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Nerite vs. mystery/apple snail

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15K views 13 replies 8 participants last post by  HairyNoseWombat  
#1 ·
I plan on getting a snail for some algae clean up for my 20 gallon which snail is better nerite or mystery/apple.
 
#6 ·
Nerites won't eat living plants, only the biofilm growing on them. I feed mine blanched spinach or lettuce, plus they adore the beech and oak leaves I rotate out of the container used for aging water, as well as some dried food I picked up from a member here. The latter is nice to have when someone else is watching the house while I'm away; no need to blanch or prep anything, just break up and drop one in.

True algae wafers are very hard to find these days; almost all have fish meal as a primary ingredient - something nerites do not need.
 
#7 ·
Nerite is the best worker-eating diatoms and green spot algae on glass and plants, but won't eat food srcraps. Mystery snail is more 'showy' and will eat food scraps, apple snail (that's not a mystery snail) will eat your plants. Last 2 make more poop too.
 
#9 ·
Please don't. They are actually brackish water snails sold as freshwater snails and only live a year plus in freshwater and several years at a minimum in brackish water. I have one bumble bee nerite still going strong in a brackish tank after 7 1/2 years. They really do not belong in true fresh water. They are just sold that way.
 
#10 ·
I think I've read this before (perhaps from you on a different thread). However I've never heard it anywhere else. Also, I have a nerite snail that is in a freshwater tank that I have owned for over a year, and a friend owned for several years before... so maybe there is a specific species of nerite that cannot tolerate freshwater long-term? Because mine is fine, and it seems others' are as well...

As for the OP, I agree with the others -- nerites work more (though mystery/brigs do well when they're young), but the others are more fun! I would grab a handful of cherry shrimp, or maybe some amano sized shrimp to help with cleanup too.

:)
 
#12 ·
Nothing in our hobby eats nerite eggs in freshwater (dunno about brackish) but that's kinda the point-they evolved to increase survival rate by making eggs inedible (nothing eats ramshorns, pond, or bladder snail eggs that I am aware of either). But you can scrape the eggs off the glass when doing a water change-driftwood is a little harder, but they do break down over time. Only the females lay eggs so if you're lucky and get a male no egg issue.