A little reminder about hatching bridgesii

msjinkzd

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Feb 11, 2007
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Rachel O'Leary
With all the excitement of the legislature being changed, I have been reading alot about people planning on breeding and hatching bridgesii clutches. Although its fun to watch the babies grow up, please keep in mind that each clutch can produce well over 150 babies. That is alot of snails to feed, house, and find homes for. I have also cautioned against hatching out clutches, especially multiple clutches, unless you have a plan beyond "I will sell/trade them". Please make sure you have an idea of homes, LFS trade/credit, etc. Alot of LFS won't take them until they hit dime-sized, which is ALOT of bioload in a tank to reach that point. This means quite often every other day wc's and vacs to prevent secondary tank pests and to keep the snails healthy (that is what my 29g grow-out tanks require). Its not as easy to raise the babies as many may think. I would not use a tank smaller than 29g for one clutch of babies after they hit pea-size. They seem to develop more fissures, erosion, and grow much slower with overpopulation. Part of owning these great critters is being responsible about maintaining their populations. With hatching clutches comes culling babies as well as clutches. I routinely get 6-10 clutches each week, I hatch maybe one clutch every 6 weeks. The rest need to be frozen or smashed. As fun as watching their life cycle is, it requires LOTS of work to raise the babies, and lots of tank space.

Also, before planning to ship them, please take the time to research the appropriate and safe shipping methods. Shipping is stressful on any critter, snails are no exception. There are several accepted methods but the primary concern should be to keep their shells from being damaged during transit. I have found the best way to do this is to individually bag them.

I, myself, am probably going to stop hatching clutches all together. I am concerned that with the influx of all the new people selling/trading them, I will not be able to house them adequately long term. I do not have an LFS that can take them, and would not like to take the chances that they would have to either be inappropriately housed for adulthood, or be euthanized for lack of homes.
 
Jinkzd this is a very good thread and I think you have very valid concerns that a lot of people do not think about before hatching their clutches. Too many people just want the cute little baby snails and don't think about what will happen when they get larger and need more space. It's kind of like what happens with puppies before they get big and end up in pounds being euthanized. I hope this thread opens up a lot of peoples eyes that it's not all flowers and rainbows, there is a lot of work to be put in and a snail is a pet just like anything else. Thanks for posting this :)
 
Wonderful Rachal, I am glad you posted this!! I had a few clutches hatch while I was gone, shocked the heck out of me. i have since given around 60 away, but Im still loaded. I will not be letting them bread again ! I want my babies to go to go good homes, and the local pet store is super bad. So there for no more babies to have to deal with and find homes for.
 
Oh but I do want a blue one from you rachal, please, a very pretty blue one. then I will be foreever happy. i have every color then!!
 
I agree 1000% with jinkzd. Yes it is very cool to see babies hatch and grow. I for one, have many tanks and can move when clutches get numerous. I remember buying 5 purple brigs and within 2 weeks I had 7 clutches. I could only let 3 hatch. I had to freeze 4 of them to keep up with quality and keep down the bioload. It's very important to research what you're getting yourself into with hatching out brig's. Not only to make sure you have proper care, but to make sure you have a place for ~200 baby snails. Not everyone has a place to house them, and if you cant provide proper care and housing, you should freeze and/or smash the clutches as Rachel advised. As far as shipping goes. Be sure you are comfortable and have the knowledge to ship them. If you plan on hatching out a clutch, plan out what you're going to do with possibly over 100 snails.
It really is going to hurt with them lifting the mandation of having permits to ship them. So, please, educate yourself before raising and before selling/shipping. You have the life of inverts in your hand, and someone will be watching you.
 
a single hatched clutch:
picture.php
 
OMG! :thud:
 
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