Bunnies of Snails?

Well, usually they feed themselves, but blanched veggies and algae tablets should do the trick since algae levels will likely be too low to foster big blooms in population.
 
pond snails are not nice or sellable. They are the demon's seed. They are pure evil. Red Ramshorns are a little better, but are still not really sellable.

If you want to make money off snails, I'd say your best bet is to breed assasin snails, as they're becoming quite popular with those infected with pond snails.
 
Note hes looking for dwarf puffer food... he WANTS to be infested :)
 
Yeah true....I am gonna get co2 thingy that is only like $30 and do review on it on my youtube account. I am wanting pond snails or something so I can put like 30-50 in a bag with water and ship for dwarf puffer people.
Hehe... I'm one of those DP people!

You may want to consider getting a top for the tank. Snails can and will get out of any little opening on a covered tank. With no top at all, you could be asking for trouble.
 
yah Pond snails breed absolutely out of control...though they are slightly smaller than ramshorn snails

I find in my snail tank the pond snails just breed faster than anything else...they move faster also

If you want to help them breed faster...Algae is the way to go

Spinach or dark lettuce (the kind you get in those garden salad packs...the name escapes me right now) are very good food for snails and it seems they don't want to touch it until it starts decomposing (usually 24 hours after it's in the tank)

Super clean tanks and snails simply don't mix...so if you want them to breed quickly and often...Lots of algae and spinach about every 3 days (remove it after it's been in the tank for 3 days)

Just be prepared...they breed out of control
 
Nerites have a planktonic larval stage, and aren't likely to reproduce successfully in a 3 gallon setup. Ramshorn snails (and presumably pond snails as well) will grow like weeds on NLS pellets. That's what I feed my BN pleco's, and they certainly don't leave much algae for snails, yet I pick out hundreds of them regularly.
 
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