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Stream rock snail

Paludomus loricatus

Stream rock snail: aquarium gastropod in the family Paludomidae, useful for biofilm, light algae, and substrate cleanup.

Family
Paludomidae
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

20 °C - 28 °C

pH

7 - 8.4

Water type

Freshwater

Ecological role

Algivoro/detritivoro

Copper

High

Description

Geographical Origin & Biotope:

Endemic exclusively to the pristine, high-altitude mountain streams and fast-flowing rivers of Sri Lanka. Paludomus loricatus (the Stream Rock Snail) is a highly specialized, rheophilic (current-loving) invertebrate. It naturally colonizes torrential, highly oxygenated aquatic environments. These incredibly rugged micro-habitats are fundamentally characterized by freezing, crystal-clear water violently rushing over massive, smooth boulders and solid bedrock, completely devoid of fine sand or aquatic vegetation, but heavily encrusted with tough diatoms and biofilm.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Paludomidae family. Morphologically, it is a robust, heavily armored, medium-sized snail, reaching 2.5 to 3.5 centimeters (1-1.4 inches) in diameter. Its extraordinary evolutionary adaptation is its massive, incredibly thick, rounded, and highly textured shell. The shell is deeply sculpted with thick, prominent spiral ridges and grooves, heavily resembling a rough, eroded piece of river rock. This heavy, low-profile, and rugged design acts as the ultimate anchor, preventing the snail from being crushed by debris or swept away in torrential mountain rapids.

Social Behavior:

They are completely peaceful, entirely non-aggressive, and highly methodical biological grazers. They possess zero territorial instincts and completely ignore all other tank inhabitants, including tiny shrimp and peaceful fish. Unlike burrowing snails, the Stream Rock Snail is a dedicated surface grazer. They spend 100% of their waking hours firmly locked onto large, smooth surfaces (massive river stones, thick driftwood, and aquarium glass) using their massive, muscular foot, relentlessly scraping away stubborn biofilms and encrusting green algae.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is virtually non-existent visually; distinguishing males from females requires microscopic anatomical dissection. The coloration is highly functional, rugged camouflage designed to render them completely invisible against algae-covered boulders. The massively textured shell is typically a deep, earthy olive-green, dark chestnut-brown, or solid, striking jet-black. The shell is frequently overlaid with intricate, dizzying patterns of tiny, bright golden or yellow flecks, spots, or delicate zigzag lines trapped within the deep spiral grooves.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture must flawlessly replicate a highly oxygenated, fast-flowing Sri Lankan mountain stream. A minimum 40-liter tank is sufficient, provided it is fully mature. The layout MUST feature massive amounts of smooth hardscape: giant, water-worn river stones and heavy, thick driftwood positioned directly under bright lights to intentionally cultivate heavy biofilm and algae growth. They strictly require hard surfaces to graze on. A completely sealed, tight-fitting lid is absolutely mandatory, as they are capable of climbing above the waterline and desiccating.

Diet & Feeding:

In their torrential Sri Lankan streams, they are highly specialized, obligate algivores and biofilm grazers. They use their specialized, raspy radula to shear tough diatoms and green encrusting algae directly off smooth bedrock. 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 and biofilm. In flawlessly clean tanks, they will quickly starve. Their diet MUST be supplemented with sinking spirulina wafers, blanched zucchini, and calcium-rich foods.

Water Quality:

Originating from pristine mountain rapids, they demand immaculate water chemistry and extreme oxygenation. They thrive in cooler, stable tropical temperatures (20-25°C / 68-77°F). Crucially, they strictly require hard, highly alkaline water (pH 7.2 - 8.5, GH 8-20) saturated with dissolved calcium to maintain their massive, thick shells. They are rheophilic (current-loving); therefore, a highly powerful canister filter or dedicated powerheads generating a massive, unidirectional water flow across the rocks is absolutely mandatory. They have zero tolerance for stagnant water or ammonia.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

They are the absolute perfect, heavy-duty algae grazers for a specialized, fast-flowing "Hillstream" or river manifold community tank. Because they are completely peaceful and heavily armored, they are virtually impervious to casual nipping. Excellent tankmates are other rheophilic, fast-water species: Hillstream Loaches (Sewellia), White Cloud Mountain Minnows, and peaceful Gobies (Stiphodon). However, they MUST NEVER be housed with specialized snail-eating predators: large Pufferfish, massive Botiid Loaches, or Assassin Snails, which will relentlessly hunt them.

Aquarium Breeding:

Breeding in a standard freshwater aquarium is incredibly difficult and extraordinarily rare. Unlike pest snails that lay massive, unsightly egg clutches on the glass, Paludomus loricatus is exceptionally secretive. Their complete reproductive cycle remains largely a mystery in the aquarium hobby. They are believed to be livebearers or produce extremely small numbers of fully formed miniature snails hidden deep within the rockwork. Consequently, they will absolutely never overrun a planted aquarium, making them a premium, non-invasive cleanup crew.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest physical risk is slow, agonizing starvation in a brand new, perfectly clean tank; they MUST only be added to mature, established aquariums with a heavy, visible crop of algae and biofilm on the rocks. The second major risk is severe shell erosion and death caused by keeping them in soft, acidic water lacking calcium. The third major risk is suffocation in stagnant, poorly oxygenated water without strong flow. 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
3 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 variabile; controllare disponibilita di calcio e cibo senza sovralimentare.
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 Paludomus loricatus.