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Curated catalog
Diadem nerite snail
Clithon diadema
Diadem nerite snail: aquarium gastropod in the family Neritidae, useful for biofilm, light algae, and substrate cleanup.
- Family
- Neritidae
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
20 °C - 28 °C
7 - 8.4
Freshwater / Brackish
Algivoro/detritivoro
High
Description
Geographical Origin & Biotope:
Endemic to a massive geographical range encompassing the tropical Indo-Pacific region, natively colonizing the shallow coastal rivers, tidal estuaries, and brackish mangrove swamps of Southeast Asia, specifically the Philippines, Indonesia, and Malaysia. Clithon diadema (the Diadem Nerite Snail) naturally inhabits the high-energy intertidal zone where freshwater rivers collide with the ocean. These micro-habitats are fundamentally characterized by extremely shallow, sun-drenched, fast-flowing water, and massive expanses of smooth river boulders totally smothered in thick biofilms, green algae, and tough diatoms.
Taxonomy & Morphology:
Scientifically classified within the Neritidae family (the nerite snails). Taxonomically, the Clithon genus comprises heavily armored, amphibious freshwater snails. Morphologically, it is slightly larger than the Horned Nerite, reaching a maximum diameter of 2.5 to 3 centimeters (1-1.2 inches). Its defining evolutionary adaptation is its magnificent, domed, highly calcified shell, famously adorned with a prominent "crown" or "diadem" of long, sharp, outward-radiating calcified spikes. These aggressive spikes serve as a highly effective defense against predators attempting to crush them.
Social Behavior:
They are completely peaceful, non-aggressive, and incredibly methodical biological bulldozers. They possess zero territorial instincts and completely ignore fish, shrimp, and other snails. Like all Nerites, they are relentless, unstoppable eating machines. They spend 100% of their waking hours locked onto hard surfaces (aquarium glass, massive river stones, and sunken driftwood), relentlessly scraping away the most stubborn, hard-to-remove algae films (like Green Spot Algae). They are highly amphibious and will frequently climb completely out of the water to rest above the waterline.
Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:
Sexual dimorphism is virtually non-existent visually; distinguishing males from females requires microscopic anatomical dissection. The coloration is globally famous, striking, and incredibly variable; no two snails possess the exact same pattern. The base shell coloration typically ranges from deep olive-green and golden-yellow to rich chestnut-brown. This base is almost always heavily overlaid with a complex, dizzying pattern of thick, spiraling black bands, delicate zigzag lines, or intricate mottled spotting, creating a spectacular visual contrast in the aquarium.
Care and observations
Tank Setup:
The aquarium architecture must flawlessly accommodate their unstoppable algae-grazing habits and amphibious escape attempts. A minimum 30-liter tank is sufficient, provided it is biologically mature. The layout MUST feature massive amounts of smooth hardscape (large, flat river stones and extensive, branching driftwood) positioned directly under bright lighting to intentionally cultivate heavy algae growth. The absolute, non-negotiable requirement is a completely sealed, heavy, tight-fitting lid with zero gaps. If the tank is open, they will relentlessly climb out and desiccate on the floor.
Diet & Feeding:
In their sunlit Indo-Pacific estuaries, they are highly specialized, obligate algivores. They use their specialized radula (a raspy, tooth-covered tongue) to shear tough diatoms and green algae off rocks. In captivity, they are ravenous grazers but strictly refuse to eat healthy aquatic plants. Their diet MUST consist almost entirely of naturally occurring aquarium algae. If the tank is perfectly clean, they will quickly starve. Their diet MUST be supplemented with sinking spirulina wafers, blanched zucchini, and calcium-rich foods (cuttlebone) to maintain shell integrity.
Water Quality:
Originating from tidal estuaries, they are incredibly adaptable to varying salinities but absolutely demand specific chemistry for shell health. They thrive in warm tropical temperatures (22-28°C / 72-82°F). Crucially, they strictly require hard, highly alkaline water (pH 7.5 - 8.5, GH 10-25) heavily saturated with dissolved calcium. If kept in soft, acidic water, their calcified, spiked shells will rapidly dissolve, pitting and cracking until the snail dies of exposure. They possess absolute zero tolerance for ammonia or nitrites.
Compatibility & Tankmates:
They are the absolute perfect, bizarre, and highly functional clean-up crew for any peaceful community tank. Because they are completely peaceful and heavily armored with spikes, they are practically invincible to most casual nipping. Excellent tankmates are peaceful community fish, dwarf shrimp (Neocaridina), and peaceful bottom-dwellers. However, they MUST NEVER be housed with specialized snail-eating predators: large Pufferfish, massive Loaches (like adult Clown Loaches), or Assassin Snails (Clea helena), which will relentlessly hunt and consume them.
Aquarium Breeding:
Breeding in a standard freshwater aquarium is absolutely impossible, making them the perfect, non-invasive cleanup crew. They reproduce via an incredibly complex, amphidromous lifecycle. In the aquarium, females will relentlessly pepper the glass and driftwood with hundreds of tiny, hard, sesame-seed-like white egg capsules. While highly unsightly, these eggs will NEVER hatch in freshwater. In the wild, the microscopic larvae wash out into the ocean to develop in full marine salinity before crawling back up into the freshwater estuaries as miniature adults.
Risks & Diseases:
The absolute greatest physical risk is escaping the tank and desiccating; a tight-fitting lid is strictly mandatory for these amphibious escape artists. The second major risk is severe shell erosion and death caused by keeping them in soft, acidic water lacking massive amounts of calcium. The third major risk is slow starvation in a brand new, perfectly clean tank; they MUST only be added to mature aquariums with established algae. Medically, as invertebrates, they possess absolute zero tolerance for any copper-based medications.
Invertebrate profile
- Type
- Freshwater snail
- Diet
- Biofilm, alghe tenere, residui vegetali e mangimi specifici ricchi di calcio
- Ecological role
- Algivoro/detritivoro
- Minimum group
- 1
- Adult size
- 2 cm
- GH
- 6 dGH - 20 dGH
- KH
- 3 dKH - 15 dKH
- TDS
- n/a
- Copper
- High
- Shock sensitivity
- Media-alta durante acclimatazione e cambi acqua
- Calcium and minerals
- Richiede calcio e alcalinita adeguati per mantenere il guscio integro
- Reproduction
- Riproduzione spesso legata a larve salmastre o marine; in dolce molte specie non infestano la vasca.
- Compatibility
- Compatibile con pesci pacifici; evitare predatori di lumache, botia grandi e pesci palla.
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Wikimedia Commons species-level image selected as licensed fallback for Clithon diadema.