Hello Ram. Your solution is the best!You could put some lettuce in there and when they are on the lettuce grab it out then take that to a local pond or river.
lol- i do have a friend with a pet bluegill. i wonder if they eat snails?Unless you have a very naive acquaintance whom you hate, and who has a fishtank, no.
good idea. i bet even without feeding those little buggers could last a long time.Hello Ram. Your solution is the best!
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@Ram419 - Under no circumstance should any life form that comes from an aquarium ever go back into nature. It's one of the basic ethical 'rules' that allows our hobby to exist. Releasing snails is releasing whatever diseases the dead fish had, and they may not be the same as the ones found in Texas. Were the fish from Malaya? Thailand? Singapore? All of these places have different fauna, different parasites, etc.You could put some lettuce in there- and when they are on the lettuce grab it out then take that to a local pond or river.
Yeah, good point. My bad.@Ram419 - Under no circumstance should any life form that comes from an aquarium ever go back into nature. It's one of the basic ethical 'rules' that allows our hobby to exist. Releasing snails is releasing whatever diseases the dead fish had, and they may not be the same as the ones found in Texas. Were the fish from Malaya? Thailand? Singapore? All of these places have different fauna, different parasites, etc.
Once it has been in a tank, anything you keep is dead to nature. And nature should NEVER be a dumping ground for mistakes. Unfortunately for the pond snails, their habitat is the tank. When the tank is closed, they die, or they go to another tank. I figure if I have tapeworms, no one is going to keep them on life support when I croak. Pest snails are in the same unfortunate bind..
There are pressures to ban fishkeeping, and release into the wild by aquarists is a major argument. We have destroyed habitats with pleco releases, and other thoughtlessness. The keepers of native species have a rule they propose - once caught and removed, never returned.
@Ram419 - Under no circumstance should any life form that comes from an aquarium ever go back into nature. It's one of the basic ethical 'rules' that allows our hobby to exist. Releasing snails is releasing whatever diseases the dead fish had, and they may not be the same as the ones found in Texas. Were the fish from Malaya? Thailand? Singapore? All of these places have different fauna, different parasites, etc.
Once it has been in a tank, anything you keep is dead to nature. And nature should NEVER be a dumping ground for mistakes. Unfortunately for the pond snails, their habitat is the tank. When the tank is closed, they die, or they go to another tank. I figure if I have tapeworms, no one is going to keep them on life support when I croak. Pest snails are in the same unfortunate bind..
There are pressures to ban fishkeeping, and release into the wild by aquarists is a major argument. We have destroyed habitats with pleco releases, and other thoughtlessness. The keepers of native species have a rule they propose - once caught and removed, never returned