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1 RR DAPHNIA & 1 MOINA Fluorescent lit
Item #1569723027

Current Auction Time: Thu Apr 25 16:01:18 2024


Final: $20.00 First Bid $20.00
Time left 00:00 # of Bids 1 (bid history)
Started Sep 21 2019 - 09:10:27 PM Location Veneta OR 87982 United States
Ended Sep 28 2019 - 09:10:27 PM
Auction Closed
Seller Food (354/358) 101-500
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High Bidder Rnanopro (0/0)

Payment PayPal
Shipping Will Ship to United States Only Buyer Pays Fixed Amount,


Seller assumes all responsibility for listing this item. You should contact the seller to resolve any questions before bidding. Currency is U.S. dollars (US$) unless otherwise noted.

Description

Cost: $20(culture) + $8(shipping/USPS priority)= $28 total.
Make payment with Paypal using: ryanthehut@gmail.com
My Paypal account is a business account and accepts debit & credit.
I can't combine orders as this fills the package.
Don't request an invoice unless vital to you.


Auction:

You receive two 1-liter bottles. One contains 50 Russian red daphnia, the other contains a bunch of moina. The cultures are only heated in winter where they are kept at a minimum of 60 degrees. The cultures are lit by fluorescent daylight spectrum(6,500 kelvin).

Tip: Don't start a culture with more than a couple daphnia per gallon. Why? Your new culture, after the addition of daphnia, continues to cycle. The 'cycle' we are referring to is the flora & fauna(biome) that keeps your culture stable and some of it is food for daphnia/moina. If start with too many daphnia they can strip elements out of the evolving biome. When you add too many daphnia, they have too many babies too fast, and your biome can falter - crashing your culture. Don't be tempted to add more daphnia thinking that will increase your odds of success - daphnia don't work that way. Moina aren't such a big deal as they are so small and even the smallest of cultures has plenty...just don't overdue it.


Keep some of what I send as a backup:

When you recieve the bottles gently pour them into a more usable containers(a glass jar with wide lid works great), fill a couple tiny cups with my culture water, net out most the daphnia/moina, divide them into the cups, and then transition to their awaiting tanks. The culture water that is left over, just under 1-liters, along with a dozen moina or 6 daphnia, is then placed under fluorescent light at 6500 Kelvin(daylight spectrum). The population will rise to a certain number and any daphnia/moina you take from it will be replaced almost immediately. Then, if your primary cultures fail to start, you have a backup culture to pick daphnia/moina starts from. Remember, it only takes a couple daphnia to start a culture, and you should start a culture with only a few to begin with - so even a little 1-liter culture is plenty big as an emergency backup.

Tip: A 1-liter backup for moina is fine, but is a little small for this large strain of daphnia. It will deffinitely support some for a couple weeks, but for long term you may want to go with something a little larger.

I add food prior to shipping so don't feed for two weeks. After that add a few drops of aquarium mulm. Hopefully, by this time, you will have successfully transitioned some of the daphnia/moina as you most want a daphnia backup using your water.

Tip: Always have a daphnia backup - always. Culturing in a soda bottle is just as easy as the largest of cultures so you have no excuse keeping you from having a backup tucked away somewhere. My favorite type of backup is a closed-cycle culture, 2-liter soda bottle, that sits on a windowsill in my garage. All it takes is a heavy dose of aquarium mulm and you don't touch it after that. It's the same as placing snails and plants into a container and placing under light; the snails and plants grow to a certain population/level and remain that way. You don't have to feed it as the organic matter is in a permenant/balanced cycle. A small backup like this will survive for years.


How to start a main culture:

The key to a successful daphnia/moina startup is raising the level of organic matter and allowing it to cycle until stable. Daphnia/moina enjoy an organic rich enviroment. The more organic matter, with the addition of light, promotes the growth of flora & fauna. That flora & fauna aid in feeding the daphnia, keeping the culture stable, and absorbing nitrates. To build up organic matter in a new culture use mulm from a fish tank. What is mulm? It's the debris you vacuum from the bottom of a fish tank. A fish tank with fish, snails, plants, etc, will provide a well rounded. Fruits & vegetables are also helpful, such as cucumber, banana peel, melon, grapes, etc.

Tip: The goal in starting a daphnia culture is adjusting them to a new water source. Once adjusted future generations of daphnia will be much more robust. In addition to keeping most of the water I send you as a backup, to increase your odds of a successful startup even more, is starting a few small cultures. A small culture, something like a soda bottle, milk jug, etc, is just as easy as a large culture. My point is, even if you are going for a monster culture, starting a couple small cultures, each set up differently, will increase your chances of a successful daphnia/moina startup. If your primary culture fails to start, one of the small cultures should, and if they don't you will have what I sent you as an emergency backup.

Tip: Keep in mind everything you add to a culture contributes to the organic level. The greater the organic level, the more naturally occuring flora & fauna(the biome) there is, which aids in feeding daphia.

Steps:

Week 1:
The vessel can be anything from soda bottles on windowsills, aquariums under lights, to outdoor tubs & ponds. Lets assume a 10 gallon culture for proportions.
Place under flourescent light(6,500 Kelvin) or where it receives filtered sunlight.
Add water. Aquarium water is ideal. If using tap water allow an extra week or two for cycling.
Lightly coat the bottom with mulm(2 to 3 shot glasses).
Add 1/4 slice of fresh banana peel.
Gravel, driftwood, aeration, are helpful but not required. A water only culture works fine.

Week 2:
Add 1 shot glass of aquarium mulm.
Add 1/8 slice of banana peel & thin slice of cucumber.

Week 3:
Add thin slice of cucumber.

Week 4:
Add 1/8 slice of banana peel & thin slice of cucumber.
Add 2 to 3 daphnia per gallon. Don't add more as that stresses the cycling biome.

Feeding:
Outdoor: So much debris naturally falls into a culture, organic dust, bugs, leaves, your dogs slobber as it drinks from the culture, etc, there is little need to feed it. For a boost throw in a banana peel each month.

Indoor: Each week I add a small amount of cucumber/grape/tomato/etc, and every two weeks a 1/4 slice of banana peel.

One of the most common questions I receive is why I prefer using banana peel & cucumber over something like yeast? I like them because they release some of their nutrients directly into the water for an instant feeding, they are low impact, and as they decay bacteria is also released for the daphnia to consume. A banana peel decays slowly over several months - acting like a time release food capsule. Nothing can beat that.

Maintenance:
There is little need to clean or change water as the gradual buildup of organic matter keeps your culture growing - that decaying matter encourages the growth of flora & fauna that the daphnia can dine from. Nitrates, something that will cause a complete crash, aren't an issue as the biome also grows. To clean lightly vacuum the bottom of a culture every month, or two, or three, or not until it's super gross months later. Replace water with aquarium water for best results as it contains flora & fauna the daphnia can consume.

Scuds:
I have stated scuds aren't challenging but there are few things they do appreciate. They like 'soft' fruits & vegetables, and surfaces to cling to, such as plants, driftwood, rocks, etc. If something is too hard boil it. Other than this there is little more to culturing scuds.


GUARANTEE:

If DOA I will replace it at no cost. Please don't file a claim as that adds additional steps for us both - just let me know and I will send another without a guilt trip.

FYI: During shipping, distance isn't a risk factor, neither is temperature - what will kill the culture is sunlight. It's critical this not be left in your mailbox. If you don't greet your mail carrier and receive the package directly from them its not likely to survive.


WHITE WORM MAN:

Visit both my Facebook page and YouTube channel for a variety of culturing information. No culturing information comes with the package.

Facebook page and YouTube channel links, or search White Worm Man:
YouTube Channel: White Worm Man
Facebook Page: White Worm Man



Bid History:

Bidders Bid Time Bid Comments
Rnanopro (0/0)  Sep 26 2019 - 12:04:39 AM $20.00 BUY IT NOW

Auction is closed

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