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Curated catalog

Indian apple snail

Pila globosa

Indian apple snail: aquarium gastropod in the family Ampullariidae, useful for biofilm, light algae, and substrate cleanup.

Family
Ampullariidae
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:

The Indian Apple Snail (*Pila globosa*) is a massive, exceptionally resilient freshwater gastropod natively endemic to the vast, highly vegetated, and seasonally flooded river basins, shallow lakes, and agricultural rice paddies stretching across India, Bangladesh, and Myanmar. Their natural biotope is defined by extreme monsoonal flooding followed by severe, prolonged droughts. They are famous for burying themselves incredibly deep in the baking mud to aestivate (hibernate) for months, awaiting the return of the monsoons.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Ampullariidae family alongside the Asian Apple Snail, they are immense aquatic titans. Fully mature adults routinely reach 6.0 to 8.0 centimeters (2.4-3.1 inches) in shell diameter. Their morphological hallmark—which gives them their scientific name (*globosa*)—is their spectacularly rounded, perfectly globe-shaped shell that is significantly wider and rounder than most other Apple Snails. They possess gills, a lung, a long breathing siphon, and a tough operculum.

Social Behavior:

They are peaceful, highly armored, and exceptionally hungry biological bulldozers. Despite their massive size, they are completely devoid of predatory instinct toward fish or dwarf shrimp. They are aggressive substrate scavengers; using their massive, muscular foot, they effortlessly plow through deep sand and gravel, unearthing buried roots and decaying matter. Utilizing their lung, they will frequently scale the aquarium glass to the surface, extend their siphon tube, inhale loudly, and drop back down.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is visually non-existent; male and female reproductive organs are fully enclosed within the shell. The intensely rounded, globe-like shell is incredibly thick to survive drought conditions. The base coloration is highly variable but generally earthy: pale yellowish-green, dark olive, muddy brown, or occasionally a stunning deep reddish-brown. The shell is usually wrapped in numerous, thin, dark horizontal bands. Their massive foot is typically a dark, mottled greyish-black.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture MUST accommodate their colossal adult size, massive biological footprint, and reliance on atmospheric air. A minimum 100-liter (25-gallon) tank is absolutely mandatory for a single adult. Because they breathe via a siphon, a heavily exposed air gap of 2-3 inches above the waterline is unconditionally required. A robust, heavy lid is mandatory to prevent them from climbing out. The substrate should be deep, soft sand to allow them to engage in natural burrowing behavior.

Diet & Feeding:

They are relentless, heavy-duty herbivores and voracious macrophyte (plant) eaters. CRITICAL WARNING: The Indian Apple Snail is catastrophically destructive to planted aquariums. They possess a massive appetite and WILL aggressively consume and obliterate every single living aquatic plant in the tank. In an unplanted or rock-only aquarium, they MUST be heavily fed daily with copious amounts of fresh, blanched vegetables (entire zucchini halves, lettuce) and heavy sinking wafers.

Water Quality:

Originating from the hot plains of the Indian subcontinent, they demand stable tropical heat (24-30°C / 75-86°F). Due to their massive size and ravenous, plant-eating metabolism, they produce an astonishing amount of physical waste. Flawless, over-engineered filtration and massive water changes are strictly required to prevent lethal Ammonia spikes. They possess an uncompromising biological requirement for extremely HARD, highly alkaline water (GH 8-20, pH 7.5 - 8.5) rich in dissolved calcium.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

Compatibility is universally excellent due to their peaceful nature and immense, impenetrable shell. They are the perfect (though heavily destructive to plants) giant cleanup crew for large, bare, or rock-only community tanks. They completely ignore fish. However, they MUST NEVER be housed with aggressive, snail-eating predators (massive Loaches, large Cichlids) that will relentlessly attack their vulnerable soft foot. Excellent companions include fast schooling fish and peaceful bottom-dwellers.

Aquarium Breeding:

Breeding the Indian Apple Snail is highly prolific. They are NOT hermaphrodites; distinct males and females are required for reproduction. After mating, the female will climb completely OUT of the water to lay a large, hard, calcified, stark-white egg clutch firmly attached to the aquarium glass, lid, or emergent rocks. The eggs incubate in humid atmospheric air for 2-4 weeks before hatching. Hundreds of voracious, plant-eating baby snails will then drop into the water column.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest physical risk is agonizing death from massive shell degradation caused by keeping them in soft, acidic water lacking calcium; extremely hard, highly alkaline water is unconditionally mandatory. The second major risk is massive, lethal water fouling (Ammonia spikes) if industrial-grade filtration is not utilized to handle their immense physical waste. Finally, they will completely decimate, devour, and destroy any planted aquarium they are introduced to.

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
6 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.