Not a lot of organisms seen this week. However, a lot of bacteria was seen that I have not seen before just about everywhere in the aquarium. Other than that were a few diatoms, one very fast moving euplod. There were three more nematodes this week. I found a new creature which is the stylaria, which looks like some kind of worm.
Tiffany L, Britton M. 1952. The Algae of Illinois. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press. 247 p.
Plank R W. 1989. Fresh-Water Invertebrates of the United States: "Protozoa to Mollusca. Canada: John Wiley & Sons, inc. 303 p.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Week 4
This week there were many different organisms but not many of them besides the rotifers. There were atleast four rotifers constantly moving and looked like they were eating all of the time. Like last week I saw a nematode. I saw one euplote, and one lacymarria. I saw the same larvae as last week, and it still was not moving so I believe it is dead. I saw the same copepod as last week that was moving very swiftly and was difficult to keep up with. I saw one new organism I found interesting which I believe was a oligochaetes because it was a segmented worm that had hair bundles. It was a very large object because I could see it without a microscope. It moved and acted like a normal earthworm eating soil. Since the second week it seems to me like there are less organisms.
Friday, October 29, 2010
Week 3
This week's aquarium had a lot more and bigger organisms than last week. The reason for that is probably because one beta food pellet was added to it on October 22, 2009. I saw many organisms which included two or three rotifers, a couple of nematodes and several diatoms. The hydra that I saw last week was actually a type a larvae called a midge. Last week it was moving around everywhere, but this week it did not move and looked dead. I also saw a crustacian known as a copepod.
Rainis, Kenneth G., and Bruce J. Russell. "Nematoda." Guide to Microlife. Ed. Watts Franklin. Danbury, CT: A Division of Grolier, 1996. 230-233. Print.
This vorticella was the first time I have seen this creature so far.
Patterson, D.J.. "A Colour Guide." Free-Living Freshwater Protozoa. Ed. Hedley Stuart. Washington, D.C.: Manson, 2003. 25. Print.
Rainis, Kenneth G., and Bruce J. Russell. "Nematoda." Guide to Microlife. Ed. Watts Franklin. Danbury, CT: A Division of Grolier, 1996. 230-233. Print.
This vorticella was the first time I have seen this creature so far.
Patterson, D.J.. "A Colour Guide." Free-Living Freshwater Protozoa. Ed. Hedley Stuart. Washington, D.C.: Manson, 2003. 25. Print.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Week 2
This week it was a lot easier to find organisms because I found a lot more than the first day. I saw a worm like organism with a big head similar to a bug. I believe it was a hydra because of its tentacles. I noticed several slug like creatures swimming around mostly in the soil that I believe to be flatworms. There were two other organisms that were a red-pink color that looked like leaches. They also just stayed around the soil. The last thing I saw that lived in the soil was I believe to be a stonefly nymph because it had two jointed tails. The only organism that was not in the soil was the hydra. I think the reason for that might be because it eats all other organism so all the other ones stay away from it.
Thursday, October 14, 2010
In lab we set up our micro aquarium. We were given a glass tank, a stand holder, and a lid. Then we labeled our tank with colored dots according to where we sit in the classroom and which water sample we took. I took a sample from bowl 8 which was the Tennessee River at the boat ramp across from Knoxville sewer plant. Then with a pipet I gathered some water with a little bit of soil and put it in the tank. While looking at the micro aquarium through the microscope I only saw two organisms. One I caught a short glance at and it looked just like an ordinary bug running around, then it disappeared. I saw another one that was a snakelike or wormlike that was stationary the whole time and only moved one end of its body like an inchworm.
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