Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Hypsolebias trifasciatus egg

       I bought a small bag of Hypsolebias trifasciatus eggs at the Keystone Killie Club meeting on November twelve, 2016.  The eggs were marked "Coll 10.08.2016".  Since the eggs originated from a European fish keeper, that would indicate they were collected on August 8, 2016.  If the eggs needed a 3 to 4 month incubation period, they might be ready now on November 22, 2016 for wetting.  A couple of emails from Keystone members suggested checking the eggs to see if they had "eyed" up.  So I fired up the little microscope and wrestled with remembering how to operate it and take pictures.  Here goes:


      Here is the Hypsolebias trifasciatus egg collected from the peat today.  This shot is at 20x.  To my uneducated eye, I would assume the round circle at the bottom of the egg is the developing embryo, which just might be showing an eye within the inner circle.  In any case, I would not think that this egg is anywhere near ready for wetting.


      Same egg at 30x.  The possible eye shows up a little better.


      When I started this photo session, I was looking for water bugs from a standing sample of aquarium water with a thick algae mulm on the bottom.  The egg is in the corner, and all the little specks are some little creature, with three somewhat larger paramecia in the upper left corner.  Should have used tap water to look at the egg.
      Now the interesting part:


      Two much larger creatures came from somewhere and appeared to be grazing the surface of the egg.  They looked to be fairly developed.



      In this picture it looks fairly similar to a terrestrial deer tick.  Any ideas?
      I did let the water on the slide dry out, then threw this egg away.  Don't want those critters getting any bigger.

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Take it Off the Bucket List


      I missed the Chesapeake Killie meeting on Saturday because I am visiting my daughter in Port Orange Florida.  Ever since I saw photos of huge redfish in Mosquito Lagoon, I was quite literally hooked myself. These three monsters were caught on blue fish chunks.  Only bait they took today.  Thank you little blue fish that took our shrimp. Then became our wonder bait.

Fish Number 1

The Smallest one, a mere 41"

Fish number 3

Hurry, get him in before the line breaks!
      Wow what a wonderful day.  And yes they were three different fish.  My wife pointed out that my hair is different in the three shots, evidence of the windy day.  Am already planning the next fishing adventure.

Sunday, February 7, 2016

Annulatus Update


      The six annulatus that I Bought from Gary Haas on 9/12/15 turned out to be three pairs.  One pair went into the shallow "Surefresh" four liter box at the top right on 12/3/15. Finally on 1/18/16 I found one lone tiny baby with the parents.

Box A
      This is the Box A with the parents and single baby.  The male is in the lower left corner.  The parents have been fed on a nearly exclusive diet of grindal worms, plus whatever cyclops I find to pour in their tank.

Box B
      On 1/18/16 the parents were moved to this different box with java moss and some floating plants.  The single baby was left in the Box A to see if any other babies would show up.  With my patience wearing quite thin, I was going to move the baby to some other container, but this morning, on 2/7/16, I spotted a second much smaller baby. Finally.  Nineteen days to get the second baby.  And I had checked often to see if any late babies had hatched.  So now the two babies will be left in Box A to grow out.  Maybe some more will pop up while I wait.
      As of 2/7/16 no other babies have been spotted in the other two tanks with the other two pairs of parent annulatus.
      Spotted another tiny baby in Box A on the morning of 2/8/16.  Brings the total to three.
      On Friday, 2/12/16, I found five smaller babies and the one larger one!  Sieved some cyclops from a holding jug and added them to Box A with the babies.
      Since this box method seems to be successful, I moved the breeding pair from Box B to a newly set up Box C.  The pair was in Box B for 3 1/2 weeks and no babies were observed in the box.  Now we wait.

      2/17/16:  Highest count in Box A has still been five small babies and the one larger one.  Put in good collection of cyclops.  Box B has still not produced any babies.

      4/6/16:  Box A count down to two, the original biggest baby, and one surviving secondary baby.  This box was down to just those two after our return from the two week Florida absence in early March.  Both babies moved into separate file card boxes.
      Box C has one tiny baby!  The pair was moved to Box B with a complete water change.
      Box B never had a single baby show up, boo.  Pair moved into Box B to let Box C sit to develop hatch out any additional babies.

Saturday, January 2, 2016

Red Cherry Shrimp


      Here is the 2 1/2 gallon tank that contains five adult shrimp, four females and one lucky male.  He is the much fainter colored shrimp in the black circle to the left.  Two of the females have dropped their babies, resulting in a count of over twenty this morning. Those two shrimp have not berried yet for their next round. The other two females, one on the filter and the other on the lower left are still carrying developing eggs.  I think I will let them go to baby drop, then probably remove all of the adults.


      Same five adults, but here you can just see the back end of a female in the circle.  The male ls at the top left of the plant clump, against the aquarium glass.


      This picture shows five of the baby shrimp in the circles.  As small as they are now, they are at least double the size they were last week.