
Some interesting trips
#22
Posted 25 May 2015 - 09:44 AM
Steve -- I just PM'd you Erica's response to the PM that you sent her. She emailed it to me and asked me to fwd it to you.
I usually collect them in late fall or winter and rarely have problems transporting and acclimating them. In warm weather they're more sensitive, and in late spring/summer you get mostly spawned-out adults ready to die or tiny fry that slip through 1/8" mesh. Salt at 1 teasp/gal (dissolved in the collecting bucket before you start collecting) can help reduce their ion loss, which leads to bacterial and fungal infections. Also it's better if you do not pick them up between your fingers. Plop them directly from dipnet to bucket quickly without handling, or if seining you can pick them up on leaves, plants, or whatever is in the net. If collecting them in low-oxygen swamps, you might want to BYO clean water to mix 50/50 with the native water, or a battery air-pump. Feed them fresh-hatched BS or small skeeter larvae right away when you get home - a good meal seems to promote quick recovery from collecting stress.
Gerald Pottern
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Hangin' on the Neuse
"Taxonomy is the diaper used to organize the mess of evolution into discrete packages" - M.Sandel
#24
Posted 27 May 2015 - 09:34 PM
Lower Ogeechee/Ogeechee Coastal Drainage
#25
Posted 29 May 2015 - 03:39 PM
Lower Ogeechee/Ogeechee Coastal Drainage
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