Tag Archives: sulawesi snails

Can rabbit snails produce hybrids?

YES! Rabbit snails can and do produce hybrids. While they do occasionally hybridize in the wild, it’s much more likely to occur in the pet trade. Both wholesalers and pet stores often house different species of rabbit snails together, which means some of the babies produced will often be hybrids.

I am very careful to keep my rabbit snails in single-species-only aquariums, and I remove any snail that doesn’t look like the intended species BEFORE the snail is old enough to breed. Many hybrid rabbit snails look like “bumblebees,” like the one pictured below. This snail was born right after I purchased a group of rabbit snails and was removed from my “Yellow Spotted” or “Yellow Flake” aquarium when still very young.

Regular-sized rabbit snails that grow to be 3-4″ in size typically breed at 1.5-2″ in length. There are some mini rabbit snails that can reproduce at a smaller size. Since many people don’t know what species they are keeping, it’s best practice to remove any baby of an unusual appearance and keep it separate from the snails that look “correct” for each species.

While the hybrids can look really cool, it’s very important to keep pure species as much as possible so that the specific natural traits of each species are preserved. This is not always an easy task, as sellers often don’t know what species they are offering, and different exporters call the same rabbit snail by different common names (yellow spotted/yellow flake/yellow spotlight, for example, might all be the same Tylomelania species or a different one). Ask the seller for pictures of the exact snails being sold to try to make sure you are getting the type of rabbit snail that you want to keep. It’s not uncommon (but definitely unethical) for sellers to use photos that they have snagged from the internet.

Side Note: The photos of the snails on this website are of my own snails, past or present. Please do not take my photos to sell your snails or promote another website. I have had this happen many times over which is frustrating.

Hybrid-rabbit snails with the often seen "bumble bee" pattern
Hybrid-rabbit snails with the often seen “bumble bee” pattern

Why does my baby rabbit snail have a reddish shell?

Mama rabbit snails are very sensitive to sudden changes in water conditions. Such a change can cause them to give birth to a premature baby. The little guys usually live, BUT they typically have a reddish shell. As they grow, the normal coloration slowly takes over. This creates a cool bicolor shell for quite awhile!

Baby Yellow Rabbit Snails for Sale – Tylomelania / Sulawesi Snailsm

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SOLD OUT!
Very limited # of Baby Yellow Rabbit snails for sale  – 1/4″ or slightly larger.  $8 each
WINTER SHIPPING: Heat packs available at no extra cost but you must have temperatures above 30 degrees F for them to function.

Minimum order $25. Shipping available via priority mail with tracking number within the Continental USA (excluding Maine): $15
Please contact me if interested.

Below is a photo of a couple of my adults (not for sale – pictured so that you can see what the babies may look like when older).  Yellow rabbit snail babies typically will grow up to be some shade of yellow.  Occasionally other colors can occur such as white or brown.

Adult Yellow Rabbit Snails – Tylomelania / sulawesi / rabbit snails found in pet stores, are usually wild caught which can deplete native populations. The babies I offer are tank raised with no impact on the wild population 🙂  Rabbit snails can live for 2-4 years and are easy to care for. They love snello / snail jello, algae wafers, some vegetables such as frozen/thawed cut green beans and left over fish food, the will eat some algae but need to be fed regularly to thrive.  The do best if you offer a calcium source such as weco wonder shells or plain white bird cuttlebone in the aquarium for them for proper shell growth.

Adult Yellow Rabbit snails
Adult Yellow Rabbit Snails – Tylomelania / sulawesi snails

Cleaning a rabbit snail (tylomelania) aquarium

Cleaning my rabbit snail aquariums takes some special consideration. While mystery snails and ramshorns will happily mob food at one end of the aquarium while I carefully clean, this isn’t always true of rabbit snails. Rabbit snails eat until they are very full, and then can sleep for a few days. When resting, they often burrow under the aquarium gravel and hide behind the sponge filters. Females also do this right before giving birth to a baby.

To keep them as safe as possible from injury, I very carefully rake the gravel with my fingers and remove every single rabbit snail I can find and place them gently in a bucket. Then I can safely gravel vacuum their aquarium and put them back as soon as the debris settles again.

I also squeeze the sponge filters in a separate bucket to break up the bio-film and make sure they aren’t clogged and that water is still flowing through them well and replace filter media as needed.

Yellow rabbit snails in a bucket while there aquarium is being gravel vacuumed.
Yellow rabbit snails in a bucket while there aquarium is being gravel vacuumed.