I love these types of nature tanks! I will follow along the journey of your multiple species tank. This is the first video I've watched from you so I'm not sure if you have this animal yet but you can find aquatic isopods in rocky creeks and rivers that have lots of fallen leaves in there. They're a great cleanup crew and they eat detritus just like land isopods. I haven't tried searching for them in the winter but in the other seasons, they are easy to find. You can also make a jar like this but with less organic matter so it won't be so smelly and you'll still be able to collect many animals. Kind of random but Fishtory is a good channel that has a similar philosophy to Father Fish but his videos are more "sciencey". I'm a nerd so I like those kinds of vids.
Thank you so much for the feedback on my tanks 🌱😊 I really highly appreciate it! Also, thanks for the suggestions. I was originally searching for scuds / freshwater isopods. Never kept either of them in a larger fish tank w/ tropical fish, so i'm curious to see how the scuds will do. Freshwater isopods are even cooler, because as you say they look and behave pretty much like normal isopods, just underwater. So very interesting to watch. I'll try to add more microfauna over the coming weeks & months. Also, thanks for mentioning Fishtory here, it's a great channel and i also think it's very valuable content.
Great Video. Thx for sharing. I love all the parallels. Like me, you‘re going out with your Kölle Zoo bucket, dig into the freezing water and mud, just to bring home some creatures for your tanks. What I learned (at least here in Austria) I have much more success with with lakes and ponds as with fast flowing waters. In those I only manage to find larvae. The only larvae I add to my tanks is caddisfly larvae which build there own little shells with different materials like sand and leafes. They also eat algae and do not harm the other animals. Try to look out for those they are quite fascinating.
I watched a documentary about caddisfly larvae years ago. Very interesting creatures. I watched it a long time ago, so i actually forgot they even existed. It’s a great idea to get them into the tank. Will add them to my list ☺️ Greetings from Heilbronn - Germany 🇩🇪
It helps cut the smell to put maybe half as much leaves and add a small air line or add floating plants like hornwort to make sure it has some oxygen. That's what solved the problem for me with my resurrection jars.
Cheers mate, thanks for mentioning this. There is some duckweed in there at the moment and so far, it is the only plant that has survived. The newly added plants are also dying already and it has only been 4 days since i put them in there. I do daily water changes now. As a benefit, this will help acclimate the scuds to the tank water as a side effect, because i always add tank water. Greetings from Southern Germany :)
Yes and no: It would decrease microorganism & bacteria load, if i just used clean tap water - however, i use water from my ecosystem tank, which contains lots of beneficial bacteria (but is quite clean and does not smell or rot). :)
I think , if you don't have too many big fish or cichlids in your tank , they can last "forever" ! In my big tank (300 liter), where I have 7 denison barbs, 3 synodontis petricola , 1 male hemichromis exsul , 2 sae and 1 bristlenose pleco , at spring time , i added about 300 scuds every week ! They lasted about 3 to 4 days each time ! In my small tank i added them once , and they lived until summer , and then suddenly died of !!!! I couldn't even find them in the water where I collected them in spring anymore ! They had died of there too! Next year i will definitely try to culture them for constant live food ! I'm pretty sure they don't survive in high water temperature , and it's very hot here in Greece at summer !
This might be the reason for them dying quickly - hot water temperatures! My tanks are pretty warm as well, 24 degree celsius / 75 Fahrenheit. Do you think this will be too hot? My largest "predators" (from the scud perspective) are black molly and the corydoras paleatus fish. I think the guppys will not threaten them. You should also upload a video of your tank, it sounds very nice mate. Greetings from Germany :) 🇩🇪
Scuds, scuds, and more scuds. Best live food you can find for many types of fish. I live in the US up in Northern Michigan on the shores of Lake Michigan. My family and I collect our Aztec Scuds from the local rivers and lakes. Our local river, called The Bear River, runs right through town into Lake Michigan.The Aztec Scuds are a very common type here and can be found as far as South America near the equator. Not sure what species of scuds you guys have over in Europe but I’m sure they are very similar to what we have here. Father Fish was a huge inspiration to our five all natural deep sand substrate tanks. I did tear down my 2gallon redirection jar to build a 15gallon Red Cherry Shrimp Tank. But that tank is now seeding all the other aquariums with scuds and other micro fauna that gets transferred on the leaf litter I move between the tanks. Keep an eye on that jar though for they can go foul quickly like mine did at the beginning. I managed to fix mine by small daily water changes and adding more sand until the water cleared and the smell was gone. You have some awesome looking tanks dude, keep up that good work and keep your fishy friends close. BTW those Egyptian Geese look similar to the Canadian Geese that we have here in Michigan. Hopefully your geese are a bit friendlier than ours because the Canadian Geese can be very aggressive lol
Cheers mate! I would love to see your tanks one day, maybe you could share a TH-cam video as well? Regarding the atzek scuds: I would be very curious to compare both side by side: There should be differences between those and the scuds we have over here in Central Europe /Germany, if they developed on different continents.🙂 Regarding the Egyptian Geese: They are definitely not Canadian geese, since we also have those here in Germany. We actually have quite a lot of American species that are invasive here in Europe: Cormorant, sunfish, Canadian Geese etc. Greetings from Southern Germany and thanks for watching my video :)
3:33 Hadn't thought to collect aquatic material in the cold to limit potential nasties and hitchhikers, smart idea even if that's not what you were thinking 😊 White vinegar to remove the brown stains on the glass? 4:25 It's wonderful but still awful when you have so much plant growth that you can throw excess away - or at new projects! 😅 That mosquito larvae looked huge! Maybe we have a different kind here in Midwest USA 🤔 Would you mind listing the plant species you tried that failed, and any that succeeded? I wonder if some fast growing floating plants like duckweed or floating stem plants like cabomba or guppy grass (watch out for invasive varieties and look a likes) might survive - can live in medium to low light, will uptake some (excess) nutrients in the water?
Plants that worked: - Duckweed (Wolffia globosa), which i put in during setup. - I also tried a second time to add hygrophila corymbosa stricta to the jar, lets see how it will evolve mate :)
@@naturalaquariums76 Thank you for the lists! 😁 the snails seemed to be the nastiest smelling contributors to pond jars when they died in my past experiments, and they stink almost as bad when they die in clean aquariums, so just eliminating those by winter harvesting might be good 🤔
I have 3, 2.5 gallon tanks that I set up for the same purpose , they do not smell but I try to keep the leaves dried prior to putting them in also only plant is Java moss. It’s amazing to watch the scuds.
Cheers Mate :) The molly is bullying my smaller corydoras paleatus from time to time. I think it would be way worse if it was a whole pack of mollies in the tank. He is basically just constantly eating these days. Greetings and Merry Christmas :)
Black Mollys get really large sometimes. This dude has the size of a small gold fish already. That's also the reason why i do not want to add more black mollys to this tank. Greetings from Southern Germany :)
i love the work fatherfish has done to popularize foodwebs and natural fishkeeping, and I especially love when I see more channels creating these tanks and types of vids! very entertaining content man!
awwwww thank you so much - I've been keeping fish way before i even heard about father fish, but he inspired me to go more natural and include microfauna and stuff from ponds :)
@@naturalaquariums76 same for me lol! started looking into microfauna more and i felt like my eyes had opened. it's all i think about now, i see a random puddle and have to fight the urge to go dig in it for more fauna to bring home!🤣
Hallöle, du meintest das du die flusskrebse nirgends im internet zum kaufen gefunden hast, ich würd dir mal raten auf garnelio zu schauen, da hab ich meine bestellt.
Vielen Dank für den Tipp, ich hatte vor 2 Wochen bei Garnelio geschaut und leider nichts gefunden. Daher habe ich die etwas kältere und günstigere Variante vorgezogen :)
I think those are damselflies, not dragonflies. They will stay pretty small and although they do hunt, they won't bother guppies except the smallest fry. I still don't think you should put them in your other tanks.
I think you are right, in German "damselfies" and "dragonflies" are the same word - "Libellen". So in everyday language we don't distinguish them. That's why i have never even heard the word damselfies before. Yeah i don't want to take that risk of adding them - even my smallest guppy fry should not suffer such a terrible death :O
It is a damselfly, but both damselflies and dragonflies belong to the group known as Odanata. Zygoptera (Damselfly)and Anisoptera (Dragonfly). Damselflies are more slender than the Dragonfly, almost indistinguishable from each other as adults, which is why I suppose the Germans give them the same name. In their larval stage damselfly are distinguishable by the three tail appendages (as shown in your video), on some dragonflies these are barely visible and on others not at all. They make an excellent live food, as do the red midge larvae, as shown and the detritus worms which will undoubtedly be in the resurrection jar as well. My fish go nuts on midge larvae and detritus worms. Midges are a non biting insect that looks similar to a mosquito but has no mouth parts as adults, both the midge and mosquito belong to the Diptera group.
@@naturalaquariums76ain't the german word for damselfly 'wasserjungfer' or might also be called 'kleinlibelle'? I looked up the translation in google for the english word Damselfly and for the dutch word Waterjuffer. Found those 2 translations .
Not sure what the white spider is, the others look like dragonfly nymph or larvae. Red worm might be a detritus worm, doesn't look like planaria (lucky you!). For the more mature dragonfly nymphs, you could euthanize them by freezing quickly in your electric freezer(or outside, whichever is colder) then cut them into smaller pieces for your critters or blend them into a small batch of snello 🤢 Love the use of the go pro in the beginning, very cool to see the bottom of a winter river in Germany!!🎉❤ PS to the fiance, the smell is why I refuse to do this, forget Father fish! 😅
haha 😜 i will send her your regards mate! Regarding potential planaria or other pests that could be transferred to the large ecosystem tank: I plan on catching the skuds one by one from the jar and releasing them to the large ecosystem tank. This should ensure no pests are transported from the jar to the tank. I actually plan on keeping the dragon fly larvae until spring and then release them to a local pond. Maybe they’ll even molt and turn into dragon flys, which would be very cool.
Random question: I’m American, you said you’re from Germany. I know English stems from you guys so does the average person there learn English and German growing up? I notice all my channels with similar content come from your general area and all of you sound like English is native even though my American ears can hear a slight “Arnold Schwarzenegger” vibe coming through. This is not meant to be offensive or anything, the accent is cool to me. Great video, I’ll be subbing to see what else you do
Hey there, thanks for subscribing and thanks for the question about English / German, which is not offensive at all. 🙂 Yes, every kid in Germany has to learn English in school (most of the time starting in the 5th grade, sometimes earlier). Also, depending on the region, children have to learn French, Polish or Czech according to my knowledge. My English might have a Schwarzenegger-vibe because Arnold is originally from Austria and they also speak German in Austria, which might explain it 😅 Thank you for subscribing 😇
Die meisten Zuschauer dieses Kanals sind tatsächlich US-Amerikaner. Du bist aber nicht der einzige Deutsche, ca. 5% der Views meiner Videos stammen aus Deutschland 🇩🇪😉
HOWDY from TEXAS! they are not dragonfly nymphs; they are damselfly nymphs. both the white one and the larger dark colored ones on the waters surface. damselflies are smaller than dragonflies but look much the same. dragonfly nymphs are a shorter thicker bodied creature. I subbed.
Cheers mate! Thanks for subscribing to the channel and for clarifying the difference between damselfy nymphs and dragonfly nymphs. In German, both animals have the same name (at least in everyday language), so i assumed it would be the same in English. Greetings from Southern Germany to Texas :)
Watch the last episode: th-cam.com/video/TtMGmOm9Bi0/w-d-xo.html
of the 100 species ecosystem playlist.😊🌱🤩
Vielen Dank for Ihre Video.
Sehr gerne! Es freut mich, dass es Dir gefallen hat 😊
I love these types of nature tanks! I will follow along the journey of your multiple species tank. This is the first video I've watched from you so I'm not sure if you have this animal yet but you can find aquatic isopods in rocky creeks and rivers that have lots of fallen leaves in there. They're a great cleanup crew and they eat detritus just like land isopods. I haven't tried searching for them in the winter but in the other seasons, they are easy to find. You can also make a jar like this but with less organic matter so it won't be so smelly and you'll still be able to collect many animals.
Kind of random but Fishtory is a good channel that has a similar philosophy to Father Fish but his videos are more "sciencey". I'm a nerd so I like those kinds of vids.
Thank you so much for the feedback on my tanks 🌱😊 I really highly appreciate it!
Also, thanks for the suggestions. I was originally searching for scuds / freshwater isopods. Never kept either of them in a larger fish tank w/ tropical fish, so i'm curious to see how the scuds will do. Freshwater isopods are even cooler, because as you say they look and behave pretty much like normal isopods, just underwater. So very interesting to watch. I'll try to add more microfauna over the coming weeks & months.
Also, thanks for mentioning Fishtory here, it's a great channel and i also think it's very valuable content.
Great Video. Thx for sharing.
I love all the parallels. Like me, you‘re going out with your Kölle Zoo bucket, dig into the freezing water and mud, just to bring home some creatures for your tanks.
What I learned (at least here in Austria) I have much more success with with lakes and ponds as with fast flowing waters.
In those I only manage to find larvae.
The only larvae I add to my tanks is caddisfly larvae which build there own little shells with different materials like sand and leafes. They also eat algae and do not harm the other animals. Try to look out for those they are quite fascinating.
I watched a documentary about caddisfly larvae years ago. Very interesting creatures. I watched it a long time ago, so i actually forgot they even existed. It’s a great idea to get them into the tank. Will add them to my list ☺️
Greetings from Heilbronn - Germany 🇩🇪
It helps cut the smell to put maybe half as much leaves and add a small air line or add floating plants like hornwort to make sure it has some oxygen. That's what solved the problem for me with my resurrection jars.
Cheers mate, thanks for mentioning this. There is some duckweed in there at the moment and so far, it is the only plant that has survived. The newly added plants are also dying already and it has only been 4 days since i put them in there. I do daily water changes now. As a benefit, this will help acclimate the scuds to the tank water as a side effect, because i always add tank water.
Greetings from Southern Germany :)
@@naturalaquariums76 I'm confused by the daily water changes. Isn't that wiping out or decreasing a lot of the microbial life in the jar?
Yes and no: It would decrease microorganism & bacteria load, if i just used clean tap water - however, i use water from my ecosystem tank, which contains lots of beneficial bacteria (but is quite clean and does not smell or rot). :)
Scuds are , in my opinion , the best green hair algae eaters ! And of course one of the best live fish food !
I'm so excited to add them, i hope they won't instantly end up as live food for the fish though :D
I think , if you don't have too many big fish or cichlids in your tank , they can last "forever" ! In my big tank (300 liter), where I have 7 denison barbs, 3 synodontis petricola , 1 male hemichromis exsul , 2 sae and 1 bristlenose pleco , at spring time , i added about 300 scuds every week ! They lasted about 3 to 4 days each time ! In my small tank i added them once , and they lived until summer , and then suddenly died of !!!! I couldn't even find them in the water where I collected them in spring anymore ! They had died of there too! Next year i will definitely try to culture them for constant live food ! I'm pretty sure they don't survive in high water temperature , and it's very hot here in Greece at summer !
This might be the reason for them dying quickly - hot water temperatures! My tanks are pretty warm as well, 24 degree celsius / 75 Fahrenheit. Do you think this will be too hot?
My largest "predators" (from the scud perspective) are black molly and the corydoras paleatus fish. I think the guppys will not threaten them.
You should also upload a video of your tank, it sounds very nice mate.
Greetings from Germany :) 🇩🇪
GOOD SHOW :)
THANK YOU FOR SHARING :)
THANK YOU FROM ISRAEL :)
Thanks for watching my video 😇 are coy also a fish keeper? Would be interesting to see some animals native to your region 😊
Scuds, scuds, and more scuds. Best live food you can find for many types of fish. I live in the US up in Northern Michigan on the shores of Lake Michigan. My family and I collect our Aztec Scuds from the local rivers and lakes. Our local river, called The Bear River, runs right through town into Lake Michigan.The Aztec Scuds are a very common type here and can be found as far as South America near the equator. Not sure what species of scuds you guys have over in Europe but I’m sure they are very similar to what we have here. Father Fish was a huge inspiration to our five all natural deep sand substrate tanks. I did tear down my 2gallon redirection jar to build a 15gallon Red Cherry Shrimp Tank. But that tank is now seeding all the other aquariums with scuds and other micro fauna that gets transferred on the leaf litter I move between the tanks. Keep an eye on that jar though for they can go foul quickly like mine did at the beginning. I managed to fix mine by small daily water changes and adding more sand until the water cleared and the smell was gone. You have some awesome looking tanks dude, keep up that good work and keep your fishy friends close. BTW those Egyptian Geese look similar to the Canadian Geese that we have here in Michigan. Hopefully your geese are a bit friendlier than ours because the Canadian Geese can be very aggressive lol
Cheers mate! I would love to see your tanks one day, maybe you could share a TH-cam video as well?
Regarding the atzek scuds: I would be very curious to compare both side by side: There should be differences between those and the scuds we have over here in Central Europe /Germany, if they developed on different continents.🙂
Regarding the Egyptian Geese: They are definitely not Canadian geese, since we also have those here in Germany. We actually have quite a lot of American species that are invasive here in Europe: Cormorant, sunfish, Canadian Geese etc.
Greetings from Southern Germany and thanks for watching my video :)
We swim with those things everytime on river. 😂 Nice work!
This is true haha 😂😃 imagine they were our size 😃
3:33 Hadn't thought to collect aquatic material in the cold to limit potential nasties and hitchhikers, smart idea even if that's not what you were thinking 😊 White vinegar to remove the brown stains on the glass? 4:25 It's wonderful but still awful when you have so much plant growth that you can throw excess away - or at new projects! 😅 That mosquito larvae looked huge! Maybe we have a different kind here in Midwest USA 🤔 Would you mind listing the plant species you tried that failed, and any that succeeded? I wonder if some fast growing floating plants like duckweed or floating stem plants like cabomba or guppy grass (watch out for invasive varieties and look a likes) might survive - can live in medium to low light, will uptake some (excess) nutrients in the water?
It wasn’t the original idea to limit potential pests by doing it during winter - but now that i read it, it does make sense!
Plants that did not work (i added them right away):
- hygrophila corymbosa stricta
Proserpinaca Palustris "Cuba"
Plants that worked:
- Duckweed (Wolffia globosa), which i put in during setup.
- I also tried a second time to add hygrophila corymbosa stricta to the jar, lets see how it will evolve mate :)
@@naturalaquariums76 Thank you for the lists! 😁 the snails seemed to be the nastiest smelling contributors to pond jars when they died in my past experiments, and they stink almost as bad when they die in clean aquariums, so just eliminating those by winter harvesting might be good 🤔
I have 3, 2.5 gallon tanks that I set up for the same purpose , they do not smell but I try to keep the leaves dried prior to putting them in also only plant is Java moss. It’s amazing to watch the scuds.
Thanks for sharing your tip regarding dried leaves mate😊🌱
do you also keep scuds in your jars /tanks?
The small white ones look like the mayfly larvae we have in the states
Cheers mate! Never heard of mayfly larvae before, the insects look cool. I'm quite sure we do not have them over here in Germany though :)
Mate that tank is looking amazing! Do you have issues with the molly being aggressive toward the smaller fish?
Cheers Mate :)
The molly is bullying my smaller corydoras paleatus from time to time. I think it would be way worse if it was a whole pack of mollies in the tank. He is basically just constantly eating these days.
Greetings and Merry Christmas
:)
@@naturalaquariums76 the molly is cracking me up with his size difference! i always forget that they get so large sometimes!
Black Mollys get really large sometimes. This dude has the size of a small gold fish already. That's also the reason why i do not want to add more black mollys to this tank.
Greetings from Southern Germany :)
i love the work fatherfish has done to popularize foodwebs and natural fishkeeping, and I especially love when I see more channels creating these tanks and types of vids! very entertaining content man!
awwwww thank you so much - I've been keeping fish way before i even heard about father fish, but he inspired me to go more natural and include microfauna and stuff from ponds :)
@@naturalaquariums76 same for me lol! started looking into microfauna more and i felt like my eyes had opened. it's all i think about now, i see a random puddle and have to fight the urge to go dig in it for more fauna to bring home!🤣
Haha 😂 I can relate 100%!
Hallöle, du meintest das du die flusskrebse nirgends im internet zum kaufen gefunden hast, ich würd dir mal raten auf garnelio zu schauen, da hab ich meine bestellt.
Vielen Dank für den Tipp, ich hatte vor 2 Wochen bei Garnelio geschaut und leider nichts gefunden. Daher habe ich die etwas kältere und günstigere Variante vorgezogen :)
I think those are damselflies, not dragonflies. They will stay pretty small and although they do hunt, they won't bother guppies except the smallest fry. I still don't think you should put them in your other tanks.
I think you are right, in German "damselfies" and "dragonflies" are the same word - "Libellen". So in everyday language we don't distinguish them. That's why i have never even heard the word damselfies before.
Yeah i don't want to take that risk of adding them - even my smallest guppy fry should not suffer such a terrible death :O
It is a damselfly, but both damselflies and dragonflies belong to the group known as Odanata. Zygoptera (Damselfly)and Anisoptera (Dragonfly). Damselflies are more slender than the Dragonfly, almost indistinguishable from each other as adults, which is why I suppose the Germans give them the same name. In their larval stage damselfly are distinguishable by the three tail appendages (as shown in your video), on some dragonflies these are barely visible and on others not at all.
They make an excellent live food, as do the red midge larvae, as shown and the detritus worms which will undoubtedly be in the resurrection jar as well. My fish go nuts on midge larvae and detritus worms. Midges are a non biting insect that looks similar to a mosquito but has no mouth parts as adults, both the midge and mosquito belong to the Diptera group.
Wow! Thank you for that detailed response! Are you a biologist?
@@naturalaquariums76ain't the german word for damselfly 'wasserjungfer' or might also be called 'kleinlibelle'? I looked up the translation in google for the english word Damselfly and for the dutch word Waterjuffer. Found those 2 translations .
Father Fish yaaayy!
🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🤝🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🤝🤝🤝🇩🇪🇩🇪🇩🇪
:) :) :)
Love it! How is the weather in New York City? 😁
Haha 😂 I try to use different locations in the video description to reach different audiences!
@@naturalaquariums76 Do you have warm dry autumns in your hometown in Germany? Might explain the goslings.
@@naturalaquariums76 very smart man
I would say warmer than in the last few years. Still, i think the goslings won't make it through winter. It will get cold in January / Febuary 🥶
Not sure what the white spider is, the others look like dragonfly nymph or larvae. Red worm might be a detritus worm, doesn't look like planaria (lucky you!). For the more mature dragonfly nymphs, you could euthanize them by freezing quickly in your electric freezer(or outside, whichever is colder) then cut them into smaller pieces for your critters or blend them into a small batch of snello 🤢 Love the use of the go pro in the beginning, very cool to see the bottom of a winter river in Germany!!🎉❤ PS to the fiance, the smell is why I refuse to do this, forget Father fish! 😅
haha 😜 i will send her your regards mate!
Regarding potential planaria or other pests that could be transferred to the large ecosystem tank: I plan on catching the skuds one by one from the jar and releasing them to the large ecosystem tank. This should ensure no pests are transported from the jar to the tank.
I actually plan on keeping the dragon fly larvae until spring and then release them to a local pond. Maybe they’ll even molt and turn into dragon flys, which would be very cool.
Random question: I’m American, you said you’re from Germany. I know English stems from you guys so does the average person there learn English and German growing up? I notice all my channels with similar content come from your general area and all of you sound like English is native even though my American ears can hear a slight “Arnold Schwarzenegger” vibe coming through. This is not meant to be offensive or anything, the accent is cool to me. Great video, I’ll be subbing to see what else you do
Hey there, thanks for subscribing and thanks for the question about English / German, which is not offensive at all. 🙂
Yes, every kid in Germany has to learn English in school (most of the time starting in the 5th grade, sometimes earlier). Also, depending on the region, children have to learn French, Polish or Czech according to my knowledge.
My English might have a Schwarzenegger-vibe because Arnold is originally from Austria and they also speak German in Austria, which might explain it 😅
Thank you for subscribing 😇
What a nice project father fish is a good channel 🙂
thanks for the feedback - i agree, father fish is amazing :)
What happened to serpa designs
What do you mean? Serpa Design is an amazing channel, I love his videos ☺️
Dragonfly larve
Which one? The black or the white one?
White one is damselfly larvae. Black one and the tiny one are dragonfly larvae. @@naturalaquariums76
Thanks for clarifying mate :)
Oh man, I just got the memory of awful river funk. Rivers can smell absolutely disgusting.
Haha - this is so true. Just came home and entered my fish room, this one jar is enough to make the whole room smell like a festival toilet :D :D
@naturalaquariums76 😂😂😂
Bin ich der einzige Deutsche hier
Die meisten Zuschauer dieses Kanals sind tatsächlich US-Amerikaner. Du bist aber nicht der einzige Deutsche, ca. 5% der Views meiner Videos stammen aus Deutschland 🇩🇪😉
32f
Is oc.
?
Those will kill the fish
Which one are you referring to?🧐
Which ones? Scuds? 😂😂😂
HOWDY from TEXAS!
they are not dragonfly nymphs; they are damselfly nymphs. both the white one and the larger dark colored ones on the waters surface.
damselflies are smaller than dragonflies but look much the same. dragonfly nymphs are a shorter thicker bodied creature.
I subbed.
Cheers mate! Thanks for subscribing to the channel and for clarifying the difference between damselfy nymphs and dragonfly nymphs. In German, both animals have the same name (at least in everyday language), so i assumed it would be the same in English.
Greetings from Southern Germany to Texas :)