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minnesotastan

Worms in the sand

minnesotastan
16 years ago

This spring I used an old 10-gallon aquarium as a vivarium to allow tadpoles to mature into frogs. Now I have a profusion of small worms in the sand that I can't identiy.

The sand was originally harvested from a roadcut here in the Midwest. I supplemented that with some ornamental gravel, then a patch of moss on a peaty base taken from a woodland floor.

The aquatic materials were scooped from a rural pond, including the tadpoles, a couple snails, several water boatmen and whatever else was lurking in the detritus on the pond bottom. I remember transilluminating the original jar of pond water and seeing tiny spirochete-shaped critters rotating in the water.

After six weeks most of the frogs have matured and been returned to their pond. Now when I view the vivarium in the early morning, with the light crossing it almost horizontally, I can see a couple colonies of worm-like critters embedded in the sand (the sand that's below the water, near the water's edge). These are not "worms" in the sense of large annelids, and not microscopic. They are visible to the naked eye if the light is just right, only a fraction of a mm in diameter and perhaps 10-15 mm in length. They seem to have their rear portions anchored in the sand (like benthic sea-snakes) with the aqueous portion waving about quite vigorously.

Can anyone offer an identification? I've tried Googling various relevant terms and searching Google images without success. Thought someone here might be familiar with these. They appear benign - don't know whether to ignore them, or remove them, or leave them there as potential food for future vivarium inhabitants.

Thanks in advance,

Stan

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