Odd phyto contamination. Help with ID?

KonradTO

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Hi all,
Some of my phyto cultures started to turn slowly yellowish so I decided to check under the microscope.
I found plenty of TINY hair-like organisms. First I thought was cyanobacteria but they seem even too small for being cyano.
I would say they are probably 10 times smaller than Ostreopsis.
Any idea? Could be filamentous bacteria this small?
First picture is stereoscope with colors
Second microscope without colors
Screenshot_20220809-160049_Gallery.jpg
20220809_143328.jpg
 
Hi all,
Some of my phyto cultures started to turn slowly yellowish so I decided to check under the microscope.
I found plenty of TINY hair-like organisms. First I thought was cyanobacteria but they seem even too small for being cyano.
I would say they are probably 10 times smaller than Ostreopsis.
Any idea? Could be filamentous bacteria this small?
First picture is stereoscope with colors
Second microscope without colors
Screenshot_20220809-160049_Gallery.jpg
20220809_143328.jpg
I wouldn’t rule out cyanobacteria because of the fineness of the filament. @taricha have any additional ideas?
 
I wouldn’t rule out cyanobacteria because of the fineness of the filament. @taricha have any additional ideas?
Agree with this.
Our most common hobby cyano has very large cells. Most forms of cyano are a lot smaller. Specifically, a fine filament green cyano is not that uncommon. I've found that type of thing in my system before.
 
Agree with this.
Our most common hobby cyano has very large cells. Most forms of cyano are a lot smaller. Specifically, a fine filament green cyano is not that uncommon. I've found that type of thing in my system before.
Ok then I had maybe some contamination between tank and culture vessels. Its incredible that they killed 99% of the other stuff, they must carry some strong toxins
 
Ok then I had maybe some contamination between tank and culture vessels. Its incredible that they killed 99% of the other stuff, they must carry some strong toxins
Many microorganisms use allelopathy to inhibit competition by other organisms. The allelochemical might inhibit growth or lyse cells. I am growing and studying mixed algae culture and have begun to suspect that nutrient competition might be allelopathy.

Good luck getting rid of the cyanobacteria contamination.
 
Ok for precaution I checked the stock solution I am using for inoculation and its a bit more diverse but it's composed mainly of those cyanobacteria.
I contacted the company selling them asking the composition of the phyto. It is a pre-mixed blend of phyto but I did not expect to have cyano inside. Intrestingly my pods seems eating this anyway. O ordered some nannochloropsis now, but I will check under the microscope before using this time.
 
Ok for precaution I checked the stock solution I am using for inoculation and its a bit more diverse but it's composed mainly of those cyanobacteria.
I contacted the company selling them asking the composition of the phyto. It is a pre-mixed blend of phyto but I did not expect to have cyano inside. Intrestingly my pods seems eating this anyway. O ordered some nannochloropsis now, but I will check under the microscope before using this time.
You might have a new product idea. Cyanobacteria would be so easy to grow.
 
Aren't some cyano toxic? I guess that could cross the food chain up to fish and corals
The key word is “some” are toxic. I think the most popular toxic blooms are pelagic though. Finding a beneficial nontoxic cyanobacteria might be easy. By the way, people eat many tons of Spirulina each year with no ill effects.
 

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