robertloop
Member
Things are still going good! The rotifer numbers are climbing. It is not "soup thick" yet so I have not added any to my reef. I brought the culture into the house because it has been getting REALLY cold at night and the rate of reproduction seemed to slow down a bit since the cold weather kicked in. I put three on a slide in a drop of water to observe. Wow can they really cruize around! Not as fast as baby brine shrimp but close. I had to slap a slide cover on there to slow them down long enough to take pictures! This one is at 100X. Notice only one egg cyst.
Here is the same specimen at 300X. As the slide cover settled in it crushed the rotifers and egg sacks so I had to be speedy! Actually you have about 5 min if using light wieght acrylic covers.
If you were at the last meeting the guy form the algae place commented that feeding rotifers tomato juice would not be beneficial. "All that rotifers do is provide vessel for corals to consume what was in the rotifer's stomach." My amature opinion would agree with that statement. Look at the tissue surrounding the rotifer's stomach. (the not green part). A rotifer is almost an empty shell aside from the egg sack(s). Esentially, all a coral polyp gets while consuming a rotifer is whats in its stomach! There is probably not any data on testing tomato fed rotifers and phytoplankton fed rotifers against a group of corals but the theory makes some sense.

Here is the same specimen at 300X. As the slide cover settled in it crushed the rotifers and egg sacks so I had to be speedy! Actually you have about 5 min if using light wieght acrylic covers.

If you were at the last meeting the guy form the algae place commented that feeding rotifers tomato juice would not be beneficial. "All that rotifers do is provide vessel for corals to consume what was in the rotifer's stomach." My amature opinion would agree with that statement. Look at the tissue surrounding the rotifer's stomach. (the not green part). A rotifer is almost an empty shell aside from the egg sack(s). Esentially, all a coral polyp gets while consuming a rotifer is whats in its stomach! There is probably not any data on testing tomato fed rotifers and phytoplankton fed rotifers against a group of corals but the theory makes some sense.