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Getting rid of copepods



 
 
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  #1  
Old September 26th 03, 08:09 AM
Dinky
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Default Getting rid of copepods


"Eric Schreiber" wrote in message
...
"Dinky" wrote:


I should have done a mild bleach bath when I first moved the plant. If
I had, I wouldn't have this problem now.



Guppies? A small feeder goldie, perhaps.


  #2  
Old September 26th 03, 08:25 AM
Eric Schreiber
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Default Getting rid of copepods

"Dinky" wrote:

Guppies? A small feeder goldie, perhaps.


Maybe. They have the advantage of being cheap, anyway. But having
sworn up and down that I'll never keep guppies, I don't think I could
withstand the abuse my sister would heap on me

I just stumbled across a Usenet article that indicates that ghost
shrimp eat copepods. This also falls under the heading of 'cheap', and
fits in with my plans to get another dozen this weekend anyway. I seem
to run out a lot - someone in my main tank appears to have decided
that ghost shrimp are yummy. I haven't determined yet who the culprit
is.

A shrimp or two might be kind of neat scooting around in the
one-gallon.

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  #3  
Old September 26th 03, 09:14 AM
Dinky
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Default Getting rid of copepods


"Eric Schreiber" wrote in message
...


A shrimp or two might be kind of neat scooting around in the
one-gallon.



Agreed! Hope that works. Any loaches in the tank that loses shrimp? I've
heard tell that some loaches will eat them.


  #4  
Old September 26th 03, 09:59 AM
Eric Schreiber
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Default Getting rid of copepods

"Dinky" wrote:

Any loaches in the tank that loses shrimp? I've
heard tell that some loaches will eat them.


No loaches. There are several possible culprits (see list), but I
think Fundies are most likely. The SAEs are the biggest fish in the
tank and they seem fairly omnivorous, but they tend towards being
scavengers.

Peacock Gudgeon (9)
Fundulopanchax scheeli (3)
Red-Eyed Tetra (1)
Siamese Algae Eater (3)
Otocinclus Catfish (3)
Leopard Danio (1)



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  #5  
Old October 2nd 03, 10:38 PM
Eric Schreiber
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Default Getting rid of copepods

Eric Schreiber wrote:

I just stumbled across a Usenet article that indicates that ghost
shrimp eat copepods. This also falls under the heading of 'cheap', and
fits in with my plans to get another dozen this weekend anyway.


On Saturday I put two ghost shrimp into the copepod infested
container. There were easily a hundred copepods in sight at any given
moment when I did this. Today, five days later, I'm hard pressed to
find even a dozen. It looks as though the ghost shrimp do indeed eat
copepods.


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  #6  
Old October 2nd 03, 11:00 PM
Victor M. Martinez
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Default Getting rid of copepods

What's a copepod?

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Victor M. Martinez

http://www.che.utexas.edu/~martiv

  #7  
Old October 3rd 03, 12:14 AM
Eric Schreiber
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Default Getting rid of copepods

(Victor M. Martinez) wrote:

What's a copepod?


www.google.com

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  #8  
Old October 3rd 03, 12:38 AM
Eric Schreiber
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Default Getting rid of copepods

Eric Schreiber wrote:

(Victor M. Martinez) wrote:

What's a copepod?


www.google.com


Grrr. Not sure what keys my fat fingers hit.

http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/wimsmall/crust.html


I can't say for sure that the things pictured here look like the
critters in my plant jar - the things I see swimming around are far
too small to make out features with the naked eye.


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  #9  
Old October 4th 03, 03:28 AM
Moontanman
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Default Getting rid of copepods

What's a copepod?

A smalll free swimming crustecean that is great fish food.
remove nospam from e-mail to send to me, I grow trees in aquariums like bonsai.
I breed dwarf crayfish, great for planted community tanks. If you can get me a
shovelnose sturgeon fingerling (Scaphirhynchus platorynchus) no wild caught
please, contact me
 




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