Inside this folder are
the visible invertebrates
we treat as visitors.
This isn't a biology text or anything, so
the Skeptical Aquarist splits up invertebrates
according to the uses we make of them; this
is a thoroughly medieval organizing concept,
isn't it? something out of an illuminated
Bestiary manuscript. But non-vertebrates
are everywhere in your aquarium, so it does
make fishkeeping sense.
Largely microscopic invertebrates are essential
components of the plankton
and the biofilm.
At the major site devoted to amateur microscopists
www.microscopy-uk.org.uk look through the e-zine Micscape or try "The smallest page on the Web"
among "Pond Life" articles in the
Magazine Library. Or try the "Pond Life Identification Kit" at the site--—or just do a keyword search
at the site for the particular organism you're
interested in.
Many favorite microscopist subjects are the
pondwater organisms that are equally part
of the aquarium's plankton and biofilm. Some
of the variety of lives in the biofilm is
captured in many color micrographs with informative
captions at John Walsh's beautiful site geared to professional and amateur microscopists.
The Specimen Galleries at this site illustrate
algae broadly speaking, bacteria and cyanobacteria,
protozoans and minute aquatic crustaceans,
etc. with some rich and informative text.
Nikon make microscopes as well as cameras.
They have a microscopy site with a "Digital Movie Gallery."
Select "Pond Life," where you can
view digital micro-videos of many creatures
you'll also find in the aquarium: aeolosomatid
and naidid and nematode worms, flatworms,
hydra, daphnids, gastrotrichs, rotifers,
waterbears, etc. (You need to configure your
browser with RealPlayer to view them.)
There's a web homepage for freshwater benthic ecology
and aquatic entomology that is coordinated from Halifax N.S. by
Prof. S. M. Mandaville. It's got condensed
information about all the various invertebrate
orders and families likely to be found in
fresh water, and copious links to excellent
scientific stuff about the world of the freshwater
biofilm.
A page of links to scientific sites
concerned with Freshwater Biodiversity is maintained at the University Putra Malaysia.