Mysis
Chopped Meaty Seafood
Shellfish
Snowflake Eels are nocturnal and exhibit a serpentine swimming style. They are solitary and prefer hiding in crevices during the day. Territorial, they may become aggressive if threatened. Generally compatible with larger, non-aggressive fish, but small fish may be at risk of predation. They require ample hiding spots and a secure lid to prevent escape.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
About the Snowflake Eel
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How large of a tank do I realistically need for a Snowflake Eel, and does the tank’s shape or aquascape matter for its long-term health?
A Snowflake Eel (Echidna nebulosa) reaches 24–30 inches in captivity, so the realistic minimum is 75 gallons for a small individual with a planned upgrade, and 90–120 gallons for an adult. A longer tank (4 feet or more) is much better than a tall, narrow tank because eels swim in a snake-like motion and need horizontal space and layout to navigate. Rockwork should form stable caves and tunnels that fully hide the eel’s body; use well-supported base rock on the glass, then add sand or rubble so burrowing won’t topple structures. Add multiple entry/exit points to reduce stress and aggression. Avoid sharp rock edges that can tear the eel’s skin when it darts into its cave. A tight, well-fitted lid with no gaps over 1/4 inch and covered overflow teeth are mandatory; Snowflake Eels are escape artists and often crawl out at night or during storms/power outages. -
My Snowflake Eel only seems to eat live feeder fish or shrimp. How can I safely transition it onto frozen foods, and what are good staple items?
Start with foods that mimic its natural diet of crustaceans. Use tongs to wiggle thawed raw shrimp, silversides, squid, or small pieces of marine fish (like salmon, mahi, or snapper) right in front of its face, especially at dusk when it is most active. Soak frozen foods in garlic extract or the juice of thawed shrimp to trigger a feeding response. If it is hooked on live foods, offer live ghost shrimp or mollies lightly injured or pre-killed, then quickly swap to similarly sized thawed shrimp while it is in “hunt” mode. Over several feedings, reduce live foods and increase frozen. Staple diet: raw shrimp (with shell pieces sometimes for jaw exercise), krill, squid, clam, mussel, and marine fish flesh. Avoid freshwater feeders (goldfish, rosy reds) long term due to poor nutrition and thiaminase. Feed 2–3 times weekly; a slightly rounded but not bulging belly is a good guide. Overfeeding can cause regurgitation and water quality issues. -
Can I keep a Snowflake Eel in a reef tank with clean-up crew and small reef fish, or will it eventually eat inverts and tankmates?
Snowflake Eels are “crustacean specialists,” so most small crustaceans such as cleaner shrimp, peppermint shrimp, pistol shrimp, and small crabs are high-risk and often become food sooner or later, especially as the eel matures and gains confidence. Snails and hermits are somewhat safer but still at risk if the eel develops a taste for them or is underfed. Small, slender fish (firefish, small wrasses, gobies, chromis) are also at risk, particularly if they sleep near the substrate or rockwork where the eel hunts at night. Larger, more robust fish that do not fit easily in its mouth (tangs, larger angels, big wrasses, triggers that can handle themselves) are generally safer. If you plan a mixed “reef with eel,” accept that most shrimp and small crabs are expendable and design your clean-up crew around snails and larger hermits. Provide heavy feeding and multiple caves to reduce predatory behavior toward fish, but there is no guarantee of safety for small tankmates. -
Why does my Snowflake Eel sometimes breathe heavily, keep its mouth open, or hide completely for days after a tank move or major change, and how can I tell if this is normal stress versus a health problem?
Snowflake Eels naturally open and close their mouth constantly to pump water over their gills, so “gaping” itself is normal. After a move, aquascape change, or new tankmates, it is very common for them to retreat into a cave and only expose their head for several days to over a week. Normal post-stress behavior: hiding most of the time, only coming out at feeding or at night; regular, rhythmic mouth movement; skin coloration intact with no fuzzy patches; and a normal feeding response returning within a week or two. Warning signs of problems include rapid, shallow respiration, gasping at the surface, milky or peeling skin, fuzzy or cotton-like patches (possible bacterial or fungal infection), frayed fins, visible external parasites, or total refusal of food for more than 2–3 weeks in a previously established eel. Always check ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, salinity, and temperature after a move; eels are very sensitive to ammonia and low oxygen. Strong surface agitation and secure caves in dimmer areas help reduce stress and stabilize breathing behavior. -
How do I safely acclimate and quarantine a new Snowflake Eel, and are there any medications or procedures I should avoid with this species?
Snowflake Eels have a thick, mucus-coated skin and lack true scales, making them very sensitive to some treatments. For acclimation, float the bag to match temperature, then drip acclimate for 45–60 minutes, ensuring the eel cannot escape the container. Use a tight lid or net over the acclimation bucket. Transfer the eel with a container, not a net, to avoid skin damage. Quarantine in a secure, escape-proof tank with plenty of PVC pipes or rock tubes for hiding; bare bottom is fine. Avoid copper-based medications and full-strength formalin whenever possible, as they can severely stress or injure eels. Instead, use observation quarantine and treat only if you see signs of disease. If treatment is required, methods like tank-transfer for external parasites or carefully dosed praziquantel are generally safer. Do not expose eels to freshwater dips unless absolutely necessary and for the shortest possible time, as they tolerate it poorly. Good water quality, low stress, and a secure environment during quarantine go a long way toward preventing the need for harsh medications.