Hi guys, did you know who this weird creature is?— Rafael Marine Microfauna (@rmartinledo) March 20, 2020
Specimen from coasts of Northern Atlantic.#StayAtHome #homeschooling
"The sun will shine on us again, brother" pic.twitter.com/vNZJZCdrah
Monday, March 30, 2020
Polychaetes larvae
Rotifera
Here’s a different kind of #corona for you. Corona means ‘crown’ in Latin, so it’s not hard to imagine why the wheel-like structures on rotifers also got that name! #microscopy— My Microscopic World (@MyMicroscopic) March 23, 2020
🔬 BA310E @MoticEurope microscope! pic.twitter.com/gdEy7PFGs0
Blackworms
My new favorite organism to observe under the microscope, blackworms!— My Microscopic World (@MyMicroscopic) March 14, 2020
This one is viewed with a combination of darkfield and polarized light microscopy with a @MoticEurope BA310E microscope.#science #biology #microscopy pic.twitter.com/CNtUzYb0U5
Saturday, March 21, 2020
Polychaetes in simbiosis with Octopus
(8/10) The Octopus-Dwelling Worm, sounds like the story for a horror movie! Polychaetes have never been found associated with octopuses, until now...https://t.co/jHxOmplKei#toptenmarinespecies #taxonomistappreciationday @WRMarineSpecies pic.twitter.com/sQSYmv9UaM— WoRMS (@WRMarineSpecies) March 19, 2020
Rhabditidae
A good guy! Free living nematodes (a bacterial feeder in this case) can be used to monitor/better understand soil health, nutrient turnover, etc, etc. #Rhabditidae are found in enriched systems. @Hobes07 @MikeFidanza @hcwetzel3 @BruceMrtn @RandallKane1 pic.twitter.com/ZMrRLYXliU— Derek Settle (@turfdom) February 13, 2020
Free-living nematodes and potato crops
Ian Toth @HuttonCMS @PlantHealthScot discusses the potential interaction of free-living nematodes and the pathogen responsible for blackleg in potato crops, as part of the #SSCR2020 Potato Winter Meeting today in #Dundee https://t.co/GVc1euLmFY pic.twitter.com/rEDglUgRlq— James Hutton Institute (@JamesHuttonInst) March 11, 2020
Aphelenchoides pseudogoodeyi
Video of Aphelenchoides pseudogoodeyi moving within a soybean trichome. This was the first reported occurrence of a nematode within a plant trichome #UFBugs #UFNematodes @UFGulfCoastNema pic.twitter.com/2sey2hPu2j— Clemen De Oliveira (@clemen_agro) March 20, 2020
Thursday, March 19, 2020
Guide to the identification of Marine Meiofauna by Andreas Schmidt-Rhaesa
New book alert - edited by a friend of mine. 608 pages of the marvellous Meiofauna. Do yourself a favour and buy it. pic.twitter.com/SD8cwA9cyg— Ross Piper (@DrRossPiper) February 27, 2020
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