I have about 20 of them in my 40gl and they really do a good job of keeping the sand clean and moving.. Anyone else use them?
Hey Bob.. I think I have 2 or three of them when i picked them up from the bay the same time i caught the Onyx .. My neighbor has a local 180gl tank and has 100's of them.. he was the one who told me about them when i first started the hobby.. hey the price was right at the time ;DBobnKate said:I have a bunch of Nassarius Vibex Snails. sand colored with a snorkel. I'm gathering that they are reproducing or they live a really long time because I put them in I don't know how many years ago and they are still there.
Bob
Im sure These are Onyx Nassarius Snails (Mud snails) I caught them in great bay and they all bury.. In fact you can see a few in the sand against the glass and as you said... :Great sand sifters and voracious eaters of detritus"redfishbluefish said:I could be totally wrong because I don’t know much, but I also thought that Nassarius were warm water snails. I’m assuming your catch was local...NJ waters. I never knew we had Nassarius here. Are you sure they are not Whelks. The difference is that the Nassarius will bury itself in the sand with its elephant trunk sticking out of the sand while the Whelk will stay above the sand. Similar look, but different….also the Nassarius will drag and expose its foot as it travels.
By the way, love them. Great sand sifters and voracious eaters of detritus. Amazing when you feed they can “smell” the food hitting the water and up out of the sand they come with their elephant trunks wagging all over the place.
Your welcome.. We have a real small inlet where I live and that's where I found them in abundance but remember i got them in the summer.. I don't know if they are still out but it worth a trip to the shoreredfishbluefish said:Te salut, Codfather.
I guess I’ll have to go do some local collection for snails. Thanks for the info.
A very informative read and thank you!..They seem to be the same ones I have but I got mine from Great Bay.. I have had them in my tank since mid july of this year and so far everything seems to be ok.. They seem to like to be in the sand at day and all over the glass at night.. never seen them go after the few corals i do have ..I got the "onyx" nassarius snail" name from a online vendor before I put them in my tank and when i was trying to ID them http://www.bluezooaquatics.com/productDetail.asp?cid=82&pid=1141&did=2Hawkeye said:No such thing as an 'onyx" nassarius snail. What you have (more than likely) is the snails being sold on ebay - nassarius obseleta.
http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2006-11/mg/index.php
In a nutshell - if that is what you have - they are not reef safe and are also possible parasite carriers.
Really! I don't feel like getting "swimmers' itch" now or anytime ;DHawkeye said:eh...if it works for you - go for it. I also read those articles sometimes with a grain of salt - because one person's way is not necessarily the right way for everyone else. The parasite thing is freaky though. By now you'd probably have noticed it if there was an issue. Anyways - if you go hunting for more - maybe best to quarantine to make sure you don't mess with the ones that die quickly.