![]() |
Daphnia?
I have tiny white specs swimming around my tank. They are visible
with the naked eye, but with a 30x loupe look like round blobs with a little bit sticking out. I am guessing they are daphnia, but does anyone have any other ideas? Daphnia are okay with me as they feed fish and eat single-celled algae, but I am concerned they might be something else. |
Daphnia?
Vreejack wrote:
: I have tiny white specs swimming around my tank. They are visible : with the naked eye, but with a 30x loupe look like round blobs with a : little bit sticking out. I am guessing they are daphnia, but does : anyone have any other ideas? : : Daphnia are okay with me as they feed fish and eat single-celled : algae, but I am concerned they might be something else. : From the description, these are ostracods. There is a UK Microscopy site with a good overview on them. Google for details. Daphnia -vs- Ostracods daphnia swim in jerky motions, ostracods swim in a smooth manner. daphnia frequently have an orange or brown color, ostracods are white or green daphnia at maturity can be 10 times larger than ostracods at maturity |
Daphnia?
On May 10, 9:04 am, g_i_n_k_o wrote:
Vreejack wrote: : I have tiny white specs swimming around my tank. They are visible : with the naked eye, but with a 30x loupe look like round blobs with a : little bit sticking out. I am guessing they are daphnia, but does : anyone have any other ideas? : : Daphnia are okay with me as they feed fish and eat single-celled : algae, but I am concerned they might be something else. : From the description, these are ostracods. There is a UK Microscopy site with a good overview on them. Google for details. Daphnia -vs- Ostracods daphnia swim in jerky motions, ostracods swim in a smooth manner. daphnia frequently have an orange or brown color, ostracods are white or green daphnia at maturity can be 10 times larger than ostracods at maturity This sounds right. The description of the movement is dead on, and as they all seem to have the same tiny size I assume that is the tiny adult stage, which is barely visible when lit from behind. Alas, they are probably too tiny to feed the fish, but they do not seem to be present in any great number, either. They were probably present in the soil I dug up, which formed part of the bank of an intermittent stream which is eroding its way down to the water table. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:34 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FishKeepingBanter.com