Naked turbo snail?

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Jan

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Jan 23, 2007
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Sorry, no pic....

But this a.m. when I turned my lights on, I was surprised to see a large snail on the back wall of my tank, with no shell! :shock: He didn't seem to like the light at all, and made a dash for cover. From the size of him, I'd guess he had to be one of my turbo snails. But how could he have lost his shell and still lived? Could a hermit crab have evicted him? (My hermits look too small to have wanted a big turbo shell...)

:confused: :confused: :confused:
 
are you sure it was a snail and not a slug? :confused: .

usually nudis/slugs look like snails but without the shell dood.
 
I'm not sure, no. I don't know how he could have got into my tank though. And he was so big and fat.

I'll try to get a picture of him, or search for photos of nudi's. Are all nudi's bad? (I've read that some are, they eat corals or something...)
 
hi ya'll
I would bet a Stomatella

got to go to work
can't wait Jan to hear what it turns out to be.

Deb
 
Last edited:
I thought snails where part of there shell, and cant not be removed with out death???/?
 
You guys nailed it, it is a Stomatella. Thanks!

The posted link with the following benefits and problems, is a bit too narrow for my understanding:

Potential Benefits:
1. One of the best snails for grazing settling tiles in the Breeder Challenge experiments. Snails larger than a nickel should not be allowed to graze settling tiles as they could potentially eat any newly settled polyps that many smaller snails will not eat.

Potential Problems:
1. Difficult to remove for harvesting, damage occuring during removal can kill them.

The part about them potentiallly eating "newly settled polyps that other snails will not eat"...what kind of polyps are we talking about? Should I try to remove this snail or let him be? He did seem to be chowing down on the algal film on my back wall.
 
You guys nailed it, it is a Stomatella. Thanks!

The posted link with the following benefits and problems, is a bit too narrow for my understanding:



The part about them potentiallly eating "newly settled polyps that other snails will not eat"...what kind of polyps are we talking about? Should I try to remove this snail or let him be? He did seem to be chowing down on the algal film on my back wall.

That's referring to Project DIBS's coral breeding experiments, so unless you have corals that are sexually breeding and producing very small babies you shouldn't have anything to worry about. This is one of the best snails for algae control out there.
 

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