Sand cleaning - fighting or tiger conch

nrbelk

New member
I have heard that some good sand cleaners are the conch snails. Are some better than others?

The two I've been thinking about are fighting conch or a tiger conch?

Any info would be appreciated, thanks!
 
I purchased 4 of them for my 75 gallon from reefs2go.com and I am happy with them. They are fun to watch and do a good job of keeping the sand white. At first I only had one and it did not move around enough to keep up with cleaning. I only wanted to get one more but reefs2go was running a special so I couldn't resist. It's not like they are hard to catch if they become a problem. ;-).
 
I believe three of them are tigers and one of them is a fighting. One definitely looks different than the others, it has more of a white shell with brown lines on it.
 
I have a spider conch in my 120.. not only is he awesome but he does a good job in the sand bed and low rocks...
 
Have 3 fighting conchs in my 40 gallon. Mine stay submerged in the sand for weeks sometimes and I can see is there eyes sticking up out of the sand. I do see trails in the sand in the morning so they come out at night. Everyone once in a while I see one on top of the sand for a couple of days. They do a good job though when they decide to work :)
 
I have both fighting and tiger. The tigers are a little bigger so I guess they do a better job of stirring the sand. Either way they are both cool, but I think I like the tigers a little better they seem to be more active.
 
what about olive snails...? are those tiger conches...? i've seen a pair of olive snails take care of a 6'x30" shallow tank...
 
I have two fighting conches in my tank. They have outlived most other snails so I'm pleased with them in that respect, but I'm skeptical that they really move all that much sand. I guess after seeing my 3 adult engineer gobies work on the tank nothing compares.
 
agree on the goby. op may want to consider a goby instead of an invert.
I have one diamond goby and it can do one heck of a better job than anything I have tried. it goes through the whole sand bed and not just a small spot, everyday. likewise, for algae, a lawnmower blenny does a lot better job than all my snails combined.
 
If you don't have any crabs, the cucumber is the way to go if you want pure white sand. I already have hermit crabs and a couple of emeralds, so I recently got 2 fighting conchs in my 180g. I'll probably have to get more, but they are amazing. I was unaware of their abilities until I tank-sat one for my friend while he got his system up and running (he got it as a package deal.) My sand literally looked better overnight, and it is obvious which side of the tank he preferred.
 

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