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Keeping Rabbit Snails: A Charming Slow-Breeding Cleaner

A guide to keeping rabbit snails - large, charming freshwater snails from Sulawesi that clean algae and detritus, breed very slowly, and won't overrun the tank like other snails.

Rabbit Snail
Gives
Slow-breeding cleanup snail
Space
Nano tank
Water
Warm hard
Effort
Beginner

Rabbit snails are the gentle giants of the snail world - large freshwater snails from Sulawesi with long spired shells and endearing, rabbit-like faces. They graze algae and detritus like other cleanup snails, but unlike most, they breed extremely slowly, bearing just a young or two at a time, so they never explode into the plagues that give aquarium snails a bad name.

Is it right for you?

Rabbit snails suit anyone who wants an attractive, useful cleanup snail without a population explosion. They are peaceful, hardy and slow to breed, ideal for planted community tanks.

System & Space

A stable planted tank with warm, hard water and a fine substrate to burrow in suits them; they do well in nano and community tanks alike.

Water & Temperature

They prefer warm water and harder, alkaline conditions (which keep their shells strong); soft, acidic water erodes the shell. Stable parameters keep them thriving.

Stocking & Feeding

They graze algae, biofilm and detritus, supplemented with sinking foods and blanched vegetables; a mature planted tank largely feeds them. They breed slowly on their own.

Health & Care

Hardy and undemanding as long as the water is hard enough to protect their shells; soft water and copper (in some medications) are the main hazards.

Harvest & Enjoying Them

Ornamental and functional - the reward is a peaceful, attractive cleaner that controls algae and detritus without overrunning the tank.

Getting Started

Add a few to a mature planted tank with hard water and a soft substrate, and let them graze and slowly reproduce.

Common Mistakes

Soft, acidic water (shell erosion), copper-based medications, and expecting fast breeding are the main mistakes.

FAQ

Will they overrun my tank? No - they breed very slowly, unlike most snails.

Do they eat plants? They prefer algae and detritus, generally leaving healthy plants alone.

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