billsreef:
On the toxic copepods:
Here's an excerpt from an e-mail conversation Jungle Pete sent me between himself and Martin Moe.
Martin Moe wrote:
"My friend Syd Kraul in Hawaii was working with similar fish at the time and found that he could rear them on cultured copepods but he could only harvest them for about 3 days before the copepods became toxic to the fish larvae. He had to sterilize the copepod culture tanks and start them up again and then use the cultures for only a limited time."
In addition:
A paper from OI(Oceanic Institute) on Flame Angel (Centropyge loriculus) rearing it is stated that they used cultured Parvocalanus copepod nauplii as the first foods with limited success to a point, 14-20 DPH, at which they experienced a high mortality/die off rate. They started adding the copepod nauplii at 2 DPH and maintained the nauplii at 5-10/ml. They were dealing with 18-20 pairs and tens of thousands of eggs during each effort ( high of 45,000 eggs I believe at one point). The end result was they got "Dozens" to survive thru to settlement.
I don't know how many "dozens" they got but even assuming 96 ( the highest "dozen" you can go to not over 100) and starting with 30,000 eggs, almost 70% of which progressed thru prolarvae to 3DPH larval stage (21,000), then "thousands" thru to 14DPH where they experienced the die off. Now while these numbers are imprecise they do fall within the stated numbers from OI. Using these numbers shows you the expected success ratio of approx .32% (.0032) : 96/30,000 under this example.
Now using a modest amount of eggs/spawn which the standard hobbyist(me, you and most everyone reading this) can expect of 600 eggs, you then follow thru to the .32% success ratio and you get 1.92/spawning thru to settlement under the same conditions and methods used by OI.
This is what lead me to ask the questions on possible cultured copepod toxicity.
I will be happy with getting 1-2 thru settlement to start.:fish1:
On the "Crabby" front:
When I got home from the plankton gathering I seived out everything into four class sizes 300(tossed), 120, 53 microns and then what ever passed thru the 53 micron minus silt/dirt. So crabby got "tossed"

but I first wanted a photo cause it was neat.:lol: