I just had to reply to this posting Bernhard - VERY impressive! Three excellent images - all showing an astounding amount of internal detail - worth taking time to really explore and enjoy.
I am interested in the texture of the creature's "shell". Somehow I expected it to be smooth and featureless, but it appears to be a fairly regular pattern of tiled segments. Do you know how that structure forms? Is it for example one tile per cell, or is the structure much larger or much smaller than the level of a cell?
first of all, you will hardly find smooth structureless shells in crustacea. In fact, these patterns are an important feature for the ID.
I found the answer to your question in one of our standard books over here (Das Leben im Wassertropfen- Life in a waterdrop):
For those who understand german:
" Die feinen, polygonalen Muster der durchsichtigen Schalenkutikula spiegeln die Grenzen der unter der Kutikula liegenden Hypodermiszellen"
For those who prefer english:
" The fine polygonal patterns of the transparent shell cuticula are indicating the outlines of the hypodermic cells beneath the cuticula."
Bernhard - Thanks for the link to your other D. longispina pics on the German forum . More excellent photos - I strongly recommend anyone to pay a visit.