing if they go for them? I’ve thought about it, but I worry I’ll just be training them to eat my baby shrimp lol.
×
×
  • Create New...