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Janek Lass

Janek Lass

https://www.instagram.com/microworld.with.janek.lass/

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country flag of EE38 y/o Male
Joined 7-13-16
Giant Tortoise
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  • Dixidae
    2 Dixidae
  • ceriodaphnia Ceriodaphnia is a genus of the Daphniidae; the genus was described in 1853 by James Dwight Dana. It has cosmopolitan distribution. Species: Ceriodaphnia dubia Ceriodaphnia quadrangula Ceriodaphnia reticulata
    2 ceriodaphnia
  • Amphipoda Amphipoda is an order of malacostracan crustaceans with no carapace and generally with laterally compressed bodies. Amphipods range in size from 1 to 340 millimetres and are mostly detritivores or scavengers. There are more than 9,900 amphipod species so far described.
    2 Amphipoda
  • Hydrachnidia Hydrachnidia, also known as "water mites", Hydrachnidiae, Hydracarina or Hydrachnellae, are among the most abundant and diverse groups of benthic arthropods, composed of 6,000 described species from 57 families.
    2 Hydrachnidia
  • Amphipoda
    2 Amphipoda
  • Coreus marginatus  Coreus marginatus,Dock bug,Estonia,Geotagged,Spring
    1 Coreus marginatus
  • Ostracod  Estonia,Geotagged,Spring
    2 Ostracod
  • Zebra spider The zebra spider (Salticus scenicus) is a common jumping spider of the Northern Hemisphere. Estonia,Geotagged,Salticus scenicus,Spring,Zebra spider
    2 Zebra spider
  • Copepod
    2 Copepod
  • A head louse egg
    1 A head louse egg
  • Ceratopogonidae larvae  Estonia,Geotagged,Summer
    1 Ceratopogonidae larvae
  • Heterocypris  Estonia,Fall,Geotagged
    1 Heterocypris
  • Simocephalus sp Simocephalus sp. are large, 3-4 mm in length, round animals that are covered in a bivalve carapace. The head, which contains a single compound eye, is not covered by this carapace but instead is surrounded by a hood (see figure 3). Attached to the head are a very small rostrum and the first antennules, which contain olfactory setae (Balcer et al. 1984). The mouthparts of Simocephalus sp. are small and they lack maxillipeds. Simocephalus sp. uses its second antennae as swimming appendages while the five thoracic legs are used for filtering food or respiration. The dorsal side of the thorax is called the brood pouch, an extension of the carapace, and is where the eggs are held (see fig. 5). While several of the members of family Daphnidae have a tail spine, Simocephalus lacks this feature. One of the most important features in differentiating between species is the post abdominal claw (see fig. 4). The difference in pectin on these claws is the only thing that separates three Great Lakes species from one another (Balcer et al. 1984, Thorp and Covich 1991).
    1 Simocephalus sp
  • Musca domestica  Estonia,Geotagged,Housefly,Musca domestica
    0 Musca domestica
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