The great snail, a majestic snail in the pond

Of remarkable size, its elegant shell rolled up into a long point, the great snail crisscrosses the ponds with its quiet glide.

An aquatic snail

The great snail, Limnaea stagnalis, is a snail, with lungs, installed in quiet waters, with slow or non-existent currents. Imposing gastropod, its size can reach 5 to 6 cm, it remains elegant with its lengthened shell with the many spires. Accustomed to ponds, it is found throughout Europe, in the Northern hemisphere, Asia and America, alongside other limneas, all of the family Lymnaeidae.

A siphon to breathe oxygen from the air

If it lives in water, the Great Limnea cannot breathe oxygen. Its lungs need air. The attentive observer will have to wait long moments to see it finally going back to the surface, deploying a siphon, piercing the surface of the water and capturing the air necessary for long immersions. Immersions all the more long as the water will be well oxygenated, the gas exchanges taking place then also by the skin.

Its house on the back

Classic snail, the big Limnée carries its house. A "coat" on its back secretes a calcareous formation, of only one part it manufactures a twisted shell. In which she shelters her soft mollusc body, in case of predation and in times of drought. If its waiting in its shell must be prolonged, it will close the "door" using dried mucus, burying itself if possible in the mud.

A quiet path

On its muscular oval foot, the large Limnea surveys the bottom of the pond, its reliefs, slips from plants to plants. One can see it floating sometimes, between two waters, in ascending or descending movement. At the surface of the pond, between water and air, it is placed upside down and its mucus-covered foot is flush with the air. She glides slowly, feeding on the biofilm formed on the stagnant water.

She grazes, grazes

The great dabbler spends long moments grazing. Its two long triangular tentacles are surmounted by two eyes, below which is placed the mouth. In this mouth is the radula, which could resemble a rasping tongue, covered with asperities that allow it to scrape decomposing plants, to graze the aquatic bottom, to tear some particles from occasional decomposing corpses.

Males and females, aquatic meetings

The great snail, like many snails, is hermaphroditic, the same individual carrying, in a complex anatomy, the male and female sexes. After cross fertilization, sometimes with several individuals, the eggs are laid on the walls or on the plants in extremely adhesive elongated socks. After three weeks, more or less according to the temperature, the eggs hatch and come out tiny Limnea whose body and shell will grow in a few months.

Majestic, slow-moving, the great snail is one of the easiest to observe in the pond. Not very demanding, an abundant vegetation, a calm water and detritus will be enough to welcome it.

The gambusia, against mosquitoes

The Gambusia, from its small name Gambusia affinis, is a small freshwater fish native to the United States that likes to live in schools. It has been successfully introduced in several French regions, including the marshes of the Camargue and certain rivers in the southwest, in order to combat the proliferation of mosquitoes.

Presentation

The gambusia is part of the order Cyprinodontiformes. It is a cousin of the guppies that we commonly find in our aquariums, however its colors are less bright: they vary from gray to light green.

The head is large but ends in a point at the level of the mouth which is provided with many teeth.

The dorsal fin of the gambusia is positioned at the back of the body and is not very developed whereas the caudal fin is larger in the shape of a rounded fan. The ventral fin is located at the base of the tail, it is short and rounded in the female and is transformed in the male into a long pointed organ, the gonopod intended for the copulation.  The male is smaller than the female (3,5 cm against 6,5 cm for the female). In addition to their size, they are differentiated by the black spot that the female has on her abdomen.

Habitat and feeding

Native of the hot zones of the United States, the gambusia has incredible faculties of adaptation, what was worth to him to be introduced from share the world to fight against the plague of the malaria and other diseases carried by the mosquitos. Its preferred waters are fresh but it is not uncommon to find it in brackish waters or in saturated waters with very low oxygen content.

The gambusia is found in large numbers in Mexico, Cuba, Jamaica and Nicaragua. It can be described as robust and combative: it must often be isolated when it lives in an aquarium because it tends to attack the fins of other fish, it can even eat its own young.

Gambusia feed on mosquito larvae, bloodworms, water fleas or even tadpoles.

Life cycle

The reproduction period of the gambusir is from April to October. Males insert their gonopod into the genital opening of females and fertilize the eggs.

The fertilized females lay fry over a long period of time with intervals of a few weeks between each spawning.

The fry, less than 10 mm in size, are just born and disperse into the vegetation where they continue to develop until they reach sexual maturity six months later.

The life span of the Gambusia is approximately two years.

The craspedote, a freshwater jellyfish

They scare, fascinate: jellyfish populate the seas and oceans, and leave neither holidaymakers nor naturalists unmoved. And when we meet a small species in our lakes, ponds, canals, after a moment of surprise, we can only go to discover Craspedacusta sowerby, present in freshwater of all continents.

A small jellyfish in our water bodies

In 1880, London scientists discovered a jellyfish in a pond of exotic plants. Translucent, it is clearly visible to the naked eye with its 2 cm diameter. Named Craspedacusta sowerbyi, or freshwater Craspedote, it belongs to the Cnidaria, a cousin of the jellyfish of the seas and oceans, but also of anemones and corals. It is the only freshwater jellyfish that meets in its class of Hydrozoans only Hydras, polyps always fixed.

Since its first description in London, the Craspedote has been observed on all continents, in 1929 in the Garonne pond and then in all the rivers of France.

Fragile and elegant

The encounter is surprising: bending over the waters of a lake, a canal, an old gravel pit, or even a pond, one sees small translucent, parachute-shaped organisms the size of a 2 euro coin floating. The freshwater Craspedote is a typical Hydrozoan: its umbrella is lined with more or less long tentacles, up to 400, a velum closes the parachute on its lower face. Under the umbel, crossing the velum, a tube, the manubrium, springs out, equipped with an external orifice and connected to 4 radial channels in intern. All the anatomy of the medusa is visible by transparency.

It floats in the middle of its preys

The freshwater Craspedote can move by vigorous contractions of its umbrella, but lets itself float according to the movements of the water, among the zooplankton. It is thus within reach of its preys. Copepods, daphnids, all the small animals of the plankton will be captured by its tentacles, carried to the opening of the manubrium, the mouth, to be swallowed. Once the digestion is finished, the waste will be rejected by the same orifice, serving as anus this time.

In Craspedotes the tentacles are provided with cnidocytes, stinging cells provided with harpoons with paralyzing effects. Only on small preys, the man does not seem to have to worry about its presence, its epidermis cannot be crossed.

It appears and disappears suddenly

The Freshwater Craspedote can go unnoticed one year, as well as proliferate in abundant populations the following year. Then disappear again. Before being a floating jellyfish that can be observed with the naked eye, it takes the form of a tiny polyp of a few millimeters attached to the bottom, to vegetation, to rocks. Its small tentacles allow it to feed on animal micoplankton. This polyp will reproduce by asexual way, by budding, release of crawling "larvae" moving and forming a new polyp, and production of medusoid buds. Some will become medusas leading a sexual reproduction. The fertilized eggs will pass through the planula stage, a small floating ciliated larva that will settle and become a polyp.

Present on all continents and therefore considered as an invasive species, the freshwater Craspedote would not represent a threat to ecosystems. Its feeding in zooplankton remains limited, its presence remains discreet. The impact of climate change on the evolution of the populations of this species may however modify the current data in the coming years.

The koi carp

The Koi carp is a pond fish particularly appreciated by gardeners because of its large size, its colorful appearance and its proximity to humans.

The Koi carp, its origin

The Koi carp is, like the common carp of our rivers, a cold water fish particularly appreciated by gardeners with an outdoor pond. Originally, the Koi carp was Chinese. It is a descendant of the Magoi carp which was quite close to our European carps since they were essentially grey.

Introduced in Japan around the year 200, they became around the year 1000 ornamental carps raised exclusively by the Japanese nobility. Over the centuries, the Koi carp has been adorned with beautiful contrasting colors which makes it look today like very large goldfish that can reach 60 cm long.

Koi carp were introduced in Europe after the Second World War. These animals are distinguished from other species by their temperament and their peaceful and routine behavior, very close to humans. As long as the feeding is at regular time, the Koi carp comes easily to the contact of the hand that dispenses its food.

According to the habits, the gardener can thus perfectly caress his fish! The other great advantage of the Koi carp is that it is essentially herbivorous. It cohabits perfectly with all varieties of goldfish which is an important aesthetic argument since the pond can be adorned with a beautiful ballet of small and large fish.

There are several types of Koi, among which the scaly carp which meets the Japanese standard, the mirror carp of European origin, with large scales on the dorsal side and the attachment of the fins, the leather carp of German origin without scales or the carp with sail fins of American origin. In terms of color, if the red and white of the classic Kohaku carp dominate, many variants are possible such as the Sanshoku (red, white and some black scales), the Tancho (circular red spot on the head), the Shiro Itsuri (bicolor black and white), the Ki Utsuri (bicolor orange and black), the Shiro Muji (integrally white), the Ki-Goi (monocolored bright yellow), the Goshiki (5 colors: black, red, white and different shades of blue). ..

Did you know that ?

Koi carp is an imposing fish. For reasons of space, there are usually 10 to 12 carps of less than 15 cm for one cubic meter of water and only 1 to 2 of more than 45 cm for the same volume of water.

The Ide Melanote, a little known fish

Here is an animal that is not very common in our ponds and yet deserves to be better known! The Ide Melanote is a fish that is not afraid of the cold and that, by its mode of feeding, helps to regulate the ecosystem of the pond.

Presentation

The Melanote Ide (Leuciscus idus) is a member of the Cyprinidae family. This fish looks like a roach. Of gregarious nature, it likes to live in schools.

Its body is tapered and its color is mostly silver but can vary from blue-gray to a very dark green depending on the age and the period. The belly is whitish and the sides are always lighter and silvery. The fins are gray except for the pelvic and anal fins which are pink or red. Its head is narrow, with a mouth directed upwards.

The maximum adult size is 75 cm in length for a weight of 4 kg.

Habitat and feeding

This fish is found in the wild in rivers, ponds and lakes in Central and Eastern Europe, as far as the Ural plain. It is also very common in Great Britain. In France, it can be found in the Rhine, the Moselle or the Somme, more rarely in the Loire and the Sarthe. The Ide is not a difficult fish, it can live as well near the bottom as at a few centimeters of the surface and tolerates also brackish waters.

The Ide is a good ally in the pond because it feeds mainly on insects, small crustaceans, plant debris and algae, which allows to limit maintenance operations. Be careful though, because in very large ponds, where it can grow to its maximum size, it could feed on small fish.

Reproduction

The reproduction period of the Melanotus Ide is in spring, between April and June, depending on the weather conditions. A female can lay between 42,000 and 260,000 eggs in a shallow area with a gravelly bottom where the eggs can cling. Many will be destroyed before hatching or absorbed by predators in the first few hours of their life, thus limiting the number of individuals. The Ide can live more than 20 years.

Behavior in the tank

The Ide is a gregarious fish, it will be necessary to introduce several subjects of this same species (at least 5).

A pond of at least 25 m² is necessary for its lively movements under the surface. It is a hunter and spends its time cleaning the pond of insects that are on the surface or that have fallen into the water. It also appreciates aquatic insects, mosquito larvae and can also be very useful to rid the pond of green algae and other plant invasions.

The stickleback, a nesting fish

A superb fish the size of a small finger slips into the vegetation: blue eye, red belly, slate blue back. Exotic, installed in the living room aquarium? Not at all, the stickleback lives in our rivers, our ponds, busy building a comfortable nest for its young.

A small bony freshwater fish

The three-spined stickleback is a bony fish of the Gasterosteidae family. It lives in rivers with calm currents, but also in ponds, puddles and isolated waterholes, all over France. Common, ubiquitous, it walks its long body from 4 to 10 cm, with a greenish back, a silver belly, in the abundant vegetation, on muddy or sandy bottoms. On its sides, no scales, but bony plates; on its back a row of spines, three in Gasterosteus aculeatus; under its belly not fins but pelvic spines. And especially remarkable spring colors. In the male, only, which from March prepares for the mating rituals.

A colorful male

The arrival of spring announces for the male stickleback a new outfit, with bright colors. His throat, his flanks, will become orange-red, his back slate blue. And his eyes of dull gray become azure blue. The female doesn't change anything in her wardrobe, it is she who will choose the most attractive male, with the most attractive parade. The one who will fertilize the eggs. Prepared by dozens in the females, they are so numerous and so big that she grows spectacularly, up to 25% of her weight in addition. She will entrust them to the paternal care, particularly serious.

A safe and cozy nest

Not content with adorning himself with beautiful colors, the little male stickleback works for his offspring. He chooses a territory, in shallow fresh water, with dense vegetation. On the bottom, he builds a nest of intertwined plants, bound by a mucus of his own making. Until July he will watch for females. And will seduce them of a dance, parade of presentation of its body of male and its sure and cosy nest. The conquered female will then lay her eggs in the nest. And the male will chase her away immediately, to take care of his young. He watches over them, ventilates them by creating an oxygen-carrying current. 8 to 10 days later, when the young are born, he will still be there, ensuring their protection until they leave, carried away by the current to other territories.

Dreaded carnivores and sought-after prey

The young sticklebacks will disperse, forming small scattered groups from several nests. Carnivorous, they will feed on zooplankton, crustaceans, insects, larvae and adults, worms, fry... And will even practice cannibalism, devouring each other. Sometimes cited as harmful for their voracity, sticklebacks are themselves hunted. They seem to be formidable with their row of hard and sharp dorsal spines rising up during an attack, not to mention their lateral pelvic spines always ready to hurt. But some predators have been able to adapt: the kingfisher knocks it out before swallowing it, the spines at rest are always folded. The heron will prefer to crush it with its powerful beak. The egret gobbles it head on...

The stickleback is a common fish of our fresh waters, not well known despite its amazing habits. Often raised in aquariums, it offers a fascinating show, spring colors, nest building, ventilation of the young. But under the waters of our rivers, ponds, sticklebacks are in regression and are classified on the list of protected species in "minor concern".

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