I have green water but no daphnia to try..![]()
Yeah... XD Now I desperate for easy green water while others desperate to remove them. XD I am looking for ponds that has unlimited uncontaminated green water which I can get FOC. I believe some of my copepod came from the contaminated green water sample.
I think the best is glass container or plastic aquarium. I currently tried plastic container from daiso and lucky it do works though after washing I can find that the surface is super slippy which at first I suspect there might be a layer of by-products.
When I just started, I though that Moina is very sensitive as it crashed in days then 1 week. But later I realized the main killers are overpopulation and overfeeding. I stopped using mineral water or distilled water as I realized that they able to survive on Osim u2pure filtered water. XD I thinking of using tap water next. But I not sure if it will affect the reproduction or not.
=( But I don't have tank and probably very troublesome for me to setup the aeration. So kinda cruel to keep them in small container w/o aeration so this option is out. I currently have 2 bottle under led and aeration but w/o the box. The other 2 under outdoor sunlight. @_@ But the result isn't so good, take like weeks to get green.
Now have successful setup 2month long very low yield sustainable culture. Now I planning to setup fast yield but kinda waste lot of water method. Like start from small container then after a week, change to a bigger container with fresh water and bigger and so on till like 5-10gallon tank then restart from step one again.
Do you think it's a good idea to get some phytoplankton culture online?? But the small sample cost quite some $$. =(
BTW do you wanna try some pulex culture? But I can only provide you small starter only as my culture is limited. Currently only have like 100 pulex only![]()
I have green water but no daphnia to try..![]()
@Bern
It is just not worth it to buy the phytoplankton thing into Singapore. Most of the sellers are located in the US and it takes roughly 2 weeks for any package to get here, unless you feel rich and want it in less than a week. IMO, just too expensive to even consider. Thank you for the D. pulex offer but I lack space right now so all my live food cultures are for the time being, gone.
If you want something easier to handle compared to Moina and just as good for your fish, try the Dero worms from Urban or find a grindal worm seller. These grindals love our climate and they are easy to maintain. Only problem is, just as easy to forget about them.One of my cultures crashed because I overfed the worms with fish food. Now all gone.
For what it's worth, the only live food I ever successfully shipped in from overseas was a set of microworms, bananaworms and walterworms. 3 different sizes of really puny worms, great for tiny fry. Problem was, the cultures exploded within a day or two from subculture and in our heat, they just boom in numbers. Unfortunately, their nutrition value is not really good as a primary food source, except for the first 2-3 days for a typical fish fry.
Fish.. Simply Irresistable
Back to Killies... slowly.
XD Can I trade 20 Adult pulex + some babies for your 500ml of green water??
That is what I am thinking also and worry that the phytoplankton culture isn't doing well. Actually I have Dero but XD My dero worms culture crashed too due to my negligent. Hahaha.. Too focus on pulex. Ytd I have fished out some of my Dero from my 2g tank and going to start a small culture. I doubt I will culture them together with Daphnia as it going to crash with my plan and make my water change more troublesome. I find that my pulex are more prolific than Dero but now the problem is some dying adult + some young.
Pulex needs 4-8 days to reach it max size.
No problem and feel free to PM me if you want some Pulex. Thanks for all your valuable knowledge, ^_^ Will look into other worms once I am done with my Daphnia culture.
where are you located?
the time that you mentioned are good for me.
after 10pm is good for me too!
C328 sells Daphina?
went many times , they only have BBS...
LIFE IS UNBEARABLE WITHOUT A FISH TANK!!!
That is really yummy green.
It might not work with new tap water for culturing green water algae. Better to start with some old aquarium water.
Also, it is not a good idea to experiment Daphnia with tap water. It will never work.
Daphnia are well known for their sensitivity, hence they are also used by water authorities to detect impurities, contaminants, etc.
LIFE IS UNBEARABLE WITHOUT A FISH TANK!!!
must have constant sunlight...![]()
my smallest guppy tank with only some monte carlo inside have green water after 2 days of 100% water change...
XD I tried culture Moina in tap water before and they managed to survive. I think the amount of chlorine and impurities in my tap water are too small to kill them but maybe affect their reproduction initially??
I am not using my tank water due to contamination. @_@ Can use but gotta filter it. I will try 1 bottle of tap water then another bottle of filtered water and see the result.
XD I really have no luck in green water. I overfed and didn't WC for weeks but don't recall I have green water before but wall algae.
First, the water condition must be ready for green water algae. Then only introduce a starter culture of the said algae, but not before that.
If you just introduce a culture sample into water which is not 'up to standard', the green water algae will simply die instead of propagating.
Sufficient nitrates is required, but other factors are also needed. It is a delicate balance. Even after green water is produced, there is also
the need to ensure that it (the green water algae) doesn't crash.
Also, for Daphnia culturing, before going into further experimentation, it is absolutely necessary to stick to fundamentals principles first.
Like never use raw tap water, no matter how impressed you are with it.
Also, culturing Daphnia calls for even more stringent water control than for fish. Measuring all water parameters is even more critical than for keeping fish.
Thus, culturing Daphnia is extremely demanding in terms of knowledge and technique.
The expense of a comprehensive water testing kit is a must for cultivating these adorable "sea elephants".
I am not into culturing Daphnia, but just offering my 2 cents worth of views. Hope it helps.![]()
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Last edited by tetrakid; 27th Jul 2015 at 20:08.
LIFE IS UNBEARABLE WITHOUT A FISH TANK!!!
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