View Full Version : Snails in the growbeds ..... what to do?
DaveOponic
2nd May 2009, 01:44 AM
Early this morning I found several small snails eating the Pak Choy seedlings in one of the growbeds. The snails are tiny cone shaped, not like the common garden snail. I removed about six of them from the seedlings but when I tried to pick up some of the snails on the surface of the clay balls, they just dropped into the grow bed.
Can anyone suggest a method of removing the snails without using something that might poison the fish or plants?
I think these snails may have come into the system via water hyacinth. I don't think they have climbed up the grow beds as they are too high.
I know a few tricks to stop the common garden snail or slugs in a soil garden, like using ashes around the plants etc. I am sure that there will be too many of these pests to just pick them off the leaves every morning as they are so tiny I assume they are part of a litter, so probably hundreds of them in the growbed.
Dave
bunya boy
4th May 2009, 12:57 PM
Murray had a similar problem with tiny snails, blocking pumps and inlets, getting in the grow beds, pipework and so on!
I think the only way he got rid of them was to completely dismantle the system and start afresh!! I'm not sure if he found any other way to do it, just as well he was replacing the "infected" system anyway!
Cheers IanK:D
Murray
4th May 2009, 01:49 PM
Hi Bunya Boy, I still have the snails in a big way...they are only in the two systems that have sleepie cod in them. Obviously the sleepie cod don't dine on snails.
The other systems that have Jade and Silver perch do not have the snails in any number at all.
I have overcome the problem for the moment by fitting a pump with a larger inlet that sends the snails for a fast trip around the system. I imagine that loads of them are being "processed" by the pump and thereby becoming part of the system "nutrients"
Still looking for a fish type that can co-exist with the sleepies that like eating snails.
GaryD
4th May 2009, 03:10 PM
Hi,
It may be necessary to empty the system of fish and plants and add a heap of chlorine to the water to rid it of the water snails completely.
It's a radical approach but better to clean them out properly than have them linger on for months.
Gary
DaveOponic
4th May 2009, 03:16 PM
I have overcome the problem for the moment by fitting a pump with a larger inlet that sends the snails for a fast trip around the system. I imagine that loads of them are being "processed" by the pump and thereby becoming part of the system "nutrients"
Still looking for a fish type that can co-exist with the sleepies that like eating snails.
I am only finding these tiny snails in the growbed. In fact only in one growbed even though they are adjacent and flooded from the same pipe. I haven't seen the snails in the tank at all or on the walls etc. They are the cone shaped snail, like a periwinkle but very small, only 1 or 2 cm length.
At present they are not a nuisance, I have found less than a dozen on my Pak Choy seedlings. Several plants have been eaten so my response has been to plant another 50 or so seedlings. I check every morning and evening and have removed a few each time.
I have some bio-control buddies at work ..... frogs, toads and small lizards are regular visitors to my growbeds so I am hoping I won't have to empty the GB any time soon.
Thanks for replies, Murray & BB
GaryD
4th May 2009, 03:22 PM
Hi Dave,
Your snails appear to be a different type to those that have infested Murray's system. His are white and breed up in the pump and other irrigation fittings.....to the point where they have blocked the pump and required manual removal at very frequently intervals.
These water snails are another good reason not to introduce foreign organisms (or water) into your aquaponics system. In Murray's case, he had little choice......it seems that they might have come from his dam (the source of his fish tank water).
Gary
DaveOponic
4th May 2009, 03:23 PM
Hi,
It may be necessary to empty the system of fish and plants and add a heap of chlorine to the water to rid it of the water snails completely.
It's a radical approach but better to clean them out properly than have them linger on for months.
Gary
Thanks Gary
I think I'll try picking them off for the time being unless they appear in large numbers. I am going to try laying out some treats for them (lettuce leaves) and see if I can catch a bunch of them and remove them to keep the numbers down. Meanwhile will do some research on wht eats them.
I don't know whether these kind of snails are a pest in Aust. I was surprised to see them in fresh water in my system as they look more like a saltwater snail you find at the beach. I rarely see the garden snail you see in Aust. but quite a few slugs in the garden and also millions of millipedes.
So far I have been fairly safe from insect pests in my AP systems, the main one being a white scaly bug which occasionally gets out of control - light vegetable oil/mineral oil fixes these bugs but mostly the ants visit my GB's and eat these white critters. Presumably the snails are feeding on the solid waste at the bottom of the GB and surface now and then for a vegetarian snack.
Dave
Jonty
8th June 2009, 12:08 AM
Dave,
For the garden snail you can use stale beer or an alternative is to boil some yeast and honey in water and place in shallow containers. (If they are sea snails you might want to add some salt.:rolleyes:)
DaveOponic
8th June 2009, 12:22 AM
Thanks Jonty
The snails are now well and truly out of control in one growbed. These are not garden snails. They are a tiny cone shaped snail, like the kind you would find on the beach or in a rockpool. I am actually wondering whether they came in when I introduced the Barramundi fry as the fry were kept in sea water and spent three days acclimatising to fresh. Perhaps the Barra. babies carried the snail eggs/larvae in with them.
I am growing Pak Choy and it is getting eaten leaf by leaf daily. Each day there are more and more tiny snails. Each day/evening I squash probably 50 to 100 snails. It is difficult as they often drop down into the clay balls before I can squish them between thumb and forefinger.
I laid lettuce leaves out this week and caught and destroyed scores of tiny baby snails. It is a plague.
I will try sprinkling salt around but doubt whether this will be effective as it will only kill those in direct contact and will wash away quickly each time the GB floods.
I think the only solution will be to shut down the growbed and remove clay balls and completely clean everything, pipes and all.
Dave
DaveOponic
15th September 2009, 04:30 AM
I think you were right Gary. Still have snails months later. I am now sprinkling them with salt every time I see them on the surface of growbeds... they like to come up when the GB is flooded. Concentrated salt kills them alright but there are still too many to count and tiny ones as well.
I now plan to wait till all the Tilapia have been eaten and shutdown the system, empty the growbeds and chlorinate the gravel and clay balls, pipe and fish tank.
Do you think I could avoid emptying the GB's by running chlorine through and then flushing the system thoroughly? Since chlorine (pool chlorine) would kill the snails, don't want it to kill my fish/plants.
nwestwood
15th September 2009, 04:57 AM
My snails are under control. I find a few small slugs in the grow beds that I feed to the fish, but very few. The snails show up in the DWC tank and Sump. I keep 3-4 Koi or Gold fish in the DWC and a dozen in the sump and they eat the little ones and eggs. I have not seen them in my grow beds or the fish tank.
GaryD
15th September 2009, 10:09 AM
Hi Dave,
Chlorine will definitely kill the fish, and the bacteria, and the plants won't care for it either. When it comes to snails, it's a harsh solution to a desperate problem.
While not all species of snail are so pervasive, I've seen little white snails proliferate in a system to the point where they required mechanical removal every day (or they'd stop the pump). The best way to deal with these creatures is to empty the system of fish and plants and add enough chlorine to dispense with snails......and then to cycle the system again.
Gary
Outbackozzie
15th September 2009, 10:30 AM
I recently had a bit of a slug problem, and I found that sprinkling some fine Lime powder (used for pH up) over the top of the hydroton, stopped them very quickly. It burns them :D
DaveOponic
16th September 2009, 02:35 AM
I recently had a bit of a slug problem, and I found that sprinkling some fine Lime powder (used for pH up) over the top of the hydroton, stopped them very quickly. It burns them :D
Thanks Ian, I'll try the lime solution.
Dave
Outbackozzie
18th September 2009, 12:24 AM
Ian? :eek:
Colin :)
bunya boy
18th September 2009, 11:18 AM
Ian? :eek:
Colin :)
A slip of the tongue is no fault of the mind!
and a Freudian slip is "when you say one thing, and mean your Mother. . . "
I'm sure Dave meant no offence,
Cheers; Colin errr. . IanK!! :D
Powered by vBulletin™ Version 4.0.8 Copyright © 2012 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.