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#1
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Man the thing i am just so thrilled by is that this is just from digging around in my friggen aquarium! A 'fish tank!'. These are in EVERYONE's fish tank! Critters this size, and smaller, and equally as interesting, are on doorknobs, blades of grass, in every part of life! Cool, to the max!
I will try to get some close-ups of some very very small bristle worms tomorrow, as well as the cells of both grape and feather caulerpa, a snail about 1/8th" long, and then get this polychaete worm 'examined' too. Cheers, Chris
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No more tanks - Laying off the ReefCrack for awhile!Cheers, Chris |
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#2
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Cool stuff and pictures. I didn't even think of looking at the library for books on this stuff.. Might have to check it out tomorrow or something after class!
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My 10 Gallon Build |
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#3
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I have spent a lot of time checking out the tiny 'naked eye' sized stuff in my tank, and honestly that's the coolest part of my tank (and the reason it's not stuffed with corals and fishes)! I love the little hitchhikers that came in on the rock... I have algaes of all shapes, sizes, and (almost) colors, snails, various amphipods and copepods, polychaetes, etc.
My next tank is planned to be 'rock only' or LRWOF... Live Rock With Out Fish Very cool, thanks for sharing
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Calvin --- Planning a 29 gallon mixed reef... |
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#4
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Quote:
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No more tanks - Laying off the ReefCrack for awhile!Cheers, Chris |
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#5
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Got into a different lab today with one of my bio profs. I was able to use a new microscope (and slightly more convenient to use, although less powerful than the light microscope) called an inverted microscope. This meant I could mess around with drops of water in, or an entire petri-dish full, yet it still keeps the objective lens close to the specimen. The prof also told me that she thinks we do have a microscope with a screen, but she is not entirely sure about it's availability/location yet, and that we MAY have one with camera adaptability. If you look very closely, (though its really hard to get with the camera), you can spot some colour in the limbs and other parts of the critters, for example orange/blue and some pink/purple specs in the copepods, and some significant orange in the polychaete worm. The red spot in the two pods is a semi-functional 'eye'. (A single eye found in all members of the Subclass Copepoda).
I did get a couple videos of these critters swimming around in their 'drops' of water. I will try to get those on when I get a chance tomorrow. Anyways, the first specimen is the last one from the previous set of shots but under a stronger scope. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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No more tanks - Laying off the ReefCrack for awhile!Cheers, Chris Last edited by Funky_Fish14; 03-20-2010 at 10:11 AM. |
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#6
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Another type of Copepod:
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() It was not very happy in this drop of water hence i think it began to, well, not do so well. The 'tail' began to twist upward like this. Once i transferred it back to more water it appeared to recover! ![]() Under the same magnification as the last picture, most of these 'specs' are actually alive/moving around. ![]()
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No more tanks - Laying off the ReefCrack for awhile!Cheers, Chris |
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#7
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Feather Caulerpa:
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() In this picture and the next, on the upper side of the main stem, 2 strands from the tip, you can spot a transparent organism on the outer side of a 'leaf'/branch. It was motoring around in and out of the parts of this sample, seemed to be hanging out 'against' the plant. ![]() ![]()
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No more tanks - Laying off the ReefCrack for awhile!Cheers, Chris Last edited by Funky_Fish14; 03-20-2010 at 10:23 AM. |
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#8
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Definitely! I dont know where you go, but I just go to the small U of A augustana campus in Camrose, so our library isn't giant (but it is brand new!) anyways, I bet main campus, and possibly Gmac, have a pile more books so there is a good chance of finding more!
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No more tanks - Laying off the ReefCrack for awhile!Cheers, Chris |