calliandra
Well-Known Member
Hey folks,
look what I spied while I was checking on my ACT today!
Enjoy!
look what I spied while I was checking on my ACT today!
Enjoy!
that's super cool!Hey folks,
look what I spied while I was checking on my ACT today!
Enjoy!
Ah thanks for introducing me to the euglena - learned something there!that's super cool!
and since there isn't a tail, it's not a flaggelate, maybe that's an euglena?
I;ve only seen those with color though
cool shit
Yeah this is the best tea I've made so far in terms of protozoan population & diversity! Bar maybe the many "fishies", which may be ciliates.... still need to find that out tooWow.......that's some awesome footage and how much life is in that ACT??????? Your soil and plants must be loving that shit.
Whatever it is, it was a hungry bugger before it transformed, lol
from the very little that I know f all those little micro beasties, is that there are LOTS, like alllll sorts of varies species fungal, bacterial, protozoa, all sorts of weird stuff. It's fascinating, but gets a lil overwhelming at times, I admit I sometimes overlook all those little intricacies, I wish I had the time to dedicate learning all the ins-and-outs.Glad you liked it guys, just had to share!
Ah thanks for introducing me to the euglena - learned something there!
I totally get how that critter reminds you of them -- checked them out, and one of their modes of moving about is quite similar to what the larva was doing there! I found a vid for camparison, at 2:13 mins I could really see it:
I still have to learn how to measure the microscopic organisms, so not sure how large that larva actually was
But it was definitely way larger than the flagellates -- they're the roundish bumbling thingies in the video.
Also it having that 3-toed foot and the different sections in its body led me to assume it was multicellular...
Actually the puppa at the end looks like a fly to me?!
My first panic thought was fungus gnat haha but their larvae can almost be seen with the naked eye, so definitely not.
Too bad I couldn't preserve the sample long enough to see it hatch
Yeah this is the best tea I've made so far in terms of protozoan population & diversity! Bar maybe the many "fishies", which may be ciliates.... still need to find that out too
Maybe because to now, I would test the ACT at 24 and 48 hrs (the 48hr one always contained more diverse creatures, whilst at 24hrs it was all about bacteria). This time, I purposely started the tea at a time so it would be at about 36hrs in the morning, which is when I do my indoor gardening and studying
So it may be that the 36hr brewing time is best for the wormcasts I have. OR that the wormcasts are "ripening" as they "age".
------- Dam, I should have kept a bit of the tea going to see what it's like at 48hrs so I can check on that! LOL
Ah the endless potential for new discoveries, I so love it!
Cheers!
Yeah they say there are 75000 different kinds of bacteria alone, and most of them haven't even been studied yet either!from the very little that I know f all those little micro beasties, is that there are LOTS, like alllll sorts of varies species fungal, bacterial, protozoa, all sorts of weird stuff. It's fascinating, but gets a lil overwhelming at times, I admit I sometimes overlook all those little intricacies, I wish I had the time to dedicate learning all the ins-and-outs.
now whats REALLY fascinating to me, is looking at your wormbin under a scope, now there is some cool shit there, not just under tons of magnification, but literally to the naked eye you can see the castings LOADED with life