View Full Version : Mussels
C.Mydas
Mon, 27th Mar 2006, 03:36 PM
I want to get some live clams from HEB for my butterflies...thing is they make you buy 12. I dont need 12..lol. So if anyone is willing, Ill buy them you just come get some. Ill take 2 or 3 of them..most likely 2 but it depends on how interested everyone in the tank is..lol. So that will leave 9 or 10 left.
BTW- if youve got a snowflake eel it is a sight to behold as they try to rip out the flesh..talk about a death roll :o
Christina
If you dont live on the NW side I might be able to meet you somewhere.
GaryP
Mon, 27th Mar 2006, 03:42 PM
Are you talking about little neck clams or black mussels? Clams are sold by the dozen, mussels are sold by the lb.
C.Mydas
Mon, 27th Mar 2006, 03:51 PM
yeah..I realized that after I posted it..lol. Either honestly are fine..Check your pms.
GaryP
Mon, 27th Mar 2006, 04:01 PM
Mussels are a lot cheaper. I get 2 doz. for $3. Thay are a lot easier to open too.
Ed
Mon, 27th Mar 2006, 05:21 PM
Christina,
Have you tried the frozen New Zealand Green Mussels on your fish? My CBB, Regal, Powder Blue, Sohal, engineers, and oddly enough Neon Gobies tear them up! I get them at the local Asian market for about $5 per 2 lb box.
TroyPham
Tue, 28th Mar 2006, 03:34 PM
you can get the green mussels from HEB too
GaryP
Tue, 28th Mar 2006, 07:35 PM
I guess it depends on the HEB. Mine only has the black ones.
BadPig
Tue, 28th Mar 2006, 10:09 PM
I dont know if any of you know this, but you can use the little necks as cleaner clams. I have one in my overflow box that I have had for about three months. Or you could get some cocktail sauce, horse radish and some beer to put the rest to use.
C.Mydas
Wed, 29th Mar 2006, 12:12 PM
lol. Thanks guys. I went ahead and bought some..Gary informed us we can freeze em and they'll be fine for eating..as long as they dont die and smell. You can see why I wanted to buy them in the thread "Video:fixed"...lol
fishypets
Wed, 29th Mar 2006, 01:30 PM
Why don't you just blend what is left over and feed it to Brians tank.....I bet your new kitty would also love some fresh seafood. :P
C.Mydas
Wed, 29th Mar 2006, 01:43 PM
lol..you mean the cat that is allergic to vaccines.. :roll Good idea but Im not in any hurry to find out what else his system cant tolerate..lol
Brians tank is a good idea...risky though...do they secrete the same 'chemical' that clams do when they are ticked? We've got some fish that eat clams...I would be worried that the chemical released would make them munch on the 'good' clams.
Any thought?
fishypets
Wed, 29th Mar 2006, 01:50 PM
I feed my tank blended clam/mussel and so far no one picks on my clams. (Knock on wood) That would suck if they develop a taste for teardrops.
GaryP
Wed, 29th Mar 2006, 05:31 PM
I have 4 clams in the tank with mine and I see the butterfly pick at the clams occasionally but I think they are just picking stuff off the shell. There was an medium sized aiptasia growing on the shell of a maxima when I got the first butterfly. I was concerned that it was going to sting the mantle of the clam. The aiptasia was gone the next AM, picked clean with surgical precision.
Clams do secrete a stress chemical when they are first introduced to a tank. This is a feeding trigger for butterflies. The solution is to put them in a fuge when first introduced, or to cover them with an eggcrate cage for a few days until they are acclimated. I have added a couple of clams since the butterfly arrived and I never had a problem. I did lose a small clam but I'm not sure if the butterfly just cleaned up the leftovers of a dead clam or whether it ate it. I suspect it was just scavenging. You know how hard it is to keep small clams alive.
Bill S
Wed, 29th Mar 2006, 06:01 PM
Just a quick note about mussels & little neck clams. Mussels are naturally found in the ocean. Little necks are an estuary species, and are found where the salinity is a bit less than natural seawater. As are oysters & blue crabs - not that you would want a blue claw in your tank! The clams likely won't do well in the long term in the higher salinities of our tanks.
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