So we're almost at 15 days now. This evening I fed a small amount of selcon enriched brine nauplii (BBS) and sat and watched for a while. ONE, out of the 40 or 50+ larvae has started to feed on them, so it's only a matter of time before the rest follow suit.
HOWEVER, in watching the larvae go about their business, they've become exceptionally proficient COPEPOD hunters. The tank has a lot of tiggerpods, a very small population of A. tonsa, as well as my unidentified tiny harp. cope. Suffice it to say that while not thick, there are always a small to fair number of copepods that are swimming in the water column or at the surface, and if they are about the size of BBS, they are getting chased down over a lenght of sometimes several INCHES and then being attacked the moment they pause to rest.
That's right, 40, maybe 50 or more larvae in the tank at 14.75 days...we're doing EXTREMELY better than my earlier attempts. I've been RELIGIOUS about adding in 1L of Pnyto per day, following Ed's recommendation of using whatever is "ready" and so far it seems to be paying off. I have done NO water changes OR bottom cleanings since the introduction of these larvae...at least none that I recall at the moment. The rotifer population IS starting to get thick now, I suspect perhaps in partial result of a shift in what the GBGs are feeding on, so removing rotifers may soon be an issue.
At this point, I don't want to start getting my hopes up, but I can't help but be a little optimistic!
FWIW,
Matt