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#1 |
Registered Member
Join Date: May 2020
Location: NC, USA
Posts: 4
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Good morning! I just recently added 2 bumblebee shrimp to a 10 gallon nano tank, and had successfully fed them frozen brine shrimp via dropper. I added a 1 1/2" Derasa clam into the tank 2 days ago and has been acclimating nicely. This morning I woke up to turn the lights on and one of the bumblebee shrimp had pushed the clam over in the sand to expose the foot and was halfway inside the shell! I am not sure if the bumblebee was trying to eat the foot, however I separated the two and moved the clam to the far side of the tank temporarily. It has since opened up fully, however I am concerned it may be attacked again, and if I need to relocate it into my 29 gallon setup. Any advice is welcomed!!
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#2 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Sep 2018
Posts: 69
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I have 4 bumble bee snails in my tank with one maxima. They've lived together for over 2yrs now. Bumble bee snails so not eat live healthy clam. If the clam is dying everyone might want a piece of the dying meat though. Sometimes, while the crustaceans can fall into the hole of the clam. Most time though the clam will close up before that happens or spit them out. If the clam doesn't close up when the crustacean get too close to it or start to touch the mantle, that may be a sign of degrading health. With clams, its really hard to tell their health until it's over. Keep an eye on the clam, feed it some phyto every now and then. Make sure they get good light and most of all, don't worry about the snail, focus on the clams health. If the clam is healthy and happy, the snail wouldn't eat the clam. Hope this helps.
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#3 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Sep 2018
Posts: 69
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I have 4 bumble bee snails in my tank with one maxima. They've lived together for over 2yrs now. Bumble bee snails so not eat live healthy clam. If the clam is dying everyone might want a piece of the dying meat though. Sometimes, while the crustaceans can fall into the hole of the clam. Most time though the clam will close up before that happens or spit them out. If the clam doesn't close up when the crustacean get too close to it or start to touch the mantle, that may be a sign of degrading health. With clams, its really hard to tell their health until it's over. Keep an eye on the clam, feed it some phyto every now and then. Make sure they get good light and most of all, don't worry about the snail, focus on the clams health. If the clam is healthy and happy, the snail wouldn't eat the clam. Hope this helps.
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#4 |
Registered Member
Join Date: May 2020
Location: NC, USA
Posts: 4
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Thanks, but I have the shrimp not the snails. The bumblebee shrimp are similar to harlequin shrimp and will eat the feet off of starfish. Im wondering if clams count or are similar enough for them to attack, and if I should relocate. Right now I have a net placed overtop the clam, so it can still get waterflow and light without being harassed
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#5 | |
Registered Member
Join Date: Sep 2018
Posts: 69
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Quote:
https://www.marineaquariumsa.com/thr...-attack.15635/ Bumble bee shrimp on the attack!!?? Sent from my SM-G975U using Tapatalk |
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#6 |
Registered Member
Join Date: May 2020
Location: NC, USA
Posts: 4
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Thank you very much for your help!
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Tags |
clam, nano, nano 10 gallon, shrimp |
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