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Fighting Conch

Strombus alatus

A fascinating sand-sifting conch that cleans the sand bed of algae and detritus.

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DifficultyBeginner
Min. Tank Size110 L
Temperature24.0–27.0 °C
pH Range8.1–8.4
Max Size8.0 cm
Lifespan3-5 years
DietDetritivore
TemperamentPeaceful
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Overview

The Fighting Conch (Strombus alatus) is a fascinating sand-sifting conch that cleans the sand bed of algae and detritus.

This guide explains what the Fighting Conch does for your reef, how to care for it, whether it is reef-safe, and what to watch out for.

What It Does for Your Tank

It is a clean-up crew member that eats detritus, leftover food and waste, helping keep the sand bed and rockwork clean.

Care Level

It is hardy and easy, ideal for beginners, as long as it is acclimated slowly and the tank is mature.

Water Parameters & Acclimation

Keep a stable reef system at 24-27 °C, pH 8.1-8.4 and salinity 1.024-1.026 (35 ppt). Hold alkalinity at 8-12 dKH, calcium at 400-450 ppm and magnesium at 1300-1400 ppm, with ammonia and nitrite at zero. Stability matters more than chasing perfect numbers, so test regularly and avoid sudden swings.

Like all marine invertebrates it is very sensitive to copper and to sudden changes, so never use copper-based medications in the tank and always drip-acclimate new arrivals slowly over an hour or more.

Feeding

It feeds on detritus and leftovers. In a spotless tank, drop in a little sinking food now and then so it has enough to eat.

Is It Reef-Safe? Compatibility

It is reef-safe and peaceful with corals and fish - a trusted clean-up crew member. Provide one hiding spot per animal and avoid overstocking your clean-up crew, or some will starve.

Common Problems & Care Tips

The biggest risks are copper exposure, ammonia spikes and rushed acclimation - go slow and keep water stable. Snails that fall over should be turned upright; provide spare shells for hermit crabs to prevent squabbles; and never buy a clean-up crew bigger than your tank can feed.

Is the Fighting Conch Right for Your Reef?

The Fighting Conch is an easy, useful addition for almost any marine tank. Build a balanced clean-up crew rather than relying on any single species, and pair it with our marine fish and coral guides.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Fighting Conch reef-safe?
Yes - it is reef-safe and peaceful.
What does the Fighting Conch eat?
cleans the sand bed of algae and detritus
Is the Fighting Conch good for beginners?
Yes - it is hardy and easy once acclimated to a mature tank.
How do I acclimate marine invertebrates?
Drip-acclimate slowly over an hour or more, and never expose them to copper-based medications, which are lethal to inverts.
How many should I add?
Build a balanced clean-up crew sized to your tank and bioload - too many will starve, too few won't keep up.
What water does the Fighting Conch need?
Stable marine water: 24-27 °C, pH 8.1-8.4, salinity 1.024-1.026, ammonia and nitrite zero.

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