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And it is the same with new born brine shrimp. I hatch them every day and have been for decades. Now please don't tell me that brine shrimp naupli are the sworn enemy of ich parasites and they hunt them down to torture them before roasting them next to my heater, then digging into them with their antlers. I know for many years you have been trying to come up with some way to explain why my fish are immune besides the chicken bone/speedo thing. If the diatom filter theory or brine shrimp thing doesn't pan out you will ask me if there is a Radon gas leak next to my tank or if I collect my water near Love Canal or Chernobyl reactor in Russia. :rolleyes:
http://afs.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1577/1548-8667(1995)007<0257:CCOAOD>2.3.CO;2
Abstract
The potential for using nauplii of brine shrimp Artemia salina to remove the dinoflagellate Amyloodinium ocellatum from aquaculture systems for red drum Sciaenops ocellatus was investigated. Dinospores of A. ocellatum were dispensed in cell culture plates at a concentration of approximately 10,000/mL and were exposed to brine shrimp nauplii at concentrations of l, 2, 4, or 8 nauplii/mL over a 24-h period. 1n the presence of 8 nauplii/mL, dinospores were eliminated in 8 h. In another study, 300,000 dinospores were placed in 3 L of saltwater in two tanks, and l,000 nauplii were added to one tank. After 12 h, three 202-g red drums were placed in both tanks for an additional 12-h-exposure period, after which the fish were euthanized and the trophont load on gill filaments was assessed. Fish from the tank with brine shrimp nauplii had 65% fewer trophonts on their gills than those from the nontreated tank (10.75 versus 3.75 trophonts/filament). These data and the observation that dinospore remains could be observed in naupliar fecal casts suggest the potential value of brine shrimp as a bioremediation measure for this serious gill parasite.

