- Patterson D. 1996. Free Living Freshwater Protozoa. London, UK: Manson Publishing Ltd. 290 p.
- Pennak R W. 1989. Freshwater Invertebrates of the United States: Protozoa to Mollusca. Toronto, Canada: John Wiley and Sons. 179 p.
- Thorp JH, Covich AP. 1991. Ecology and Classification of North American Freshwater Invertebrates. San Diego, California: Academic Press Inc. 300 p.
Jordan Stauffer Blog
Monday, November 15, 2010
Sources
List of Organisms
Organism/ date first observed/ date last observed
- Seed Shrimp/ 10-12-10/ 11-2-10
- Philodina sp. Rotifer/ 10-26-10/ 11-10-10
- Lecane sp. Rotifer/ 11-2-10/ 11-2-10
- Tachysome sp. Rotifer/ 10-19-10/ 11-2-10
- Euchlanis sp. Rotifer/ 10-12-10/ 11-10-10
- Paranema sp. Flagellates/ 10-19-10/
- Nematode/ 11-10-10/ 11-10-10
Week 5 Observations
The amount of movement in the aquarium during my week five observations appeared to correspond with the previous weeks. There seemed to have been a pattern of less movement after the past three weeks. This week I still did not see any seed shrimp, which were the easiest organisms to spot at the beginning of my observations. There were also not as many of the unidentified unicellular organisms that were gathered in large numbers a few weeks ago. This could possibly be because the food source was pretty much gone, they may have been eaten by other organisms, or they just died off. However, there still were a pretty good amount of rotifers moving around. I even spotted some Nematodes, which I had not seen in the previous weeks. With the food source completely gone, I could only imagine within the next we weeks that the rest of these organisms would die off.
Thorp JH, Covich AP. 1991. Ecology and Classification of North American Freshwater Invertebrates. San Diego, California: Academic Press Inc. 300 p. (Figure 9.1 on page 250)
Monday, November 8, 2010
Week 4 Observations
In my week four observations, I recognized some familiar organisms that I had seen in the previous weeks. However, some things yet again had changed after a week. The movement in week 3 was very active, but in week four there appeared to be much less movement. This could be a result of organisms feeding on others or some might have just died. The philodina appeared to be back at work this week, however instead of feeding on other organisms it appeared to be feeding off of the food source. One thing that really surprised me this week was that there appeared to be no seed shrimp moving. In the previous weeks it had been very easy to spot the seed shrimp. There were still many of the unicellular tiny organisms around the food source, but they appeared to be fewer in number. I am very curious to see the next weeks observations to see if there is a trend in the inactivity in the aquarium.
Thorp JH, Covich AP. 1991. Ecology and Classification of North American Freshwater Invertebrates. San Diego, California: Academic Press Inc. 300 p. (Figure on page 234)
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