@Jay Hemdal Do you think that white snotty stuff is all bacteria, clumped together? It's a few posts up from this.I once found some odd colored strands in a sample - turned out to be fabric from somebody's clothes (grin).
Jay
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@Jay Hemdal Do you think that white snotty stuff is all bacteria, clumped together? It's a few posts up from this.I once found some odd colored strands in a sample - turned out to be fabric from somebody's clothes (grin).
Jay
I couldn't tell what that was. It looked like bleached algae strands in the macro shot, but under micro, I didn't see any algal cells.@Jay Hemdal Do you think that white snotty stuff is all bacteria, clumped together? It's a few posts up from this.
Yeah, it's very strange. This is the white stuff. I have been documenting it. My tank is very cloudy rn. Managed to find a way to take it out but takes a long time.I couldn't tell what that was. It looked like bleached algae strands in the macro shot, but under micro, I didn't see any algal cells.
Jay
In the video, you'll see most of the things in the pictures... If you watch the video, there is some weird stuff in there. Almost seems like a microscopic brittle sand sifting starfish is in there. Veins of some sort that are moving aswell. Life is exploding in my tank atm.@SaltwaterGuruNeeded I don't think that is an ich cell. Is pretty big and round. Free swimmers with the hairs are a different shape and smaller. Thinking the other is either algae or diatom. Those 2 fast bugs in the picture. One I cant tell. The other I think is a paramecium. It is hard to tell it almost looks like it is doing a barrel roll type movement. Crab shell could be a rotifer exoskeleton. https://www.researchgate.net/figure...assiosira-sp-C-D-Cyclotella-sp_fig3_306212990
Dactyliosolen fragilissimus
www.marinespecies.org
Thank you so much4:22 maybe one of those kinds that sit and wait for food to stick to it. 6:43 that is a good example of what mycelium could look like also. Maybe the same for the webby stuff. Its usually a cell somewhere with networks of strands that feed the whole colony.
No, actually Cryptocaryon is present in relatively few tanks.Which opens the debate....
Does ICH always exist in a mature tank? And the fish just have a resistance to it with a good immune system?
Update: Sun, Oct 3rd
What is this? Kinda looks fluke like or those bugs you find in the yard sometimes. This is in my qt tank.
400x
Hmm. That's very interesting!That actually could be a cercaria larva of a trematode! The small size and twin tails leads me in that direction.
Here is a story: 20 years ago, I had a diver emerge from a freshwater tank - she said something in the tank tried to burrow into her arm. She described the twin tails, but in her case, she estimated the organism was about 5 mm long. I was afraid at the time that we had some sort of giant cercaria larva in the system - sampling never showed anything and we never had another report....and she didn't die (grin).
Jay
Whats so interesting to me is, how do all these things just enter my tank?That actually could be a cercaria larva of a trematode! The small size and twin tails leads me in that direction.
Here is a story: 20 years ago, I had a diver emerge from a freshwater tank - she said something in the tank tried to burrow into her arm. She described the twin tails, but in her case, she estimated the organism was about 5 mm long. I was afraid at the time that we had some sort of giant cercaria larva in the system - sampling never showed anything and we never had another report....and she didn't die (grin).
Jay
No, actually Cryptocaryon is present in relatively few tanks.
Uronema on the other hand is friggin *everywhere*. (Some wholesaler shipments have been 100% infected with Uronema, based on DNA testing. About 20% of hobbyist tanks have it. )
I suspect the reason Ich is present in many fewer tanks we've tested is that the symptoms are quite visible, so the owners don't need a test to identify it after a fish death.
But in terms of asymptomatic tanks? No, the idea that "Ich is everywhere" is an old forum rumor not supported by data.
This is an interesting point to follow up on. We find U. marinum and U. heteromarinum at similar prevalence in the hobby. I've seen U. elegans in a few tanks.Of course, without DNA analysis, when I say "Uronema" I really mean "cf. Uronema" - a Scuticociliate with gross attributes of that genus.
This is an interesting point to follow up on. We find U. marinum and U. heteromarinum at similar prevalence in the hobby. I've seen U. elegans in a few tanks.
I am really bad at interpreting microscopy images but to my eye all three of these look pretty darn similar. It has made me wonder whether the "Uronema" we deal with in the hobby is always caused by U. marinum. When most of the diagnoses have been based on symptoms or microscopic examination of ciliates, it seems possible these could all get lumped together.
now you've got me curious to try this dead fish test. Sampling the ciliates attracted to a dead fish might be an extra-sensitive strategy for sampling Uronema...
I have came across a paper that suggests uronema can turn to eat actual fish cells, not just the secondary bacteria. Why they do this I don't know. Maybe a high population vs lack of food scenario.So - what I was told (and this is from almost 40 years ago, from my old boss at the Shedd Aquarium) is that the normal diet for "Uronema" is bacteria. The dead smelt serves as a source for the bacteria, then the "Uronema" comes along to feed on that...and then you can find it.
Jay