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DAPHNIA PULEX & COPEPOD Mini Cuture Guaranteed.
Item #1486705203

Current Auction Time: Sat May 18 02:07:30 2024


Final: $16.00 First Bid $15.00
Time left 00:00 # of Bids 1 (bid history)
Started Feb 7 2017 - 11:40:03 PM Location Veneta OR 87982 United States
Ended Feb 9 2017 - 11:40:03 PM
Auction Closed
Seller Food (356/360) 101-500
(View seller's feedback) (view seller's current auctions) (ask seller a question)

High Bidder Jtompkins (26/26) 10-50

Payment Money Orders/Cashiers Check, 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

The total cost of this auction is $15(culture) + $13(shipping) = $28. My paypal account is ryanthehut@gmail.com

I list several food culture versions, including white worms, daphnia pulex, daphnia magna, microfex, copepods, and springtails. I offer robust culture strains. Every auction is guaranteed to arrive alive one time, with a free replacement sent. You can view my culturing video on my Facebook page: White Worm Man: https://www.facebook.com/White-Worm-Man-158732174581574/

I have cultured most everything over the years. The two cultures every serious aquarist should culture are daphnia and white worms. You may find content that discusses these cultures as being a challenge, but that is because serious aquarists value them, and all topics are thoroughly discussed. Of all the things I have cultured these two offer the greatest yields with minimal effort. You can also co-culture a few other things along with them.



Auction:
Daphnia Pulex & Copepods, 3-6 Plants of Frogbit(floating plant): 2 Liter Mini Culture::

You are bidding on a medium USPS priority box containing a cycled 2 liter mini culture. It will continue to produce daphnia & copepods for as long as it receives light, as the light feeds the algae and bacteria the daphnia feed upon. This culture has been grown/fed for several weeks indoors by florescent light. These are a daphnia pulex variety, and considered one of the highest producing daphnia strains. They are large enough to feed fish up to the size of adult angelfish.

To sustain this mini culture put under strong florescent light for 18 hours. The light supports algae and bacteria the daphnia feed upon. This is a robust strain I culture both indoors and outdoors.

This cycled 2 liter soda bottle culture will provide your initial dose of daphnia, copepods, and beneficial bacteria, then serve as your backup culture. When you receive the mini culture, remove a few daphnia and mulm with airline tubing, and add to your culture. If they survive 24 hours add more daphnia to your culture, and then use this 2 liter as your backup. If they don't take you can continue to harvest daphnia from the mini culture until you correct your new culture.

The bottle is filled with my culture water, and mulm from the bottom. This adds the bacteria and organic matter. I then add a couple pieces of frogbit plant, a few pond snails, a start of daphnia & copepods, and then let that cycle for a over one month under florescent lights. There will be dozens to 100 daphnia, and will produce small regular harvests. It should arrive with healthy water, healthy daphnia, and with healthy bacteria.


I often see auctions containing hundreds of daphnia. What is the difference between a bag of hundreds/thousands to a mini 2 liter culture with a few dozen?
1)The biggest benefit is this mini culture comes to you with healthy water. When you receive a bag stuffed with daphnia, the water is then polluted, forcing you to move them into your water. That is when daphnia are most vulnerable. It is actually very stupid to order daphnia that are going to come to you with polluted water, and then to risk them all by moving to your water - that is when they are 'most' vulnerable. This 2 liter mini culture shows up with its water as healthy as when it left here. If your new culture fails you still have this mini culture to continue harvesting daphnia from to be added to your culture.
2) When overcrowded, such as placing hundreds into a small bag, daphnia revert from producing live offspring to laying eggs. Starting with thousands of egg laying daphnia isn't going to help you start your culture, or make it harvestable any quicker.
3) What happens if you take thousands of non immunized humans, some of them already sick with various diseases, and put them into a sealed plastic bag for several days? You most likely are receiving a bag stuffed with unhealthy daphnia.
4) Regardless of how many daphnia you start with you still need to let your culture fully cycle. Your bacteria bio load needs to find its happy place before you should allow your culture to boon. If you allow it to boon before cycling you risk your culture crashing. Allow the daphnia population to grow slowly by harvesting early, as the bacteria, snails, and plants can't increase in numbers fast enough to handle a fast swelling daphnia population.


When ordering daphnia consider what conditions they came from. Consider temperature, water qualities(hardness & pH), and if it is cultured indoor or outdoor. My cultures are in the 60's being its winter, cultured indoors under florescent lights, and my water is about as middle of the road as possible. I have very nice water being I live in the Pacific NW. My point is if you match conditions as much as possible you lessen your risk.

When you receive the culture place it where its temperature will be in the 60's to low 70's. Your culture should be in that temperature range also. Pull out a number of daphnia with an airline tubing, and place them into a shot glass. You then add a few drops from your culture, over time, just like it was a new fish. When acclimated add to your culture, and if they are alive the next day you should be okay. If the initial daphnia live for 24 hours, lightly stir the 2 liter culture, remove a few cups of water(including daphnia), and acclimate to your culture. Then use the mini culture as your backup.



Culturing Daphnia
You can have a productive culture in anything from a bucket to pond, I have had tiny cultures in a glass of forgotten water. The only difference, if cultured indoors, you need to add strong lighting. If you are newish to daphnia consider culturing them in a fish tank of any size, so you can easily observe them. A 10 gallon tank works good.

Take these steps:
1) Fill the culture tank with the water from a healthy fish tank. That water shouldn't have had medication in a very long time, and hasn't had a water change in several weeks. This issue is usually what gives people the biggest challenge. If you don't use healthy water daphnia you will find them challenging. Using water from a tank that has live plants is helpful.
2) Siphon the bottom of the healthy tank, and collect enough mulm to lightly powder the culture tank bottom. This adds the initial organic matter to the culture. The mulm will continue to decay, and aid in feeding your culture.
3) Add a bunch of pond snails.
4) Add a live plant. Anacharis, guppy grass, frogbit, sylvania, and duckweed work well. I include a few plants of floating frogbit to each culture.
5) Create a small mound of natural gravel. Not the fake stuff from the pet store that is sold as natural, but real rock gravel. I use stones from the beach, or from a bag of river gravel from a garden center.
6) Add an airstone with a faint stream of bubbles. This prevents any surface film from covering the culture. Air isn't required, but if you develop film on the top you can crash your culture.
7) Add a strong florescent light for at least 18 hours. This will feed algae & bacteria that the daphnia will feed upon.
8) Keep between 50 to 80 degrees. Your culture temperature should be close to mine until adjusted. In the winter start your culture in the 60's to low 70's, and in the summer start it in the 70's. After you have cycled your culture, to increase production to high levels, you can inch the temperature into the high 70's.


Increasing yields:
To increase yields, in your larger culture, bump up the water temperature and add a tiny amount of food every few days. Be careful to not allow the culture to quickly boom, as your culture is not prepared for the sudden swell of daphnia. Continually take harvests to keep a more consistent growing daphnia population. You can select the size daphnia you wish to harvest by how large the holes in the fishnet are.

Feeding:
There is no need to feed this 2 liter culture as the florescent light is providing energy to sustain a small population of daphnia. If you culture outdoors there is no need to feed the culture as it gets sunlight, and organic debris makes its way into the culture to decay. When I do feed my daphnia I give them mulm from the bottom of my fish tanks as that adds bacteria, and vegetable & potato baby foods.



Bid History:

Bidders Bid Time Bid Comments
Jtompkins (26/26) 10-50 Feb 8 2017 - 10:39:35 AM $16.00 BUY IT NOW

Auction is closed

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