outofwater
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I have a pot of flatworms on my desk that I caught from a culture bucket that I forgot about
true! Same with hydra, and dragon and damselfly nymphs. Saw a slow mo video of a hydra taking and eating a guppy fry, and while I felt bad for the poor guppy fry, it's like mini aliens and monsters, if you imagine yourself as their prey!That video explains why my copepod culture population was so damm low. They kept eating them all and the way they hunt is incredible
I don't think HR would allow me to have thatBecause I had a mental picture of a busy office, and your coworkers giving you side eyes for having a pot of worms on your desk
I do love the teeny little guys! I'll have to check this channel out. I wish it would hurry up and dry out a little around here so I could go leaf collecting. I want more little buggies in my tank. The neons completely decimated all the rhabdocoel flatworms, the copepods, AND the ostracods that were hanging out in my tank I miss themThis is incredible! I'm absolutely fascinated, and we need to share this! That felt like a David Attenborough documentary.
@TwoTankAmin @GaryE @Seisage @Uberhoust @Colin_T @Slaphppy7 (@Slaphppy7 I'm remembering your fascinating alien bug creature mystery!) I think you guys would all like this, I hope.
Wish @Byron and @AbbeysDad were still around. I think they'd love this, and @AbbeysDad wrote some brilliant articles about live food, and not to be afraid of mulm, algae and snails (his site is down so I can no longer find his useful articles), but the gist was about how established tanks will have mulm, soft algae, biofilm etc, that not always being a bad thing, when kept to reasonable levels, and snails eating uneaten fish food and turning sand/gravel, so being useful and not to panic and try to keep a sterile tanks with immaculate substrate.
Lots of people add botanicals to their tanks, not just for tannins, but the bacteria and tiny critters that arrive to break down those leaves, and live in the mulm, provide food for shrimp, tiny fish, fry, and help with water quality too. I really think "bioactive" aquariums are fascinating, and those of us who want to or already culture live foods would also find this interesting and useful I'm sure.
I do love the teeny little guys! I'll have to check this channel out. I wish it would hurry up and dry out a little around here so I could go leaf collecting. I want more little buggies in my tank. The neons completely decimated all the rhabdocoel flatworms, the copepods, AND the ostracods that were hanging out in my tank I miss them
forgot I took this video a few weeks back (rhabdocoela)
Afraid not its just a 5L bucket that had multiple matured sponge filters squeezed into it and left for weeks. That fed my sawbwa fry for a while If I can recall I got the idea from KFS in AUS. I'll have a look for the videoDo you have a thread about your cultures?
That is not a bad idea actually might have to try that in the futureBut I do have a lot of fish buckets outside, and happily steal mosquito larvae, bloodworms, and another weird little more segmented, caterpillar type worm thing that the fish gobble up when rainwater has collected in the garden buckets.
Afraid not its just a 5L bucket that had multiple matured sponge filters squeezed into it and left for weeks. That fed my sawbwa fry for a while If I can recall I got the idea from KFS in AUS. I'll have a look for the video
That is not a bad idea actually might have to try that in the future