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- Subject: [FAQ] Aquaria: Plants
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- Archive-name: aquaria/general-faq/plants
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-
- * This is only a text dump of part of the Aquaria FAQs. *
- * The web "original" may be more current, is navigatable hypertext, *
- * and contains enhanced content not available in this posted version! *
- * http://faq.thekrib.com or http://www.actwin.com/fish/mirror *
-
-
- FAQ: Aquatic Plants
-
- In this FAQ you will find information on all aspects of freshwater
- live plantkeeping (also known as Aquatic Gardening). We also include
- detailed information on lighting, algae and snails which may be useful
- to all aquarists.
-
- Copyright
-
- The FAQs owe their existence to the contributors of the net, and as
- such it belongs to the readers of rec.aquaria and alt.aquaria.
- Articles with attributions are copyrighted by their original authors.
- Copies of the FAQs can be made freely, as long as it is distributed at
- no charge, and the disclaimers and the copyright notice are included.
-
- Contents
-
- Basics Q&A
- Lots of basic questions answered spanning the whole range of
- topics from appropriate fish to heating cables.
-
- Plant Survival
- A shorter and more narrative introduction to plant keeping.
-
- Plant Listing
- A descriptive list of most common aquatic plants, including a
- ``blacklist'' of false aquatic plants.
-
- Lighting
- Duration, intensity, and how to make your fluorescent fixture
- turn on by itself.
-
- CO2
- The compressed bottle method.
-
- Substrate Heating
- Why do it, construction hints.
-
- Resources
- Mail-order sources, books, magazines, an e-mailing list for
- aquatic gardeners, more detailed articles, etc.
-
-
- FAQ: Aquatic Plant Q&A
-
- Contributed by Erik Olson
-
- Anwers to your questions are available on the following plant topics:
- * General Questions
- * Fish
- * Lighting
- * Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
- * Nutrients and Fertilizer
- * The Substrate
- * Heating
- * Long Term Success
-
- General Questions
-
- ``What do you absolutely need to grow plants?''
-
- Successful plant growth requires a balance of light, nutrients, trace
- elements, and carbon dioxide (CO2). The light should be provided in a
- spectrum the plants can absorb, must be of great enough intensity to
- keep the plant alive, and should be consistently on 10-14 hours a day.
- Most nutrients are supplied by fish waste. Some trace elements might
- be supplied by your tap water, but are more consistently obtained
- using commercial trace element mixtures. CO2 is supplied partly from
- the air and partly by your fish, but can be enhanced by injecting it
- from an external source (for example, a compressed bottle). If your
- plants have a deficiency of even one of these factors, their growth
- will be limited. (Don't panic about this; most of us don't need
- optimal plant growth.) Overabundance of one factor over another may
- cause problems, such as plant malnourishment, undue algae growth or
- toxic buildup. Each ingredient will be discussed in detail in the
- following sections.
-
- ``My friend grows plants beautiful plants and doesn't do high-tech stuff like
- CO2 or fertilizers. Is it really necessary?''
-
- The quick answer to this is no. It is completely possible to grow
- plants using basic tank equipment, either by chance or by patiently
- learning through trial-and-error. This is accomplished by slight
- modification of the basic equipment and usual fishkeeping practice.
- High-tech gadgetry, however, can remove much of the guesswork by
- allowing you to better control each of the four ingredients.
-
- We should also mention that the term beautiful is a bit subjective
- here; Many hobbyists achieve great success with ``easy'' plants and no
- special equipment, and this is perfectly fine. But beware comparing
- this to a high-tech monger and their ability to grow a wider variety
- of plants, because they're really two different categories!.
-
- ``How do I disinfect my plants?''
-
- New plants may have unwanted hitchers: snails, algae or disease.
- Disinfection can help reduce their transmission into the tank, and can
- be used to remove algae growths from established plants. Beware, there
- is always a danger of going too far and damaging the plant itself.
- Some popular methods:
- * A ten minute soak in potassium permangenate (pale purple) works
- well; it is available in dilute form from Jungle products as
- "Clear Water". Permangenate is particularly good for killing
- bacteria and pathogens.
- * A 2-day soak in 1 tbsp/gallon of alum (buy it at drug stores) is
- good for killing snails and their eggs.
- * If the plants are kept in a fish-free system for three weeks,
- parasites like ich and velvet will die without their fish hosts.
- * A soak in a 1:19 diluted bleach solution; 2 minutes for stem
- plants, 3 minutes for tougher plants. Make sure to remove all
- traces of bleach afterwards by rinsing with water and
- dechlorinator. This method can kill your plants, so use only as a
- last resort against hell algae.
-
- (See the ALGAE SECTION of the DISEASE FAQ for more algae-prevention
- tips, and the SNAIL SECTION of that same FAQ for snail prophylaxis.)
-
- ``Do I leave my new plants in the pot?''
-
- Many aquatic plants are now sold in potted rockwool. Plants with
- delicate roots, such as Cryptocoryne and Anubias, are usually best
- left in the rockwool wadding, especially if you have to move them
- around in the tank. Leaving them potted also can reduce transplant
- shock; otherwise you must be patient and allow the plants time to
- recover in their new substrate. You can bury the pots in your gravel
- to conceal them. Some folks like to cut away the plastic pot, and just
- leave the plant in the wadding so it can grow out into the substrate.
-
- Fish
-
- ``What kind of plants can I keep with fish X?''
- ``What kind of fish can I keep with plant X?''
-
- These are essentially the same question, though asking the second one
- shows you are a serious plant person. You need to match the habits of
- the fish with the plant. Big cichlids that like to dig should not be
- kept in a tank with rooted plants, though floating (or ephiphytic)
- plants are fine. Vegetarian fish should not be kept in a tank with
- plants they like to eat, unless the plants grow faster than they
- destroy them! Some algae-eating fish also turn out to be plant-eaters
- too. In general, try and learn the habits of your fish before you buy
- them and your plants, and be prepared to find out what works by
- several trials.
-
- Some fish that can be kept with virtually any plants: small tetras,
- danios, rasboras, gouramis, discus, bettas, angelfish (Pterophylum),
- rainbowfish, Corydorus catfish, livebearers, killifish, dwarf
- cichlids, and in general most small fish.
-
- Lighting
-
- ``How much light do I need''
-
- The ``classic'' rule of thumb for lighting is 2-4 watts of fluorescent
- light per gallon (0.5-1 watts/l) for a tank of normal depth, less than
- 24 inches (60cm). In reality, the issue is clouded (so to speak) by
- the amount of algae and other particles in the water and on the walls,
- what sort of reflector you have on the light source, and how far away
- the source is from the tank. In general, start with the guidelines,
- but be prepared to add more later.
-
- For plants that demand medium to high light, most people find they
- need at least two fluorescent bulbs of the length of normal tanks
- (20-gallon (80l), two 24 inch tubes; 55-gallon (200l), two 48 inch
- tubes). More detail can be found in the later LIGHTING section.
-
- ``Can I grow plants with my single strip light?''
-
- Yes, you can, though you are limited to the lowest-light plants and
- will get very slow growth. Some of these include Java fern, Anubias,
- Cryptocoryne species, water sprite and Java moss. Some of these
- plants, notably Cryptocorynes, actually prefer lower light. We should
- also mention that some people may have luck with plants that normally
- prefer higher light, but the odds are that they will grow slowly and
- stunted.
-
- ``What kind of bulb do I need?''
-
- First and foremost, don't use incandescent lights; they generate far
- too much heat and not enough light. Full-spectrum fluorescent bulbs
- are ideal, since they duplicate the spectrum of the sun. These tubes
- (``Vitalite'', ``Spectralite'') can be costly, at $8 to $20. An
- inexpensive but effective alternative are tri-phosphor daylight tubes
- such as the Chroma-50 or Design-50, which retail at $4-8; these tubes
- do a reasonable approximation of sunlight. Cheaper ``plant lights''
- are also good, and may actually bring out your fish's color better.
- Tri-phosphor bulbs (Triton, Tri-lux) are slightly more powerful, but
- also more expensive than full-spectrum bulbs, and high-end bulbs with
- internal reflectors (BioLume) are overpriced and unnecessary. Other
- bulbs to avoid are standard cool-white tubes, and ``aquarilux'' tubes,
- designed to show off the fish and retard plant growth, though some
- folks have had success with a mixture of cool white and plant bulbs.
-
- ``What's T-8?''
-
- The term T-8 refers (usually) to high efficiency fluorescent tubes
- installed in most modern office buildings, as opposed to the "T-12"
- standard fluorescents. They are currently in vogue with some aquatic
- plant keepers because of their relative inexpensiveness, longer life,
- and high energy savings (consider that the ballast and tubes for a
- 4-tube 128-watt setup can be had for under $50). They can be
- distinguished from their standard counterparts by three things: 1,
- diameter (which is the literal meaning of T-8: 8/8 inch, as opposed to
- T-12 = 12/8 inch), 2,wattage (4-foot 32-watt, 3-foot 25-watt, and
- 2-foot 17 watt), and 3, their markings ("FO-32", "F32-SPX" "TL7xx",
- etc., depending on manufacturer). T-8's use a different (but
- inexpensive) type of ballast, so you should not use them
- interchangably with standard fluorescents. The one trick with T-8's is
- that you may need to get the tubes and ballasts from a commercial
- lighting supplier (check the phone book). Tubes are available in 5000K
- and 6500K color balances, ideal planted tanks, but they may need to be
- special ordered.
-
- One word of warning, there are some standard fluorescent tubes that
- are T-8 diameter, most notably 18" and some 36" tubes. These should
- not be mistaken for the above bulbs, and should be used with normal
- ballasts. When in doubt, make sure to check the wattage and
- identification (3-foot 30 watt and 18-inch 15 watt bulbs are not the
- new kind).
-
- ``What's MH? Is it better than fluorescent?''
-
- Metal Halide (MH) lights are most commonly seen illuminating football
- fields, but are also used in our hobby by reefkeepers and die-hard
- plant enthusiasts, who demand very high light intensity. The fixtures
- cost significantly more than fluorescent (over $200 per fixture). The
- bulbs last longer and provide more efficient and brighter illumination
- than fluorescents (typically 175-250 watts per bulb), but generate an
- appropriately higher level of heat as well. Some aquarists like the
- sun-like shadow effects generated by MH bulbs.
-
- ``Can I use those cheap Halogen bulbs from the hardware store?''
-
- Do not confuse MH with the tungsten halogen lights sold in hardware
- stores as utility floods or living room fixtures; Halogen lights are
- basically high-wattage incandescent lights, and generate an enormous
- amount of heat and are very inefficient in their light output. Some
- also find the spectrum too yellowish.
-
- ``How do I add another light to my tank?''
-
- If you can fit a second tube in your existing hood, many stores sell
- upgrade kits to add the second fixture. Otherwise, you might be able
- to add a second hood to the tank, or you can find a replacement
- two-bulb hood (mail-order places sell them). Another option for 4-foot
- (130cm) long tanks is to buy a ``shoplight'' fixture and lay it across
- the top over the glass. You can also build your own hood or canopy and
- mount the shoplight or fixture inside. It's possible to omit the
- fixture by purchasing special end caps and clips for the tubes. These
- are available, with ballasts, from aquarium stores and are commonly
- used by marine aquarists.
-
- ``How long do I leave the light on each day?''
-
- Plants want a definite daily light and dark cycle each day; 10-14
- hours is fine; twelve hours is the duration on the equator, where many
- tropical plants are found. You should buy a timer ($5-10) to
- automatically turn the lights on and off for you, since the plants
- (and fish) prefer a regular cycle to an erratic one. If the plants
- need more light, you should not extend the light period, as that will
- only help the algae. Rather, install another fixture and increase the
- intensity of light.
-
- Speaking of timers, many fluorescent fixtures don't self-start, i.e.
- you have to hold in a button for a few seconds to turn it on. You can
- quickly convert any fixture into a ``self-starting'' one with a few
- new components from a hardware store or sold as a kit from mail-order
- houses. See the later LIGHTING section for a diagram.
-
- ``How often do I change the bulb?''
-
- Most fluorescent bulbs lose a major portion of their intensity after
- six months, so they should be replaced every 6-12 months (T-8's can be
- kept longer). If that seems expensive to you and you can live with the
- reduced light level, you can cheat and wait until the bulbs burn out
- after two years (that is, according to TAG editor Neil Frank, what
- ``many experienced plant enthusiasts'' do). It is best to stagger the
- replacement on multi-bulb tanks in order to avoid dramatic intensity
- changes.
-
- ``Won't increased light fill my tank with algae?''
-
- If you are adding that second light to your tank for the first time,
- you should be prepared for this. Increased light is welcomed by both
- algae and plants, so the plants must out-compete the algae. You can
- help tip the balance in the plants' favor by maintaining a low fish
- population, keeping algae eaters, and frequent water changes (see the
- ALGAE SECTION of the DISEASE FAQ).
-
- Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
-
- ``Is CO2 injection really necessary?''
-
- CO2 injection is not required to grow plants. However, most people who
- have used it feel that, aside from high-intensity lighting, CO2 is the
- most important step to getting excellent growth. In fact, as light
- intensity is increased, plants will require more nutrients, including
- carbon which is derived from CO2. In conjunction with carbonate
- buffers (see the WATER CHEMISTRY section of the BEGINNER FAQ), CO2
- injection will buffer your water to a neutral or low pH. Lower pH will
- help plants get access to certain nutrients. Some also report CO2
- injection keeps algae down.
-
- ``Isn't CO2 expensive?''
-
- The startup cost can be a bit steep; expect to pay around $500 for a
- fully-automated Dupla system, $350 for a manual injector. If you do it
- yourself using welding or bar supplies, you can drop the price to
- $100-$200 for a tank, regulator, and needle valve. After your initial
- investment, CO2 refills (try fire extinguisher or beverage service
- outlets) are cheap: $5-10 a year for a 5 lb cylinder.
-
- If this is still too much, try the ultra-cheap Yeast Method of brewing
- CO2 (see below).
-
- ``How much CO2 is normal?''
-
- The optimum dissolved CO2 level in an aquarium is 15-20 ppm. Some
- references say that levels above 25ppm poison your fish, but general
- experience is that this doesn't happen. The amount found in the water
- from atmospheric concentrations varies by elevation and temperature,
- but is less than 1ppm.
-
- ``How does the compressed gas method work?''
-
- A compressed gas cylinder supplies CO2 at a high pressure of 800-1200
- PSI. This is dropped to 5-20 PSI through a regulator, and reduced to a
- few bubbles per second by a fine-control ``needle valve''. This slow
- bubbling must be dissolved in your aquarium's water, through either a
- gas reactor (which lets water and gas mix in a chamber much like a
- trickle filter), an inverted jar (which just lets the gas diffuse into
- the water slowly), or by injecting the bubbles into the intake of a
- power or canister filter (the impeller ``chops'' them up into smaller
- bubbles, many of which dissolve). The reactor is the most efficient
- method, while the power filter injection is the easiest to try.
-
- It is important to have control over the rate of injection, as too
- much CO2 can kill your fish. Expensive ``automatic'' systems use an
- electronic pH meter to regulate the amount of CO2 in the water by
- shutting off the gas when the pH drops too low. ``Manual'' systems
- require you to start with very low injection and gradually increase
- over several days, all the time carefully monitoring pH drops and CO2
- bubble rate in order to find the correct needle valve setting.
-
- Construction and operational details can be found in the later CO2
- SECTION.
-
- ``How does the yeast method work?''
-
- CO2 is generated by fermentation of sugars in a bottle (just like when
- brewing beer!) and then injected into the tank using the same methods
- described above. The parts are very cheap and easier to set up than
- the compressed tank. The main drawback is that CO2 generation rate can
- be erratic, and will quit on you if you do not change the solution
- (once every two weeks or so) or get the mixture right. The CO2 level
- generated is lower than that of compressed gas tanks, but is still
- enough to help plant growth. Initially passed off as ``useless'' by
- much of the aquarium literature, this technique has enjoyed a certain
- vogue in the last few years as a good way to try CO2 without draining
- your wallet.
-
- Here is one quick construction method: Tap the cap of a 2-liter
- plastic soft drink bottle (the author uses drip-irrigation taps, which
- can be obtained cheaply at local hardware stores; if you get leaks,
- try sealing it with ``Amazing Goop'' or ``Shoe Goo'') so that an
- airline tube can feed the gas into your tank. Half fill the bottle
- with water, and add 1/2 tsp yeast and 1/2 cup (or more) sugar. The
- solution will last about two weeks, after which you can throw it out
- and start a new batch. Beware of water siphoning back from your
- tank... put a check valve in-line with the airline tube.
-
- ``Can I just dump carbonated water into my tank?''
-
- No! Plants need a slow continuous source of CO2. If you dump
- carbonated water in, it will spike the pH (stressing your fish), and
- the CO2 will just dissipate back into the air within a few hours.
-
- ``Does injecting CO2 reduce the oxygen content?''
-
- No. The level of dissolved CO2 and oxygen are actually independent of
- each other; high levels of both can exist at the same time.
- Furthermore, if you have a set of healthy plants, they will be
- saturating the water with oxygen on their own. The problem is that
- many of the techniques used to increase oxygen content (airstones,
- trickle filters, keeping the water moving at the surface) also cause
- CO2 to diffuse out of the aquarium; i.e., if you turn off your
- airstone in order to keep the CO2 in, you might also reduce your
- oxygen content. The best solution is to keep the water moving at the
- surface of the tank, but inject CO2 faster than it can escape, giving
- you high levels of both CO2 and oxygen.
-
- Nutrients and Fertilizer
-
- ``Is fish food enough to fertilize my plants?''
-
- Fish food usually provides enough of the three macronutrients,
- nitrogen, phosphate, and potassium (N-P-K), to keep your plants
- healthy. However, the trace elements such as iron are not all supplied
- in a form that the plants can use. Some trace elements may be in your
- tap water, so frequent water changes will replenish them. This may
- provide enough for some plant growth, but if you want the best growth
- you should consider adding a trace element fertilizer.
-
- ``Can I use normal plant fertilizer?''
-
- Normal land plant fertilizer contains high amounts of N-P-K which is
- already supplied by the fish food. Adding more will cause algae
- outbreaks and possible fish stress. You may be able to find a
- trace-element-only fertilizer at better garden shops, or even mix your
- own. Aquarium-specific mixes by Dupla (available world-wide) and
- Dennerle (not available yet in the U.S.) are expensive, but are proven
- to work very well. Beware some other brands that supply N-P-K (check
- the label for ingredients; some do not list their contents for this
- exact reason.) Fertilizer tabs, or even 1/4 inch pieces of ``plant
- sticks'' (without sulfates) have been successfully used if placed
- deeply in the substrate and used sparingly.
-
- ``How do I know if I need fertilizer?''
-
- Lack of fertilizer shows up in your plants, as sickly transparent or
- yellow leaves, as holes in the leaves, and as reduction in plant
- growth. Old leaves die off more quickly than they are supposed to, and
- the new leaves are small and stunted. Another symptom is the plants
- grow very well for a month or so after you buy them, but then stop as
- their internal supply of trace elements and macro nutrients run out.
- You also need to add fertilizer if you have high levels of CO2 and
- lighting, but no plant growth.
-
- ``How do I know which nutrient is limiting plant growth?''
-
- This is always difficult to answer without actually trying it
- yourself. If you have slow growth and it picks up shortly after you
- change your water, then your water is probably supplying some trace
- elements which get depleted later; consider adding a trace element mix
- or changing your water more often. If you have slow growth, but it
- picks up after adding trace element mix, problem solved! If you have
- slow growth but it picks up after feeding your fish a little bit more,
- problem solved! But watch out that you don't increase things too
- drastically, or you'll get algae blooms.
-
- ``How much is too much?''
-
- If you like keeping zillions of test kits, then you can check some
- trace element levels with them (Dupla recommends an iron level of
- 0.1ppm). Ammonia and nitrate test kits will tell you if you are
- overfeeding. Alternatively, you need to watch your tank. Too much
- fertilizer and fish food may show up as excessive algae growth.
-
- ``What's PMDD? How do I make it?''
-
- PMDD (or Poor Man's Dosing Drops) is a do-it-yourself recipe, put
- together by Kevin Conlin and Paul Sears as part of their experiments
- to control algae. Much discussion an experimentation with the recipe
- is occuring on the Aquatic Plants E-mail List, so you are likely to
- get the most current info there. Semi-regular updates are kept on the
- WWW at THE KRIB. Future updates of this FAQ may include sources and
- recipes when things settle. :)
-
- The Substrate
-
- ``What should I put in my substrate?''
-
- Gravel or sand is a good start! Size is an issue; with small grains
- the roots might not be able to get a good hold and the sand tends to
- compact, while larger gravel has a tendency to collect pockets of
- rotting detritus. Most believe the ideal size is 2-3mm (#8) gravel,
- while a few others like 1-2mm coarse sand (though it may be harder to
- find). Malaysian trumpet snails (see the ALGAE SECTION of the DISEASE
- FAQ) will burrow into the substrate and keep it aerated. The bottom
- 1/3 of the gravel can be supplemented with a fertilizer, of which
- popular choices are peat (softens water), laterite (a clay containing
- iron, usually used with undergravel heating systems), and soil. One
- word of warning: if you use an undergravel filter, it may suck your
- fertilizer back into the tank instead of keeping it with the bottom of
- the gravel. Dupla makes special laterite balls which can be used in an
- UGF (though expensive).
-
- ``How deep a substrate?''
-
- In general, it's good to match the substrate with the types of plant
- (or types of roots). For instance big Amazon Sword plants like deep
- gravel of 4 inches (10cm), but Lilaeopsis grass can do fine with an
- inch or less. This can be helped by terracing the back of your tank to
- be deeper and planting your deep-rooted plants there. You also can't
- go wrong with a uniform 3 inches (7cm) of gravel all-around.
-
- ``Can you grow plants with an undergravel filter (UGF)?''
-
- Oh my yes! Make sure you have enough gravel for the plants to be
- happily rooted. It should also work best with a very slow flow rate.
- Pluses of UGF may be an increased circulation to the roots. However,
- you will probably get roots growing in the plates, it will be harder
- to vacuum everything, and will be a major pain to pull and replant.
- Many feel so strongly that you shouldn't grow plants with an UGF that
- it has become a bit of a religious issue on Usenet. However, this does
- not mean it is not possible... like most religious issues, it is
- something for which you must make your own decision. :)
-
- Heating
-
- ``What temperature do I keep a planted tank?''
-
- This varies from plant-to-plant, but you can keep most aquatic plants
- from 72-80F (22-27C). For warm-water discus tanks, check a plant book
- for species that thrive in these special conditions.
-
- ``Do I need to have substrate heating?''
-
- The exact benefits of substrate heating have not been proven yet, but
- it is believed they provide long-term stability to a tank. If you are
- a beginner, it's hardly worth messing with before mastering the basics
- (fertilization, lighting, etc). If, though, you are a gadget freak or
- love to spend money, you may get a sense of pride from installing a
- cable heating system. (Some believe that a very slow UGF can provide
- the same benefits.)
-
- Long Term Problems
-
- This list is by no means exhaustive! Please feel free to suggest more
- long-term problems that can be addressed here.
-
- ``The leaves turned yellow and fell off.''
-
- ``The leaves got holes & fell off''
-
- Might be a trace-element deficiency, or in the latter case, fish and
- plants eating them.
-
- ``It grew for a while & then died/still grows, but slower.''
-
- This is by far the most common problem beginners experience, and has
- several different causes.
- 1. Plants can store some nutrients and trace elements, using them
- later. When they come from the greenhouse, they are fully stocked.
- But after a month or more, if you do not supply them with a
- balance of nutrients they take what's missing from their stock.
- When the stock's gone, the plant dies.
- 2. Most potted plants are grown emersed (hydroponically) in
- greenhouses, and are used to growing in very high light (i.e.
- filtered sunlight) and with high levels of nutrients, and must
- acclimate to aquarium conditions. First, they'll lose the old
- leaves which were growing out of the water and produce new leaves
- that have a different shape and firmness. Secondly, as they
- acclimate to the lower light and nutrient levels their growth rate
- will temporarily slow down.
- While potted plants ship well, this may not be true for non-potted
- plants. They may have been stressed by passing through many hands
- from grower or collector to wholesaler to retailer, so they may
- not be in optimum condition when you acquire them. The non-potted
- plants were most likely grown underwater, but also outdoors under
- filtered sunlight, so they also must acclimate to the aquarium
- conditions.
- 3. The plant might not be a true aquatic plant. Many stores pass off
- land plants as aquatics (see our BLACKLIST). These plants can
- manage to stay alive for a month or more, but eventually succumb.
- 4. Some plants go into hibernation. Aponogeton bulbs will lose all
- their leaves, at which point they should be removed from the tank
- and kept in cold water for a few months. Then they can be
- replanted and will send out new leaves.
- 5. Cryptocorynes will ``melt'' all their leaves on a change in water
- chemistry. Don't despair, eventually they will send out new
- leaves.
-
- ``My ... grows great but everything else dies''
-
- Some plants are hardier than others, and will grow in lower light,
- CO2, or worse water conditions than others. However, some plants will
- actually out-compete others for the available nutrients, and some
- plants will not do well in the presence of other species; try moving
- the other plants into a different tank if you can.
-
- ``My ... is covered with algae!''
-
- Please read the ALGAE SECTION of the DISEASE FAQ for details on
- specific algaes and remedies. But to summarize, you can keep
- algae-eating fish to munch on it, starve it for nutrients by adding
- floating or fast-growing plants that consume nutrients faster than the
- algae, harvest some plants and remove dying leaves often to take
- nutrients out of the tank, reduce feeding (or increase water changes
- if you must overfeed), reduce the number of light hours per day, use
- root fertilization instead of liquid leaf fertilization, or physically
- remove it from the tank. There are also antibiotics for blue-green
- algae and other algicides, but the latter can kill your plants as
- well; use with caution!
-
-
- FAQ: Plant Survival
-
- contributed by George Booth
-
- Plants need certain things to grow: light, CO2, nutrients and trace
- elements. This should be no surprise. What is generally not known is
- that plants need these things in fixed proportions (and unfortunately,
- the proportions vary with each type of plant). For example, if you
- have plenty of light, CO2, nutrients and most trace elements but not
- enough of one specific trace element for a plant, the trace element in
- short supply will determine how well that plant grows even though
- other plants do fine. This explains why some plants are "easier" than
- others - their needs are typically supplied by tap water or other
- incidental sources. If the plants aren't able to utilize all the
- nutrients due to a shortage of one or more specific elements, the
- "excess" nutrients and light energy will be wasted or be used by
- algae.
-
- In general, there is no information available that says "this plant
- needs this much light, CO2, nutrients and trace elements". Aquarists
- can only determine "what works for me" by tedious trial and error.
- Aquarists who follow the Dupla "Optimum Aquarium" regimen try to
- ensure that all the requirements of all the plants are met, but this
- leads to expensive and complex systems.
-
- LIGHT
-
- Light is very important for photosynthesis since it supplies the
- energy required to drive the chemical reactions involved. The plants
- use light energy primarily in the blue and red spectrum but an
- aquarium will look better to people if full spectrum lighting is used.
-
- Light intensity and spectrum are more important than duration. You
- can't make up for dimmer bulbs by leaving them on longer. 10-12 hours
- per day is usually sufficient. You need about 1.5 to 3 watts per
- gallon, with deeper tanks requiring more intensity.
-
- It is important to balance light intensity with other nutrients.
- Intense lighting will be wasted if not enough CO2 and nutrients are
- available to support the needs for photosynthesis.
-
- CO2
-
- This is very important to plant growth. Without sufficient quantities
- of dissolved CO2, photosynthesis cannot take place. Most tanks will
- have some CO2 due to fish respiration but this is usually not enough
- to get "lush" growth. Some plants do not need much CO2 and some plants
- like Cryptocorynes actually seem to do worse with higher levels of
- CO2.
-
- Typical levels of CO2 in a non-CO2-injected aquarium are in the range
- of 1-3 ppm. Most plants will flourish with levels of 10-20 ppm but
- this requires some type of CO2 injection. With lower levels of CO2,
- the plants will not be able to utilize high levels of light and
- nutrients and the extra light and nutrients will be used by algae.
-
- NUTRIENTS
-
- Beyond the "building blocks of life" provided by water and CO2
- (oxygen, hydrogen and carbon), two other important nutrients are
- required: nitrogen and potassium. Nitrogen is usually available in
- sufficient quantities from fish waste in the form of ammonium (NH4+).
- Most plants will prefer ammonium but some will use the end product of
- the nitrification cycle, nitrate (NO3-). Ammonium is the preferred
- source since it takes less energy to use that form of nitrogen. A good
- test for ammonium levels is to monitor nitrates. If the nitrates are 0
- ppm, you know that all the nitrogen is being used. This may indicate
- that some plants are starving for nitrogen. It also might indicate
- that a perfect balance has been achieved, but that is unlikely.
-
- Potassium (K+) is also usually available from fish food.
- Unfortunately, potassium is difficult to measure in the water. If
- there are enough nitrates, there is usually enough potassium. Some
- fertilizers contain additional potassium and can be used to be on the
- safe side.
-
- TRACE ELEMENTS
-
- Trace elements are those things required in very small quantities yet
- are still vital to plant growth. These are taken in by the plant in
- ion form. The more important trace elements are sulfur (SO4--),
- calcium (Ca++), phosphorus (HPO4--/H2PO4-), magnesium (Mg++) and iron
- (Fe++).
-
- Sulfur, calcium and magnesium are usually found in tap water. If the
- water has too little general hardness (< 3 degrees dH), calcium and/or
- magnesium may be in short supply. This can be remedied by adding
- calcium and magnesium sulfate in small quantities.
-
- Phosphorus can be measured in the water and should be present in
- quantities less than 0.2 ppm of phosphate. If the nitrates are OK,
- phosphorus levels are usually also OK.
-
- Iron may be present in tap water in the correct ionic state (Fe++) but
- will quickly oxidize to a form unusable by plants. To prevent this,
- chelated iron mixtures can be used. The chelator prevents the iron
- from oxidizing and makes it easy for the plants to assimilate. The
- iron concentration should be less than 0.2 ppm.
-
- Other trace elements are needed in extremely small quantities and can
- usually be provided in fish food or specialized trace element
- formulations. Note that some of these elements are toxic in anything
- but trace amounts so the addition of trace elements should be done
- very carefully.
-
- OTHER INFORMATION
-
- Some plants can concentrate carbon, potassium, nitrogen, phosphorus,
- iron or the lesser trace elements and store it for later use. This
- means that plants may do well for a while, using stored nutrients, and
- then mysteriously wither if they can't replenish their supply. This
- also means that some plants may "out-compete" others for required
- nutrients, preventing the other plants from doing well.
-
- Regular water changes are an important part of keeping a planted
- aquarium healthy since many of the nutrients and trace elements are in
- tap water. Changing 25 percent every two weeks is recommended.
-
- The substrate can play a major role in the availability of nutrients.
- Nutrients can be put in the substrate when an aquarium is setup by
- mixing laterite (tropical clay), potting soil, peat moss or commercial
- equivalents into the lower layer of gravel. These additives will
- release some necessary elements and provide chelating sites so that
- the correct ionic states are maintained. However, if nutrients aren't
- replaced, the substrate will eventually be exhausted and the plants
- will begin to do poorly.
-
- If laterite or peat is used in the substrate and a very slow flow of
- water can be forced through the substrate, water-born nutrients will
- be chelated by the laterite or peat. This will provide a continuous
- source of nutrients in the substrate. Substrate heating coils are
- recommended for this since they can provide slow convection currents.
- They are expensive, however.
-
- The following table is based on data from the Feb, 1988 "Today's
- Aquarium, the International Magazine of the Optimum Aquarium",
- ("Aquarium Heute" in German), published by Aquadocumenta Verlag GmbH.
- Average nutrient content of plants and aquarium water
-
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Symbol Nutrient Plant Water Absorbed as Concen|
- | mg/kg mg/l Factor|
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
- | O Oxygen 48,000 880,000 H2O 0.02 |
- | Abundantly available in the water |
- | |
- | C Carbon 36,000 Varies CO2(HCO3-) 1000 |
- | Absent if no CO2 injection |
- | |
- | H Hydrogen 6,000 110,000 H2O 0.02 |
- | Abundantly available in the water |
- | |
- | K Potassium 3,600 5 K+ 1000 |
- | Sufficient with good feeding, otherwise fertilizing |
- | |
- | N Nitrogen 3,200 5 NH4+/NO3- 1000 |
- | Too much nitrate with good fish feeding |
- | |
- | S Sulphur 660 15 SO4-- 50 |
- | Source: fish food and mains water |
- | |
- | Ca Calcium 650 90 Ca++ 10 |
- | Absent in soft water |
- | |
- | P Phosphorus 460 0.1 HPO4--/H2PO4- 1000 |
- | Too many phosphates with good fish feeding |
- | |
- | Mg Magnesium 210 18 Mg++ 10 |
- | Absent in soft water |
- | |
- | Fe Iron 15 0 Fe++/Fe+++ 1000 |
- | Absent under good light, unless fertilized |
- | |
- | Other Trace elements 10 0 Ions 1000 |
- | Sufficient with good feeding, otherwise fertilizer |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
-
- Notes: "mg/kg" and "mg/l" are roughly parts per million or "ppm"
-
- "Concen Factor" is how much plants can store beyond their needs for
- growth, i.e., plants can store 1000 times more iron than they need.
-
-
- FAQ: Common Plant Listing
-
- contributed by Erik Olson
-
- The information on this page is collected from my own firsthand
- knowledge, the plant list in the previous FAQ (author unknown), TAG
- (further info indicated as volume:number), Aquarium Plants Manual by
- Scheurmann (1993), various aquarium society bulletins, and old
- articles on the Krib. Contributions by Elaine Thompson, Len Trigg,
- Eric S. Deese, Shaji Bhaskar, and Peter Konshak.
-
- Contents:
-
- * Blacklisted Plants
- * Explanation of Symbols
- * Stem Plants
- * Rosette Plants
- * Ferns
-
- Blacklisted Plants
-
- These plants are so-called ``blacklisted'' because though they are
- sold under the guise of being true aquatic plants, they are actually
- land or emersed plants. Typically what happens is you buy one of
- these, it lives for a month, then dies. Don't buy them, unless you are
- setting up a paludarium and want to keep their leaves above water. The
- main problem with identifying all the blacklisted plants is that they
- are mostly known by goofy trade names which vary from
- region-to-region... To make things worse, true aquatics are sometimes
- sold under one of these trade names as well, so it's best to know the
- plant's scientific name!
- * umbrella pine
- * ground pines/club mosses (Lycopodium)
- * aluminum plant (Pilea cadairei)
- * crinkle (Hemigraphis)
- * green hedge
- * underwater palm
- * spider plant (Chlorophytum)
- * Chinese evergreen
- * arrowhead -- either Syngonium (the houseplant) or a species of
- Sagittaria that doesn't do well submerged.
- * pongol sword
- * sandriana, green dragon plant (Dracena sanderana) -- tall
- corn-like stalk, dark green sword-like leaves with white edges.
- * mondo grass, fountain plant (Ophiopogon japonicus) -- Grassy,
- leaves in one plane.
- * Japanese rush (Acorus gramineus) -- looks like mondo.
- * Brazil sword, Borneo swords (Spathiphyllum sp.). S. wallisii may
- be suitable for submersion according to Rataj.
- * scarlet hygro/dragon flame/alligator weed (Alternanthera sessilis
- and other sp.) -- see stem plant listing as some varieties can be
- grown.
-
- Legend
-
- Most plants that grow under low or medium light will usually do even
- better under higher light. Exceptions are noted. Here is what each
- symbol means:
- * [HIGH] High light requirement
- * [MED] Medium light requirement
- * [LOW] Low light requirement
- * [HI pH] Tolerates brackish or high-pH water.
- * [FAST GROW] Fast grower
- * [FLOATING] Floating plant
-
- Stem Plants
-
- To propagate most stem plants, cut the stem and replant the top
- cutting. You can also leave the bottom part (the mother plant)
- planted, and it will sprout two or more new side shoots. Some stem
- plants will grow out of the water (emersed) and produce flowers. Most
- stem plants are suited for grouping as background plants.
-
- Alternanthera reineckii (scarlet hygro, etc.) [HIGH]
- Scarlet to deep red color, which turns olive in lower light
- conditions. Not to be confused with A. sessilis sold under the
- same common names, this species can truly grow underwater. (TAG
- 6:4, 6:5)
-
- Bacopa (water hyssop) [MED]
- A bog plant that grows OK underwater, background or filler
- plant. Pale green-to-red fleshy leaves, up to 16" tall stem.
- 68-78F. Makes good background or side plant, in groups.
-
- Cabomba (fanwort) [HIGH]
- Stems up to 20" (50cm) tall. Leaves resemble fine pine needles,
- fanning out from central stem. Pair of leaves at each node.
- Will tend to break apart and litter the aquarium if light is
- too low. Difficult to grow; needs high fertilization.
-
- Cardimine lyrata [MED]
- Beautiful, delicate plant. Small (1/2 - 1") heart-shaped leaves
- with wavy edges on a thin stem. Grows roots above water at each
- node. Tolerates cold water very well; will overwinter outdoors
- at temperatures around freezing, even when emersed. Leaves look
- kind of like Hydrocotoyle sp., but stem is straight.
-
- Ceratophyllym demersum (hornwort) [HIGH] [HI pH] [FLOATING]
- Very hardy. Whorls of forked leaves. Grows leggy under medium
- light, quickly under better conditions. No roots, so can be
- kept free-floating or planted. Lengths up to 2 feet.
-
- Elodea/Egeria (anachris) [FAST GROW] [MED] [FLOATING]
- Prefers low temperature (50-77F) tanks, somewhat alkaline pH.
- Translucent green whorled leaves. Good goldfish food and tank
- oxygenator. Can be kept free-floating or rooted. Nice beginner
- plant.
-
- Hydrocotoyle leucocephala (water pennywort) [HIGH]
- Tall stem plant (over 20") with heart-shaped green leaves of 1"
- diameter. Develops several small roots at each node. Tolerates
- 50-82F. Will grow floating when it reaches the top of the water
- and flower in the aquarium. Doesn't root well, so needs to be
- refreshed occasionally from cuttings. Leaves look kind of like
- Cardimine lyrata.
-
- Hygrophila corymbosa (giant hygro, temple plant) [HIGH]
- Also known as Nomaphila stricta. Light green leaves, sometimes
- with reddish veins. Easily grows out of the water, where leaves
- turn dark reddish green. Big plant; makes good
- corner/background in large deep tanks. Grows quickly given high
- fertilization. Fairly hardy. Another species with similar
- appearance and requirements is ``narrow-leaved hygro''
- (probably H. augustifolia).
-
- Hygrophila difformis (water wisteria) [MED]
- Easy to grow. Prefers high light, but grows slowly under
- medium. Fine branched light green leaves. Has different emersed
- leaves, and flowers above water. Propagated from cuttings. Also
- known as Synnema triflorum. Sometimes confused with water
- sprite.
-
- Hygrophila polysperma (green hygro, Indian hygro) [FAST GROW] [MED]
- Spreads like a weed. Green under medium light, but gets
- brownish tinge (and grows larger) in high light. ``Sunset'' and
- variegated varieties are available, but harder to grow. (TAG
- 7:4)
-
- Limnophila sp. (ambulia) [MED]
- Similar in appearance to Cabomba, but less light-demanding.
- Grows light green leaves in whorls at each node (Cabomba has a
- pair of leaves at each node). There are two common species, L.
- aquatica and L. sessiliflora. The former is larger, more bushy,
- and has finer leaves. It is hardy in tropical aquaria with high
- light.
-
- Lobelia cardinalis
- Similar/same the red-flowered land garden plant. Rumored to
- leach poison if cut.
-
- Ludwigia repens [MED]
- Spade-shaped leaves, dark green to brownish colored. Stiff
- stems, up to 20" (50cm) long. For me, transplant stems
- sometimes rot.
-
- Mayaca fluviatilis [MED]
- Very pretty plant. Light green, narrow leaves about 1/2" long,
- arranged in whorls. Attractive for background plantings. Became
- commonly available in 1994. Like Hygrophila species, it seems
- to be a delicacy for fish. Doesn't root well, so plantings need
- to be refreshed from cuttings.
-
- Myriophyllum (water milfoil) [MED]
- Temperate water plant that needs good lighting. Good for
- background. Fine, green to reddish green leaves, depending on
- the species. Produces coarser leaves above water, which will
- flower.
-
- Rotala [HIGH]
- Very delicate leaves, easily damaged. Grows up to 20" tall, so
- they make excellent background plants. R. indica can grow in
- medium light, but just will not stay as green. R. macrandra is
- largest, and hardest to cultivate. It has red leaves with pink
- undersides, turning to green in lower light, and requires iron
- fertilization to maintain its red color.
-
- Utricularia (bladderwort)
-
- ``Rosette'' Plants
-
- These plants reproduce vegetatively (asexually) by runners or stalks,
- which you can usually cut after the new plant is large enough to grow
- on its own. Like stem plants, many will grow emersed and produce
- flowers in that state. Generally, they prefer slightly-soft acidic
- water (2-3dKH, pH 5.5-7).
-
- Anubias [LOW]
- 72-82F (22-28C). Not really a rosette plant, Anubias all have a
- creeping rhizome that grows very slowly, throwing out new
- leaves as it grows. The plant is built like a tank, some having
- reported keeping them in a closet for six months in a plastic
- bag yet still surviving. It is also one of the most expensive
- aquarium plants. If grown emersed, they may produce larger
- leaves, and will grow faster, and flowers will produce seeds.
- Anubias will frequently flower underwater, but not seed. You
- can grow the roots in gravel, or even train the rhizome to grow
- on bogwood like Java fern does. (TAG 6:2) Most commonly kept
- species is A. barteri var. nana, the smallest Anubias, which
- has egg-shaped leaves and makes a great foreground plant in
- medium-to-large aquariums. A. barteri var. barteri looks
- similar to the nana variety, but with bigger leaves. A.
- congensis, A. lanceolata and others grow very tall and make
- good background plants. They can sometimes be seen in better
- stores.
-
- Aponogeton [MED]
- Tuber. Needs rest period (triggered after blooming? drops its
- leaves), except for hybrid crispus. Easy beginner plant.
- Foreground plant singly, or background in groups. Most species
- flower by sending up a stalk with single or double-spike and
- seed easily. (Grows very slowly from seeds, and you must
- protect the young seedlings from fish.) (TAG 4:3) Oft seen
- Species:
-
- + bouvianus
- + crispus: up to 20" (50cm) tall, red to green leaves; easy
- starter plant, often sold as bulbs at Wal-Mart. Single-spike
- flower stem, slightly-undulating leaf margins.
- + elongatus,
- + ulvaceus: 10-20" (25-50cm) wavy light green leaves,
- twin-spiked flower.
- + undulatus: 16" (40cm) slightly-undulating leaves, smooth in
- low light. Flowers rarely.
-
- Aponogeton madagascariensis (Madagascar Lace Plant) [HIGH]
- Very desired plant because of its 6-18" leaves which are
- actually a lace-like skeleton. Pink self-fertile flowers on
- double-spiked stalk. Likes rich substrate. Observe dormancy
- period! Dies in water over 80F. Difficult plant to grow.
-
- Barclaya longifolia (orchid lily) [HIGH]
- 10-20" (25-50cm) delicate brownish or olive-green leaves,
- moderately-undulated margins. Likes warmed substrate and warm
- aquariums (75-82F). Foreground single plant. Often rots on
- transplant. Flowers and seeds easily by sending a stalk to the
- surface, or will remain submerged and closed (seeds still
- viable). Very difficult to grow. (TAG 4:1).
-
- Crinum (``onion bulb'') [MED]
- As the name implies, it grows from a bulb and looks like a
- scallion. Bright-green leaves are huge 20-40" (50-100cm), and
- recommended only for large aquariums. Does better in bright
- light.
-
- Cryptocoryne [LOW] (most species)
- Shocks on transplant, takes up to months to adjust to new tank,
- so don't move them once you've planted them. Crypt rot caused
- by sudden water chemistry/quality changes. Spreads by rhizome;
- new plants develop at nodes. -> Not a good beginner plant.
- Often sold potted in rockwool, which reduces the above shocks.
- Usually prefers acidic water. Some species will not tolerate
- high light. Requires iron fertilization and likes rich
- substrate. (TAG 4:1, 4:2, 5:1, 5:2, 5:3, 5:4) Oft-seen species:
-
- + affinis: emerald-green 4-12" (10-30cm) leaves, red
- undersides. Foreground plant in large aquariums or center
- plants in small tanks. Grows OK in alkaline water.
- + balansae: likes higher light?
- + becketii: likes higher light?
- + lutea: easier crypt to grow.
- + walkeri
- + wendtii: easier crypt to grow. bronze, red, green varieties.
- wrinkled leaves. Up to 8" tall. Adaptable to high light and
- will grow with CO2.
-
- Echinodorus (Amazon swords) [MED]
- Most are good as single highlight plant, or background groups
- in large aquariums. Like high levels of fertilizer. Can grow
- emersed. Reproduce by adventitious plants on end of stalks
- runners, or root division, depending on species. (TAG 4:5, 5:5,
- 7:1, 7:5) Common species:
-
- + bleheri, paniculatus, amazonicus: Your generic amazon swords,
- usually available in small, medium or large. Light green
- leaves can be over 20" (50cm). Produces plantlets directly on
- the flower stalk.
- + cordifolius (radican sword): heart-shaped leaves. Likes being
- emersed; will flower in open-top aquarium. Sends floating
- leaves if illumination is low.
- + major/maior (ruffle sword)
- + osiris (melon sword): blood-red slightly-undulate leaves.
- + parviflorus (tropico sword): smaller variety.
- + tenellus, quadricostatus (pygmy chain sword): leaves up to
- 6", 72-86F. Fast reproduction by runners; can create a lawn
- on large enough tank. Small plants; nice foreground display.
-
- Lemna (duckweed, green plague) [FLOATING] [FAST GROW]
- Tiny (1/4") plant with a pair of leaves and a root. Reproduces
- very quickly. A very noxious weed, hard to eradicate, and most
- fish don't like to eat it. Try a floating fern such as Salvinia
- instead of this one.
-
- Lilaeopsis novae-zelandiae (``micro sword'') [HIGH]
- 64-77F. This plant sold under this name is probably L.
- braziliensis, a South American Liaeopsis. It slowly spreads out
- in thick "turf" of grass, about three 1-3" long light green
- grass-like leaves per plant. Nice spawning medium, foreground
- plant.
-
- Nuphar (spatterdock) [HIGH]
- Water lily-like plant. Usually sold as rhizome end-cutting,
- which rots away in a month. Likes colder temperatures.
-
- Nymphaea (Water Lily, tiger lotus) [HIGH]
- Bulb. Delicate leaves, colors varying from red to green with
- possible mottled spots, depending on the variety. Pinch off
- floating leaves if you want only submerged ones. Reproduction
- is by blooms, or side-tubers from the main bulb. Need 3-5
- floating leaves for it to bloom.
-
- Nymphoides aquatica (banana plant) [HIGH]
- Olive-colored Heart-shaped leaves that look superficially like
- water lily, and banana-like tubers on roots. Plant by sticking
- the tubers 1/3 in the gravel. Prefers lower temperatures.
- Throws out floating leaves if light and fertilization is good.
-
- Pistia stratiotes (water lettuce) [HIGH] [FLOATING]
- Very demanding plant that prefers full sun (where it will grow
- the size of actual lettuce) over aquarium conditions (where it
- might be the size of a quarter). Reproduces by runners. Buy at
- water garden supply stores.
-
- Sagittaria (sag, arrowhead)
- Straight-bladed green grass. Many different varieties, some
- small foreground plants, some rather big. Hardy. Propagates by
- runner. S. subulata grows 4-24" leaves and throws up small
- white flowers in shallow water. 63-82F.
-
- Valisneria [MED] [HI pH]
- Grass. Reproduction by runners. Some find it grows wildly, then
- mostly dies off, in a cycle. Wide temperatures 59-86F. V.
- spiralis (Italian val) has ribbon-like leaves up to 20" (50cm)
- and throws up a spiral stalk when flowering. V. tortifolia
- grows ``corkscrew'' leaves, hence its name Corkscrew val. Other
- common species: V. gigantica (Jungle Val).
-
- Wolffia (watermeal)
- Similar to duckweed (Lemna), but even smaller.
-
- Ferns and Mosses
-
- Azolla (floating fern) [HIGH] [FLOATING]
- Floating fern that grows out in triangular ``rafts''. Buy at
- water garden stores.
-
- Bolbitus heudelotii (African water fern) [LOW]
- Slow-growing creeping rhizome with dark green, 8" (20cm) lobed
- leaves. Tie roots to bogwood like Java fern. Don't bury the
- rhizome in the gravel. Can be grown emersed with fast-moving
- water.
-
- Ceratopteris (water sprite) [LOW] [FAST GROW] [FLOATING]
- Up to 20" (50cm) tall. Exists as rooted or floating specimens.
- Good fry shelter, shade plant. Baby plants grow on older
- leaves. Confused with Hygrophila difformis sometimes. Several
- different species and/or forms, which may require more light
- than others.
-
- Microsorum pteropus (Java fern) [LOW] [HI pH]
- ``It's actually Microsorum but everyone writes it as
- Microsorium,'' says Arie De Graff (FAMA, 1991). This is one of
- the more hardy aquarium plants. It roots itself to solid
- objects like bogwood and rocks (attach with a piece of string
- or rubber band to hold it in place at first) and has a creeping
- rhizome which may be divided for cuttings. Young plants will
- also develop directly off spores, attached to old leaves, and
- can be cut off and rooted. In high light, it produces tough,
- plastic-like leaves; under low light the leaves are more
- delicate. Fronds are up to 8" (20cm) long and undivided, though
- on older plants are trilobade (three lobes to a frond).
-
- Riccia fluitans (floating liverwort, crystalwort) [MED] [FLOATING]
- Big tangly glop like Java moss; good livebearer fry cover.
- Grows fast under high light.
-
- Salvinia (floating fern) [FLOATING]
- Small floating fern that grows in long chains of two oval
- leaves and a ``root-like'' third leaf. Easier to control than
- duckweed. Buy it at water garden supply stores, as it's too
- cheap for most aquarium shops.
-
- Vesicularia dubyana (Java moss) [LOW]
- Grows in branching strands, tangling around other plants. Dark
- green. Makes good spawning medium and cover for young fry. Min
- temp 75F. May dislike salt.
-
-
- FAQ: Lighting
-
- contributed by Dennis Bednarek and Hardjono Harjadi
-
- All plants have a cycle in which during the light hours they use CO2
- and release Oxygen through a process called photosynthesis. During the
- dark hours the opposite occurs and the plants use Oxygen and release
- CO2 in a process referred to as respiration. In most aquarium plants
- the period of photosynthesis in nature is between 10 and 12 hours
- which should be duplicated as closely as possible in the aquarium to
- allow a balance between the two processes.
-
- In nature some plants are located in large open ponds and receive a
- large quantity of light, others are located in triple canopy jungles
- and receive low quantities of light. Each variety of plant has its own
- light requirements and for best aquarium results these requirements
- should be met as much as possible. In this FAQ we will divide the
- plants into groupings that require low light, low to moderate light,
- moderate to bright light, and bright light. There are also bog plants
- that are often sold as aquarium plants which we shall not cover in
- this FAQ except to mention here that their lighting requirements are
- usually greater than even the bright grouping.
-
- Fluorescent lighting is the most economical means of establishing a
- broad spectrum of light in an adequate quantity for the survival of
- aquatic plants. It is recommended that broad spectrum tubes be used to
- produce the proper lighting similar to the varieties sold in plant
- stores and aquarium stores, rather than the standard cool white bulbs
- available at hardware stores. People have had good luck with almost
- any of the "full spectrum" or plant specific bulbs (Vita-Lite, GE
- Chroma 50 and 75, Phillips Agro-Lite, UltraLume and Advantage X). The
- more expensive "three phosphor" bulbs like Triton and Penn-Plax
- Ultra-TriLux seem to have a more realistic color rendition. You can
- combine different types of bulbs to achieve the same results but the
- tri-phosphor bulbs are generally much brighter than less expensive
- types. Note that fluorescent bulbs age and will lose intensity over
- time. It is recommended that bulbs be changed every 6-12 months (try
- to have the bulbs on a rotating schedule, i.e., a new bulb every 3
- months rather than 2 new bulbs every 6 months).
-
- When calculating the amount of lighting you will need there is a
- general of thumb. First multiply the surface area of the aquarium by
- the distance from the light source to the top of the gravel. Then
- depending on the type of plants you desire multiply this by one of the
- factors given below.
-
- Low light plants 0.08
- Low to Moderate light plants 0.12
- Moderate to Bright light plants 0.18
- Bright light plants 0.27
-
- This will give you the ideal watt hours of fluorescent lighting that
- you need. Divide this number by 11 and you now have the approximate
- total wattage of lights you need. Unfortunately this number may not be
- equal to what is available in bulbs so find the combination of wattage
- that will most closely match this requirement and adjust the available
- time to match the watt hour calculation.
-
- Example: required watt hours is 1440, divided by 11, is 131 watts of
- power. since the closest is 3, 40 watt tubes we divide 1440, by the
- 120 watt total and we find we need 12 hours of lighting at this level.
-
- Warning: A common mistake is to deviate greatly from the 11 hours of
- light to compensate for low or high wattage. If the light time exceeds
- 16 hours more wattage should be added to reduce this time, Or if the
- light time is less than 8 hours less wattage must be used to allow
- adequate time for photosynthesis.
-
- When selecting plants also keep in mind that large center plants will
- shade the smaller plants under them and that higher light requiring
- plants should not be selected for small filler plants.
-
- Converting a fluorescent fixture to auto-start
-
- Many older or cheaper fluorescent fixtures require you to hold down a
- pushbutton for a few seconds to turn it on, thus preventing you from
- plugging it into a timer. You can convert such a fixture into an
- auto-starting model by clipping two wires and buying two new parts.
- You need a starter, a little gray can-like thing found in any hardware
- store. Make sure to buy the correct one for your size bulb; they say
- which is right on the package. You also need to buy a socket for the
- starter, or find some way to attach the wires directly to the two
- terminals on the starter. The sockets can sometimes be hard-to-find,
- but big hardware stores might have them, and mail-order fish suppliers
- (MOPS, for instance) can sell you both parts as a kit. Refer to the
- diagram below:
-
- line switch line plug
- \ Hot wire /-----|
- +------------ballast-------------o \____________/ |--- -> smaller plug
- | --\ |----- -> longer plug
- | --------- | \-----|
- | ----------------|starter|---------------+ +-----------------------+
- | | --------- | |
- | | +---------------------+ |
- | | | |Neutral
- | | |-----------------------------------------------------| | |Wire
- | +---| |---+ |
- | | light tube | |
- +------| |--------+
- |-----------------------------------------------------|
-
-
- The two leads you want to connect to the starter are connected to the
- pushbutton; usually they're red. Clip them at the pushbutton and
- attach to the starter socket. That's all!
-
-
- FAQ: CO2 in the aquarium
-
- Georg Jander (GEORG.JANDER at cereon.com)
-
- Anyone who has observed the explosive growth of aquarium plants in
- response to carbon dioxide (CO2) fertilization must be convinced of
- the usefulness of this system. Certainly, there are thousands of
- aquarium hobbyists who do not give their plants any sort of special
- treatment and still end up with a fairly nice display. However, truly
- luxuriant growth, the sort that you see on the covers of aquarium
- magazines and in pictures of "Dutch aquariums," can only be achieved
- by fertilizing with CO2.
-
- During photosynthesis, plants use light energy to capture CO2. This
- CO2 is used to build the basic carbon structures from which all plant
- material is made. In a poorly lit aquarium, light is likely to be what
- limits the rate of plant growth. The amount of CO2 produced by fish-
- and bacterial respiration is more than enough to allow photosynthesis
- under these conditions. If on the other hand, you try to make your
- plants grow faster by adding more light, it is likely that there will
- not be enough CO2 in your aquarium. The plants simply can not grow as
- fast as they would like to, given the available light energy.
-
- The easiest way to increase the amount of CO2 in an aquarium is to buy
- a tank of CO2 and let it bubble into the water. Several, mostly
- German, companies sell systems for adding CO2 into the outflow of your
- canister filter. If you buy your CO2 system from someone like Dupla,
- you are likely to spend about $300. That seems a bit pricey, doesn't
- it? Fortunately, it is very easy and also a fair bit cheaper to buy a
- CO2 tank at a local welding supply place and use it to bubble CO2 into
- the water.
-
- CO2 in the tank is under high pressure. A pressure regulator brings
- this pressure down to a manageable level, and ordinary aquarium air
- valves can be used to regulate the flow to individual aquariums.
- [Editor's note: this is counter to general net-experience. Most of us
- end up installing a fine-metering needle valve after the normal
- regulator in order to regulate the flow down to a few bubbles per
- second, because normal aquarium air valves do not have good enough
- control.] The CO2 reactor is simply a small chamber that allows the
- CO2 to be dissolved in the water before it escapes into the air.
- Outflow from a filter or a pump enters the top of the reactor; CO2 is
- bubbled in from the bottom. To give the CO2 more time to dissolve, one
- can add a system of baffles to trap the gas as it is moving up. Near
- the top of the reactor, there should be a small hole to vent other
- gases, which may be present in small amounts in the compressed CO2.
- These gases do not dissolve as readily in water as CO2 does.
-
- I purchased my CO2 tank and regulator at Wesco on Vassar Street in
- Cambridge. Their current (May 1992) prices are: 5 lbs CO2, $52.50,
- refill $9.74; 20 lbs CO2, $101.75, refill $19.55. A CO2 pressure
- regulator is "$79 and change." People who have better welding
- connections than I do might be able to get things more cheaply than
- that. [Editor's note: look in the PLANT RESOURCES section for more
- current prices and good inexpensive sources.] Refills are generally
- not a very big expense. My 20 lb CO2 tank is used on three aquariums
- (30, 65, and 110 gallons) and lasts about three years between refills.
- That works out to about $2 per aquarium per year. Other possible
- sources of CO2 that I have not investigated are CO2 fire extinguishers
- and the CO2 canisters they use to put the bubbles in beer and soft
- drinks. Don't bother trying to rig up something with dry ice, it is
- too complicated.
-
- The tubing and valves that I use for my CO2 setup are the sort that
- one buys for use with the aquarium air pumps. It is better to get the
- brass rather than the plastic valves, since it is easier to make fine
- adjustments with them and they also tend to leak less. Even a tiny
- leak can empty out a gas tank distressingly quickly. I check all of my
- valves and connections with a soap solution and make sure that no
- bubbles appear.
-
- The CO2 reactor can easily be constructed out of any wide bore tube. I
- use the lift tubes from an undergravel filter in my aquariums. Local
- aquarium enthusiast Jim Bardwell does well with the top half of a
- one-liter coke bottle, with the filter hose attached to where the cap
- should be. It is best to use a clear plastic, so that one can see what
- is happening inside. Baffles, designed to let the water cascade down
- in one direction and to trap the CO2 moving in the other direction,
- are helpful, but not absolutely necessary. I make my baffles out of
- foam cubes that I cut to the right size and shape to fit inside the
- tube. Jim simply lets the CO2 collect at the top of the reactor, where
- the water is coming in. He does not have a vent and does not seem to
- have a problem with excess gas accumulating.
-
- While a small increase in the amount of CO2 in the water causes lush
- plant growth, too much CO2 can prove to be toxic. CO2 dissolved in
- water forms carbonic acid (H2CO3). With weakly buffered water, like
- what comes out of the tap in the Boston area, adding too much CO2 can
- bring the pH down to as low as 3. That is not quite as acidic as Coca
- Cola, but about equal to vinegar. Naturally, this can cause death or
- other serious reactions in your fish and plants.
-
- One can buy CO2 test kits that measure the actual level of CO2 in the
- water, but measuring the pH and counting the bubbles in the CO2
- reactor works just about as well. It is best to start off by adding
- CO2 very slowly (about one to three bubbles per minute) and increasing
- the rate until a small, but measurable drop in pH is achieved. In my
- 30-gallon aquarium, I add one bubble of CO2 every three to four
- seconds to bring the pH from 7 to between 6 and 6.5. How much CO2 one
- needs to add varies from aquarium to aquarium and can depend on
- several factors: the size of the aquarium, how fast the plants are
- growing, the number of fish, how much food is decaying on the bottom,
- the buffering capacity of the water, the types of rock and gravel, and
- how well ventilated the surface of the water is. However, anything in
- the range of one bubble every two to fifteen seconds seems to work
- pretty well. Bubble size will vary with the diameter of the tubing. I
- am referring to the sort of bubbles that come out of the end of
- ordinary, one eighth inch inside diameter aquarium air tubing.
-
- By using a CO2 reactor, you are saturating the water with CO2, and any
- excessive agitation of the water surface or bubbling of air through
- the water will cause the CO2 to escape into the atmosphere, just about
- as quickly as you can add it. Thus, at least during the day, you
- should *not* have an airstone or an undergravel filter turned on. If
- you have a plant aquarium, you should probably not be using an
- undergravel filter, anyway, since most kinds of plants do better
- without one. When the lights are on, plants use CO2 and produce
- oxygen. In my tanks, so much oxygen is being produced, that I can
- often see it forming streams of bubbles from the plants. At night, on
- the other hand, the plants are actually using oxygen (and not CO2) If
- there are not too many fish in the aquarium, then the oxygen produced
- by the plants during the day will tide everyone over until the next
- morning. However, if you notice that your fish are gasping at the
- surface in the mornings, they are obviously running out of oxygen. To
- remedy this problem, you can simply turn on an air stone when the
- lights go out. This will keep up the oxygen level and remove excess
- CO2. I have the aquarium lights and an air pump on two separate
- timers; when one turns on, the other one turns off. It would also be
- fairly easy to rig up a solenoid valve for the CO2 supply and have it
- turn the CO2 on and off with the same timer that is regulating the
- lights.
-
- The system that I have described here and use is a very basic one that
- works well. For those who like those sorts of things, the automation
- possibilities are almost limitless. My brother Albrecht, who is an
- electronics whiz, has his entire aquarium run by a TRS-80 computer.
- Among many other things, the computer measures the pH, adds more CO2
- if the pH is above a predetermined level, and sounds an alarm if the
- CO2 tank is running low. Fortunately, you don't need all of that to
- have a truly great-looking plant tank. There are more than thirty
- kinds of thriving plants in my aquariums; I have to weed out bunches
- once a week, and I have enough extras to supply all of my aquarium
- friends and still sell some at the monthly BAS auction. The fish are
- also doing well and reproducing.
-
- CO2 makes it easy to grow aquarium plants, but it is not a cure-all.
- You still have to observe some of the other essentials of proper plant
- care. Aquarium plants need a lot of light. When using fluorescent
- bulbs, I usually figure about four watts per gallon. Wide-spectrum
- plant and aquarium bulbs seem to work better than the "soft white"
- ones that you can buy at the hardware store. The amount of iron in
- most aquariums is too low for maximum plant growth. I supplement the
- iron by adding "Micronized Iron" to the canister filter (about one
- teaspoon at every cleaning) and "Ortho Greenol" directly to the water
- (two drops per ten gallons per day). Both of these are available at
- gardening stores. Other nutrients and trace elements that your plants
- need are usually taken care of when you feed the fish and do water
- changes (frequently). Also, don't forget the regular sacrifices of
- goat entrails to the aquarium gods, at midnight when the moon is full.
-
-
- FAQ: Substrate Heating Cables
-
- contributed by George Booth
-
- Much of the mystery surrounding heating cables is that Dupla has been
- careful to hide the rationale to protect their product, i.e., keep it
- "magic".
-
- I think a key concept is that we are NOT trying to mimic what happens
- in nature (even though the Dupla description implies that) but we are
- trying the achieve an equivalent biological affect.
-
- In nature, you have sources of underground water moving to the surface
- or surface water moving to aquifers due to natural pressure
- differentials. Dupla mentions this in terms of "nutrient springs" in
- tropical streams. In our aquariums, there are no such natural
- pressures to cause any movement (except for UGF, etc).
-
- The water column will tend to keep the gravel at water temperature
- through conductive heating; heat will "seep" downward. However, in
- glass tanks especially, the glass bottom is radiating heat into the
- room, cabinet, etc, unless insulation is provided. This will tend to
- keep the roots cooler than the water temperature. Even with
- insulation, you'll find the bottom of the substrate cooler than the
- top, just not as much.
-
- Here is a list of substrate processes I think are important (no
- particular order of importance implied):
- 1. Provide warmth in the substrate for certain plant species
- (Barclaya longifolia, specifically). In this case the substrate
- should be warmer than the water. (``hot feet'')
- 2. Provide warmth in the substrate to speed up biochemical processes.
- 3. Transport nutrients from the water into the substrate. Important
- nutrients would be ammonium (fish waste, etc), iron (from trace
- element additions), calcium, potassium and other trace elements.
- This will replenish nutrients used by the roots and provide long
- term viability (in terms of years).
- 4. Transport harmful products out of the substrate. Decomposition
- products may be harmful to plant roots. There is also conjecture
- that plants give off low level toxins to keep other plants out of
- their territory (successful weeds have made this an art form). If
- these toxins build up due to poor circulation, the plant may harm
- itself.
- 5. Provide a chelating medium that binds the divalent state of trace
- elements with an organic molecule, enabling the trace element to
- be adsorbed by root hairs.
- 6. Provide a reducing rather than oxidizing environment so that trace
- elements are kept in their divalent state (usable by plants) or
- are reduced from their oxidized trivalent state. Iron especially
- will rapidly oxidize in water with normal levels of oxygen.
-
- Heating coils provide the ``hot feet'' and warmth for biochemical
- processes directly. The convection currents generated by the "spot"
- heat source of the coils provide for nutrient and toxin transport.
- Laterite in the bottom 1/3 of the substrate provides the chelating
- medium. The slow convection currents, coupled with nitrifying bacteria
- in the gravel will reduce the concentration of oxygen getting to the
- bottom layer of the gravel, providing a reducing environment.
-
- A heating pad under the tank will tend to warm the entire bottom layer
- uniformly. This will provide hot feet and increased biochemical
- activity, but I suspect the heat will go through the gravel as
- conduction and won't generate convention currents. Thermodynamics
- theory says that conduction will occur up to a certain heat threshold
- and then convection currents will be formed with more heat. I think
- the linear hot zones generated by proper spacing of the coils along
- with the higher temperatures of the coils will provide this. Yes,
- there will be hot and cool zones for the roots but I think the other
- factors outweigh this.
-
- Schemes that use warm water flowing in tubes in the gravel (Bioplast,
- for example) won't work, IMHO, because they can't generate enough
- heat. Bioplast wraps some tubing around a heater and pipes it through
- the gravel with a pump. The first foot or so of the tubing may get hot
- enough (though I doubt it) but the water in the coil will cool off
- rather quickly as it travels through the tube. If the tube is
- insulated enough to keep the water hot, then it won't transfer any
- heat to the gravel.
-
- Reverse flow undergravel filtration (RUGF) will provide increased
- biochemical activity, toxin transport, and a reducing environment. It
- may provide ``hot feet'' if you heat the water before putting it
- through the RUGF. Nutrient transport is kind of difficult since the
- water is usually filtered before going to the RUGF (to avoid injecting
- crud into the gravel) and trace elements probably will be oxidized in
- the filter (oxidizing is a bio-filter's purpose). Chelating is a
- problem because a RUGF will probably push the laterite up and out of
- the gravel. Don't get me wrong, a RUGF may provide the six processes,
- but it would be difficult to get it set up with the right flows and
- even flow across the substrate and proper mechanical filtering, etc. A
- coil setup is a "no-brainer" if you have the correct wattage.
-
- UGF will provide warmth for biochemical activity, and nutrient and
- toxin transport. Hot feet would be very tricky to achieve, if not
- impossible. Detritus pulled into the gravel can be chelated by the
- substrate, but a reducing environment is almost impossible unless a
- very slow flow is used and that would be hard to do evenly across the
- whole substrate.
-
- We have three ~100g tanks with coils and one 85g tank with UGF. All
- grow plants equally well but the 85g is much more unstable. We think
- it is sensitive to too much detritus building up in the gravel; a
- thorough vacuuming every 6-9 months perks it up. The coil tanks
- require no gravel vacuuming and the 90g tank was rock solid
- biologically for at least three years. We replanted at that point
- because some of the plants had gotten out of control but we didn't
- "tear down" the tank - just replanted.
-
- I think this is the key to the cables - long term stability. Plants
- will grow fine without them if you can accomplish most of the six
- things I mentioned. Just pulling up plants for trimming every month
- will accomplish as lot (stirring up the gravel, moving roots out of
- their toxin zone, etc).
-
- Construction
-
- Fully-automated systems can be purchased from commercial sources such
- as Dupla, though the cost can be a bit much for a beginner. You can
- save a great deal of money by buying just the cables and building the
- rest of the setup yourself. If you use a small enough wattage cable as
- a supplement to your tank's main heater, the temperature controller
- can be ignored or replaced with a timer, requiring only a low voltage
- transformer! Furthermore, it is possible to make your own cables,
- taking the price down almost to that of a ``normal'' heater.
-
-
- FAQ: Resources for Aquatic Plants and Related Items
-
- last updated February 1997
-
- This section contains mail-order sources for much of the plant-related
- items discussed elsewhere. They are all listed here so this section
- can be kept up-to-date without the bother of changing the others. Oh,
- one more thing, these are United States sources, and will probably be
- useless to the rest of the world (feel free to volunteer info for
- other countries, and we will try to add it).
-
- Siamese Algae Eaters
-
- The Siamese Algae Eater, Crossocheilus siamensis, the only fish known
- to eat red algae, was not generally available in the United States
- until recently; lately, it seems several wholesalers have been
- starting to import them, so you may have better luck locally. (They
- may be sold as "Algae Eating Sharks", "Siamese Flying Fox", etc. Make
- sure to ID the fish carefully; they may be the so-called "False
- Siamensis").
-
- If no local sources can be located, here is the ``original'' US
- source, that imports them directly and may be able to ship you a
- quantity order (be nice to them, they're just a small fish store, not
- a mail-order business).
-
- Contact:
-
- Albany Aquarium
- 818 San Pablo Ave.
- Albany, CA 94706
- (510) 525-1166
-
- A good identification article by Neil Frank and Liisa Sarakontu is
- freely available at http://www.aquatic-gardeners.org/cyprinid.html.
-
- Mail-Order Plants
-
- Delaware Aquatics Imports
-
- This was once the best and only place to mail-order plants. Alas, they
- are no longer in business. :(
-
- Aquarium Driftwood
- PO Box 91491
- Mobile AL 36691
- phone 334-345-2323
-
- Higher quality, higher price. Their selection is more limited than
- other sources. Check their web pages for online catalog, etc.
-
- The Aquatic Greenhouse
- P.O. Box 290421
- Tampa, FL 33687
- 813-630-9130 FAX 813-630-0171
-
- Been around since about 1995. Reportedly good service and turnaround.
- They stock the elusive Glossostigma.
-
- Natural Aquarium and Terrarium
- 3209 Bouquet Road
- Pacific, MO 63069
- phone 800-423-4717, 314-458-4717 FAX 314-458-9722
-
- Reasonable prices, and easy-to-comprehend catalog. They also sell
- books, driftwood, Dupla and other plant-growing products.
-
- Arizona Aquatic Gardens
- 520-579-3098
-
- Large selection listed in their catalog, and prices are quite low.
-
- Tropica
- Tropica plants are known worldwide for their quality. Unfortunately,
- due to the United States import/export laws, they are not available in
- this country. Check their web site for details on availability
- throughout the rest of the world.
-
- Horizon Growers
- PO Box 2330
- Ramona, CA 92065
- phone 619-789-2983, FAX 619-789-0297
-
- Horizon has licensed the Tropica name and supposedly uses the Tropica
- "method" of hydroponic growing in the US. However, they are not
- otherwise related, and Tropica has no actual control over Horizon's
- quality. Some have reported problems with delivered selection, and
- inclusion of bog plants unless they specify otherwise.
-
- All Aquatic Plants
- 90 Bruce Lane, Covington, Georgia 30014
- Phone 770-786-1953
-
- All Aquatic Plants is run by Dan Quackenbush (the "kitty litter" guy).
- A relatively new aquatic plant business (at least to the Internet),
- I've heard a few reports, all of them positive.
-
- Hobbyist growers
- There may be hobbyists in your area willing to trade cuttings.
- Consider joining an aquarium society, or you may be able to locate
- people through internet mailing lists (Steve Pushak maintains one such
- list at http://home.infinet.net/teban/where.html, though it may not be
- current.)
-
- Please send names of your favorite supplier; this section could be
- expanded.
-
- CO2 Supplies
-
- You can get many of the supplies for building your own CO2 injector
- from local welding shops and carbonated beverage distributors. Some of
- the equipment has been found particularly inexpensive:
- * Cylinders: (This comes from Matt McCabe) One cheap source is Geer
- Gas in Ohio, $38.50 for a 5lb cylinder, plus big shipping. It's
- still cheaper than buying it in some places. 1-800-696-4337
- (614-464-4277). Refill at fire extinguisher store or beverage
- supply house.
- * Regulators: We had previously recommended something here called a
- "FROG." This device is actually a flow regulator, and is not
- really recommended for the bubbling rate we use in planted tanks;
- at best, it will merely keep your system from exploding if the
- needle valve breaks under all the pressure. If you are looking for
- a cheaper regulator, try beverage supply models, which are less
- rugged than welding regulators.
- * Needle Valves: (originally located by Gary Bishop) An inexpensive
- metering valve (around $14) is the ARO model "NO1" or "NO2" from
- The ARO Corporation, One ARO Center, Bryan, OHIO 43506, Phone
- (419)636-4242. In Canada, (416)213-4500. Web site:
- http://aro.ingersoll-rand.com/power/valve.htm It provides infinite
- control from full-close to full-open. It has a neat color scale to
- indicate the degree of openness and can be locked at any setting.
- The adjustment is very smooth; I can go from off through
- incredibly slow flows to just right and beyond to way more than I
- need. You can locate a distributor of this valve in your area by
- calling the ARO company. Even if you cannot locate this exact
- valve, your local dealer might be able to suggest an equivalent
- substitute of a different brand. A more expensive option (around
- $50) is one of the fine metering needle valves by Nupro, such as
- the "S" Series (model B-4MG2). Web page: http://www.swagelok.com/
- * Solenoid Valves: (from Gary Bishop) ``$24.00 from "Air Power Inc."
- (In Yellow Pages under Valves). This is solenoid valve model
- "CAT33P-012D" from "The ARO Corporation, One ARO Center, Bryan,
- OHIO 43506, Phone (419)636-4242". You can get it with a variety of
- coil voltages. I chose 12 volts DC.''
-
- Dupla
-
- Dupla supplies CO2 equipment, fertilizers, and heating cable systems,
- among many other nifty expensive specialty products. In the US, Dupla
- is imported through J.P. Burleson and Company, but they do not sell
- directly to the consumer. You can either bug your local retailer to
- special-order something for you or purchase through a mail-order
- company. Two popular mail-order house are DaleCo and Pet Warehouse.
-
- Aquatic Plants E-Mail List
-
- (This came from Shaji Bhaskar) The aquatic plant mailing list is
- intended to be a medium for exchange of information about all aspects
- of growing aquatic plants as a hobby. Postings on both aquarium plants
- and pond plants are welcome. Topics of discussion include (but are not
- limited to):
- 1. Individual plant species (identification, cultivation,
- propagation, etc.)
- 2. Aquascaping
- 3. Substrates - pros and cons of commercial substrate additives,
- potting soil, peat, etc.
- 4. Water conditioners and fertilizers
- 5. Hardware - heaters, filters, surface skimmers, etc.
- 6. Compatibility of fish and other organisms with aquatic plants
- 7. Trades/exchanges between hobbyists (advertisements from
- commercial-scale operations are not permitted.)
-
- To subscribe, send the following in the body (not subject line) of an
- e-mail message to ``Majordomo@actwin.com'':
-
- subscribe aquatic-plants
-
- Aquatic Gardeners Association
-
- ``Purpose of the AGA:
- 1. disseminate information about aquatic plants
- 2. to study and improve upon techniques for culturing aquatic and bog
- plants in aquariums and ponds.
- 3. to increase interest in aquatic gardening
- 4. to promote fellowship among its members.
-
- The journal of the AGA is called The Aquatic Gardener and we put out 6
- of these a year. The publication is usually 25-30 pages long and
- contains good info. Membership dues are $15.00yr, U.S./Canada/Mexico
- and $28.00/yr, all other countries.
-
- Send check or money order to
-
- Jack O'Leary
- 71 Ring Road
- Plympton, MA 02367-1406 (USA)
-
- (All funds must be in U.S. Currency)
-
- AGA is a non-profit organization.
-
- Books
-
- (This list originally came from George Booth)
-
- Plant basics
-
- * Aquatic Plants; Hobbyist Guide to the Natural Aquarium
- Aquarium Digest International #45
- Andrews, C.
- Tetra Press
- * Hobbyist Guide to the Natural Aquarium
- Andrews, C.
- 1991, Tetra Press
- * A Fishkeeper's Guide to Aquarium Plants
- James, Barry
- 1986, Salamander Books Ltd., London.
- ``Lots of people recommend this as a great first plant book.'' --
- E.O.
- * Water Plants in the Aquarium
- Scheurmann, Ines
- 1987, Barron's Educational Services
- * Aquarium Plants Manual
- Scheurmann, Ines
- 1993, Barron's Educational Services
- ``Lots of detail and good photographs for a small book. Well worth
- the price.'' -- E.O.
- * The Complete Book of Aquarium Plants
- Allgayer, R., and Teton, J.
- 1987, Ward Lock Limited, London.
-
- Plant Identification and Culturing
-
- * Aquarium Plants, their identification, cultivation and ecology
- Rataj, K., and Horeman, T.
- 1977, T.F.H. Publications, Inc. Ltd.
- Somewhat disorganized and out of date, but readily accessible to
- any hobbyist. Says something about virtually every plant.
- * System for a Problem-Free Aquarium
- Dennerle
- Available in the US through the AGA, contains a thorough thumbnail
- plant catalog.
- * Baensch's Aquarium Atlases each include a large plant section.
- * Aquarienpflanzen by Christel Kasselmann, Berlin. 1995 Eugen Ulmer
- GmbH, Stuttgart. Book from the "DATZ-Atlantic" series. ISBN 3 -
- 8001 - 7298 - 4. Language: German 472 pages including 494 colour
- photos.
- 48 pages on the water plants' natural biotopes, 16 pages on
- plants' general demands on temperature, light, water, nourishment
- etc. 350 pages describe over 300 aquarium plants separately (info
- about scientific names, person who indentified the specimen,
- meaning of name, brief but exact description of each specimen,
- growth and demands on water conditions).
- ``a book that can be described as a perfect mixture of natural
- knowledge, experience based on expeditions to the nat ural biotops
- and years of intensive and enthusiastic studying of relevant
- literature.'' -- Claus Christensen on the Aquatic Plant List
-
- Technical Setup, Equipment and Maintenance
-
- * The Optimum Aquarium
- Horst, K., and Kipper, H.
- 1986, AD aquadocumenta Verlag GmbH.
- ``The bible for anyone interested in high-tech planted tanks.'' --
- E.O.
-
- Web and FTP Sites
-
- More detailed information on plants and planted tanks can be obtained
- from ``the Krib'' World Wide Web pages (http://www.thekrib.com).
-
- End of Plant FAQ.
-
-