Archive image from page 53 of Culture methods for invertebrate animals;. Culture methods for invertebrate animals; culturemethodsfo00galt Year: 1959 ( outlet through which the water is drawn from a storage tank is always located several inches above the bottom. A small amount of seawater may be made to last a long time if the investigator regularly filters and aerates it. A very convenient type of filter (Fig. 19) consists of a water- tight wooden box with two pipes passing through its bot- tom. The long pipe serves as an overflow while filtered water runs through a short pipe after having pa
Archive image from page 53 of Culture methods for invertebrate animals;. Culture methods for invertebrate animals; culturemethodsfo00galt Year: 1959 ( outlet through which the water is drawn from a storage tank is always located several inches above the bottom. A small amount of seawater may be made to last a long time if the investigator regularly filters and aerates it. A very convenient type of filter (Fig. 19) consists of a water- tight wooden box with two pipes passing through its bot- tom. The long pipe serves as an overflow while filtered water runs through a short pipe after having passed through a layer of charcoal (ch), sand (sd), fine gravel (fg) and coarse gravel (eg). From a reservoir (not shown in the figure) the water is delivered to the aqua- ria. When in operation the filter is placed below the aqua- rium from which the water is drawn. (See also p. 540-) Sometimes experimental work requires the use of seawater entirely devoid of any suspended matter, either inorganic or organic. It may be obtained by filtering through collodion membranes (ultrafiltration), using fine Berkefeld filters, or by passing through a thick layer of asbes- tos. Water obtained by the latter method may not be free from bacteria but contains no plankton or micro- plankton. A typical arrangement is shown in figure 20. From a labora- tory faucet seawater runs slowly into a large Buchner funnel, the bottom of which is covered with a layer of asbestos (A) about 1 inch thick. A small watch glass is. placed on its surface to provide a more uniform distribution of water over the entire area. The funnel is inserted into a neck of a 2 liter Fig. 19.—-Filter for seawater. After Sachs, eg, coarse gravel; ch, charcoal; fg, fine gravel; sd, sand. To suction pump Fig. 20.—Filtering of water through as- bestos. A, asbestos; T, glass tube lead- ing to suction pump. vacuum flask connected to a 5 gal- lon bottle. A glass tube (T) in- serted in a stopper of the bottle leads to a suction p
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