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Curated catalog
Mexican turbo snail
Turbo fluctuosa
Mexican turbo snail: marine lumaca marina in the family Turbinidae, included for reef role, behavior, or aquarium utility.
- Family
- Turbinidae
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
24 °C - 27 °C
8 - 8.4
Marine
Algivoro robusto
High
Description
Geographical Origin & Biotope:
The Mexican Turbo Snail (*Turbo fluctuosa*) is a heavy, highly efficient marine gastropod natively endemic to the warm, algae-rich coastal waters, rocky intertidal zones, and shallow coral reefs of the Gulf of California (Sea of Cortez) and the Pacific coast of Mexico. Their natural biotope is defined by turbulent, highly oxygenated rocky shorelines explicitly dominated by massive growths of tough macroalgae, turf algae, and thick diatom films.
Taxonomy & Morphology:
Scientifically classified within the Turbinidae (Turban Snails) family, they are a massive and heavily armored mollusk. Fully mature adults reach an impressive shell diameter of 5.0 to 7.5 centimeters (2.0-3.0 inches). They possess a thick, heavily calcified, spiral shell that resembles a turban or top. Defining Feature: They possess a thick, calcareous operculum (a hard trapdoor) that securely seals the shell opening to prevent desiccation during low tide and protect against predators.
Social Behavior:
They are slow-moving, intensely determined, and strictly herbivorous benthic grazers. They spend 24 hours a day bulldozing across the live rock, glass, and sand, relentlessly scraping algae using a highly specialized, rasping tongue called a radula. They are entirely solitary and ignore all other invertebrates. Due to their massive size and gripping strength, they possess incredible torque and are notorious for accidentally knocking over poorly secured coral fragments.
Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:
Sexual dimorphism is visually non-existent without dissection. Their coloration is highly variable and primarily functional, designed to blend in with rocky, algae-covered substrates. The heavy, spiraled shell is typically a mottled mix of dull grayish-brown, dark olive green, and off-white. In mature reef aquariums, the shell frequently becomes heavily encrusted with beautiful purple or pink Coralline algae, providing natural camouflage. The fleshy foot is a pale, mottled gray.
Care and observations
Tank Setup:
The aquarium architecture MUST accommodate their massive size and extreme appetite for algae. A minimum 110-liter (30-gallon) marine aquarium is required. CRITICAL REQUIREMENT: The tank MUST feature vast amounts of highly porous live rock. CORAL WARNING: Because of their sheer mass and clumsy, bulldozing nature, all coral frags MUST be securely glued or epoxied to the rockwork; a large Turbo Snail will effortlessly push unsecured frags off ledges.
Diet & Feeding:
They are absolute powerhouse, obligate herbivores and the supreme champions of consuming heavy hair algae (*Derbesia*). They will consume massive quantities of film algae, cyanobacteria, and thick turf algae. CRITICAL WARNING: Their massive appetite is their greatest vulnerability. A single Turbo Snail can strip a 30-gallon tank of algae in weeks. If the tank is clean, they WILL slowly starve to death. They MUST be heavily supplemented with dried Nori seaweed rubber-banded to a rock.
Water Quality:
As heavily calcified marine mollusks, they are devastatingly sensitive to water chemistry and temperature fluctuations. While originating from Mexico, they demand stable tropical/subtropical heat (23-26°C / 73-79°F). Specific gravity (salinity) MUST be maintained precisely between 1.023 and 1.025. They require hard, highly alkaline water (pH 8.1 - 8.4) with flawless Calcium (400-450 ppm) and Magnesium levels to continually grow and repair their massive, thick calcareous shells.
Compatibility & Tankmates:
Compatibility is absolute regarding peaceful reef inhabitants. They are 100% reef-safe, completely ignoring all corals and fish. However, they are highly vulnerable to predators. CRITICAL WARNING: They MUST NEVER be housed with Pufferfish, Triggerfish, large Hawkfish, or aggressive Hermit Crabs. Large Hermit Crabs (like the Electric Blue or Hairy Hermit) will relentlessly harass, kill, and eat a Turbo Snail purely to steal its massive, highly desirable shell.
Aquarium Breeding:
Breeding the Mexican Turbo Snail in a home aquarium occasionally happens through broadcast spawning. If kept in a group, males and females will simultaneously release clouds of sperm and eggs into the water column, turning the tank water completely cloudy. However, the resulting microscopic, pelagic trochophore larvae rarely survive the filtration systems and protein skimmers of a modern reef tank, making successful rearing practically non-existent for hobbyists.
Risks & Diseases:
CRITICAL TOXICITY WARNING: Like all marine snails, they are immediately and fatally hypersensitive to COPPER (Cu) and heavy metals. They will die rapidly in tanks treated with copper. The second major risk is lethal starvation; they are frequently purchased to clean a tank, and then ignored once the algae is gone, resulting in slow death. The third risk is death by being flipped; if they fall upside-down on soft sand, they often cannot right themselves and will be eaten by crabs.
Invertebrate profile
- Type
- Lumaca marina
- Diet
- Biofilm, alghe, detrito o cibo carnivoro mirato secondo specie
- Ecological role
- Algivoro robusto
- Minimum group
- 1
- Adult size
- 5 cm
- GH
- n/a
- KH
- n/a
- TDS
- n/a
- Copper
- High
- Shock sensitivity
- Alta: acclimatazione lenta e parametri stabili
- Calcium and minerals
- Mantenere alcalinita e minerali marini stabili
- Reproduction
- Riproduzione in acquario variabile; spesso richiede gestione larvale marina dedicata.
- Compatibility
- Verificare aggressivita, predazione, spazio chimico e distanza da coralli urticanti.
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Wikimedia Commons image under Turbo fluctuosus selected as licensed species-level fallback for catalog Turbo fluctuosa.