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Call now to set up a Wastewater Biomass Analyses or Filamentous Identification of your plant!

Finally new Release

Filamentous Identification

"the Easy Way"

New training program

 

Mystery Bug of the Month

March-05  more photos

 

Target Higher Forms. . . . . Gold Medal Winners

OK, these are the guys to shoot for in most activated sludge plants. They are called Suctorians. They almost always indicate an extremely healthy system and usually the BOD in the final effluent is very low, the TSS is low and things are running smoothly. If you have these in your plant, you are probably running very good and should congratulate yourselves!

Although they look very pretty, watch out, well only if you are a microscopic higher life form. They are deadly! They stab unsuspecting higher life forms that swim by and suck their guts out. Nice huh- violence even under the microscope- eat or be eaten, same as the laws of the jungle,  oh well, It was amazing and a weird experience to watch . . . ..

We do have videos of this, but they are too large to load on a  website. They are one megabyte for each second. Some of the videos were 20-30 seconds, so you can see how big the files would get. You may contact us for copies of the videos if you are interested.

These photomicrographs were taken from a wastewater sample.  Most of the objectives used were  100x,  400x and 1000x.

Come take a closer look at the amazing world under the microscope!

 

they can have long or short spikes

They can have many or few

 

100x Here the suctorian looks like he has caught his prey

 

Stuck on you

Lunch time sorry

 

 

Remember, even though it is only a drop of water and seems flat on the slide, they are 3-D, you might need to focus in and out on your microscope

 

They can sometimes be hidden in the floc structures- look for spikes

Here is a suctorian that is stained with Lacto-Phenol Cotton Blue stain

Suctorians produce young by either internal or external budding

Here, the suctorian is branched and in layers

 

Want to see more of the Mystery Bug- videos and photos

 

 

 

 

Mystery Bug 9-04  Mystery Filament of the Month 9-04  Mystery Filament of the Month 10-04

 

Mystery Bug 10-04  Mystery Bug-11-0Mystery Bug-12-04  Mystery Bug-1-05

 

Mystery Bug-2-05  Mystery Bug-3-05  Mystery Bug-4-05  Mystery Bug-5-05

Mystery Bug-6-05  Mystery Bug-7-05  Mystery Bug-8-05

 

 

 

 

Mystery Bug-9-05  Mystery Bug-10-05  Mystery Bug-11-05   Mystery Bug-12-05 

 

 

 

Mystery Bug 1-06  Mystery Bug 2-06 Mystery Bug 3-06

 

 

 

Mystery Bug 4-06   Mystery Bug 5-06 Mystery Bug 6-06

 

 

 

 

Mystery Bug 8-06 II   Mystery Bug 9-06 II Mystery Bug 10-06

 

 

 

 

Mystery Bug 11-06    Mystery Bug 12-06  Mystery Bug 1-07 and links to all of 2007 Mystery bugs

 

 

 

 

2008 Mystery Bugs

    

 

 

 

January 08                  February 08            March 08                    March 08 Enlarged

Stay tuned each month

More to come soon!

Enlargements: If you liked these pictures and want to see additional microorganisms check out the pages below.

Amoeba

Flagellates

Free Swimming Ciliates

Stalked Ciliates

Rotifers

Suctoria

Bug Sex?

Eating under the microscope- Dinner time!

 

What if you do not have a lab or microscope onsite that is capable of performing an analyses of your system?

Find out how Environmental Leverage's lab can perform an analyses of your biomass in your system and make recommendation on  how to improve your system.

Wastewater Biomass Analyses

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Revised: February 11, 2008.