![Sad :(](./images/smilies/icon/sad.gif)
I was about to dose with the old standby Rid-a-snail, but seemed to recall reading somewhere that Pygmy corys could not stand copper based snail killers.
Was that correct?
Any suggestions?
Tom
I'll be honest I'm a snail fan, so keep the snails?T_om wrote: 02 Jul 2020, 04:08I have a tank with Pygmy corys and neons. And snail, don't forget the snails. .........Any suggestions?
Copper (Cu) is much toxic in soft water, because it remains in solution as cupric (Cu++) ions and doesn't form insoluble hydroxides etc.T_om wrote: 02 Jul 2020, 15:25I have very soft RO water in that tank, keeping it soft for the neons primarily (they have spawned there)........My primary concern is copper.......Killing the snails is easy, changing the water is easy, I just don't want to kill those corys.
Yes, it is one of the issues with <"acid rain">,the lower pH solubilises metals from spoil tips etc. <"Most copper compounds "> are insoluble in water, but many of these are soluble in weak acids etc.T_om wrote: 02 Jul 2020, 22:09Thanks Darrel. I didn't realize copper was that much more effective in soft water.
Tom
I probably should have posted a picture of shell attrition, this is the <"top view of the tank above">. This is about as big as the Ramshorn Snails ever get. If I'd try to pick that one off the Magnolia leaf it would just have disintegrated.dw1305 wrote: 02 Jul 2020, 20:41The tank in the photo is at ~4dKH and 120 microS conductivity and the Ramshorns begin to show shell attrition from a young age and never grow very large.