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Curated catalog

European river snail

Viviparus viviparus

European river snail: aquarium gastropod in the family Viviparidae, useful for biofilm, light algae, and substrate cleanup.

Family
Viviparidae
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 Common River Snail (*Viviparus viviparus*) is a heavily built, temperate freshwater gastropod natively endemic to the deep, slow-moving rivers, large lakes, and highly oxygenated canals sprawling across Central and Eastern Europe. Their natural biotope is defined by cooler, flowing waters over firm muddy or sandy substrates. They spend their lives deeply submerged, using the moderate water currents to function both as heavy-duty substrate scavengers and highly efficient filter feeders.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Viviparidae family, they are the European cousins to the Asian Trapdoor snails. Fully mature adults are relatively large, reaching 3.0 to 4.0 centimeters (1.2-1.6 inches) in shell length. They feature a thick, robust, blunted conical shell that is perfectly smooth. Unlike Ramshorns, they breathe entirely underwater via gills and possess a tough, horny operculum (trapdoor) to seal themselves tightly against predators. Their sensory tentacles are notably long and thick.

Social Behavior:

They are exceptionally peaceful, slow-moving, and methodical giants. They possess zero predatory instincts and completely ignore fish or shrimp. Their behavior is highly specialized: they spend long periods buried in the substrate, using their gills to filter microscopic algae and detritus directly from the water column. When not filtering, they emerge to slowly bulldoze across the bottom, acting as heavy-duty scavengers. They rarely climb the aquarium glass, heavily preferring the substrate.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is visibly distinct to the trained eye: males possess a noticeably swollen, curled right tentacle (which houses their reproductive organ), whereas females have two perfectly identical, straight tentacles. Their thick, smooth shell serves as excellent riverbed camouflage. The base color ranges from yellowish-green to deep olive-brown, distinctly wrapped with three dark, highly saturated reddish-brown or black horizontal bands. Their fleshy body is usually a dark, mottled grey.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture MUST accommodate their size, burrowing behavior, and need for water flow. A minimum 40-liter (10-gallon) tank is required. CRITICAL REQUIREMENT: The substrate MUST consist of soft, fine sand (at least 2 inches deep). Coarse, jagged gravel will brutally lacerate their soft foot and prevent natural burrowing. They strictly require moderate water flow (via a powerhead or strong filter) to bring suspended, microscopic food particles to their gills for filter feeding.

Diet & Feeding:

They are highly specialized filter feeders and detritivores. CRITICAL CLARIFICATION: They absolutely DO NOT eat healthy, living aquarium plants, making them 100% reef-safe for planted tanks. Because they filter-feed, they will slowly starve to death in pristine, heavily filtered, sterile aquariums. Their diet MUST be meticulously supplemented with powdered spirulina (injected directly into the current), premium sinking omnivore wafers, and blanched vegetables (zucchini).

Water Quality:

Originating from the temperate rivers of Europe, their biological requirements lean strongly toward COOL to temperate water (10-22°C / 50-72°F). They are highly prized for outdoor ornamental ponds because they easily survive freezing winters. Keeping them in hot tropical tanks (28°C+) will severely accelerate their metabolism, causing exhaustion and drastically shortening their lifespan. They strictly require hard, alkaline water (GH 8-20, pH 7.2 - 8.5) rich in calcium to maintain their thick shells.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

Compatibility is excellent for cooler-water community tanks, but their slow nature requires careful tankmate selection. They are perfect cleanup crews for unheated tanks with Goldfish, Hillstream Loaches, or White Cloud Mountain Minnows. They MUST NEVER be housed with aggressive, snail-eating predators (massive Loaches, large Cichlids) that will relentlessly harass them, forcing them to stay sealed in their shells until they starve. Excellent companions for Neocaridina shrimp.

Aquarium Breeding:

Breeding the River Snail is incredibly slow and highly prized. As their scientific name (*viviparus*) implies, they are true livebearers. Females do not lay eggs; they incubate embryos internally for months and give birth to fully formed, surprisingly large (up to 0.5 cm) independent snails. Because they reproduce incredibly slowly (producing only a few babies a year), they will absolutely NEVER overpopulate a tank or become a "pest." The young are exact replicas of the adults.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest physical risk is slow, agonizing death from massive shell degradation (pitting and whitening) caused by keeping them in soft, acidic water lacking calcium; hard, alkaline water is unconditionally mandatory. The second major risk is lethal starvation; owners often fail to realize they are filter feeders and place them in sterile tanks without powdered food. Finally, lethal metabolic exhaustion will occur if this coldwater species is kept in constantly hot tropical aquariums.

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
4 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.