Nassarius Snail - 5 pack
The Ultimate Sand-Sifting Zombie Snail for Detritus and Waste Management
The Nassarius Snail (Nassarius sp.) is widely considered an absolute necessity for the clean-up crew (CUC) of any marine reef aquarium. While most snails spend their time slowly scraping film algae off the glass, the Nassarius Snail takes on a completely different role: it is a dedicated, subterranean scavenger.
Most of the time, these medium-sized snails remain completely buried beneath the sand, leaving only a tiny, snorkel-like siphon tube protruding through the substrate to sniff the water column for food. The second you drop frozen food or pellets into the aquarium, they "awaken" from the sand bed like zombies rising from the earth, rushing across the substrate with surprising speed to devour leftover organic waste before it can rot and cause an ammonia spike.
Quick Care Parameters
Scientific Name Nassarius vibex / Nassarius distortus
Size Grade Medium (approx. 0.5" – 0.75")
Care Level Easy / Beginner Friendly
Temperament Completely Peaceful
Diet Carnivorous Scavenger / Detritivore
Minimum Tank Size 5 Gallons
Substrate Required Sand / Fine Gravel (Minimum 1–2 inches deep)
Salinity / Specific Gravity 1.023 – 1.025
Alkalinity / Calcium8–12 dKH / 400–450 mg/L (For shell maintenance)
Key Behaviors & Aquarium Benefits
Substrate Aeration: By constantly burrowing and tunneling through the upper layers of the substrate, Nassarius snails keep the sand bed loosened and aerated. This mechanical shifting prevents the formation of compacted, toxic anaerobic (oxygen-depleted) dead zones.
Rapid Waste Disposal: They possess an incredibly sharp sense of smell. They ignore live plants and corals entirely, focusing 100% of their energy on consuming dead tissue, fish waste, and uneaten meaty foods that sink past your fish.
The "Zombie" Phenomenon: Watching a group of Nassarius snails simultaneously emerge from a pristine sand bed during feeding time is a highly entertaining and iconic experience for reef keepers.
Diet & Feeding Limitations
It is crucial to understand that Nassarius snails do not eat algae. They will not clean hair algae, cyanobacteria, or film algae off your glass or rockwork.
Primary Foods: Mysis shrimp, brine shrimp, pellet foods, flake foods, and pieces of chopped seafood.
Bioload Balancing: In a heavily fed tank with a healthy fish population, they rarely need direct feeding. However, if they are placed in a brand-new setup or a very clean tank with low stocking, you must drop small sinking pellets directly onto the sand bed once or twice a week to ensure they don't starve.