Nat's Wondrous Aquarium Blog

Reef Tank: Snails and Hermits

Sunday, March 2, 2008

On Saturday morning I did another round of tests and found ammonia to have dropped to zero. Nitrites were still low and nitrates were elevated to 40ppm. I decided to try and add some of the first inhabitants to my aquarium, a group of snails and hermit crabs who could feast on the new growth of diatoms and the stuff that came in on the live rock.

I went to Skipton's Pet Center in Boston, which is the best fish store in metro Boston, as far as I know. They helped me settle on a dozen Nerite snails and ten hermit crabs, a few different varieties of Clibanarius, including red and blue colorations. Both snails and hermits originate in the Caribbean and are quite common, which makes them affordable to purchase compared to other species. The snails are intertidal and therefore spend a lot of time crawling above the waterline to breathe. Everyone appears to have survived their first night, and I've been watching both snails and crabs tear into the diatoms on the rock and glass.

Still trying to figure out the white balance while shooting under actinic light, so please excuse the yellow tone of these photos. The picture of the blue hermit crab is closer to the correct coloration. Also, if you go to a larger view of the snail photo, you can see the barnacles on its shell extending their feeders. Pretty cool!

Nerite Snail

Clibanarius tricolor

Clibanarius

Saturday Parameters:
Temperature: 81F
Specific Gravity: 1.026
pH: 7.9
Ammonia: 0ppm
Nitrite: 3ppm
Nitrate: 40ppm

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