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- From: tli@caldera.usc.edu (Tony Li)
- Newsgroups: alt.aquaria,rec.aquaria,sci.aquaria
- Subject: FAQ: Plants
- Date: 1 Jan 1993 01:05:13 -0800
- Organization: University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA
- Lines: 185
- Expires: 31 Jan 1993 09:05:01 GMT
- Message-ID: <1i11g9INN9t7@caldera.usc.edu>
- Reply-To: tli@cisco.com,patti@hosehead.hf.intel.com
- NNTP-Posting-Host: caldera.usc.edu
-
- Plants
-
- Rev. 1.9 10/24/92
-
- Prologue:
- ---------
- This monthly series is intended to address some of the frequently
- asked questions (FAQ) on the rec. and alt.aquaria newsgroups. Because
- the answers may not be complete, please feel free to ask questions.
- This is only intended to address first level concerns, and not to
- dampen discussions. Please see the file FAQ.README for pointers to other
- topics.
-
- Please review and send any corrections or inputs to the FAQ maintainers
- with "(FAQ)" in the subject line. You are absolutely welcomed to tackle
- (i.e. WRITE) sections that have not been written yet.
-
- We've received recommendations to put email address "pointers" in
- the FAQ to vector questions to specific experts on particular
- subjects. If you would like to offer yourself as such an expert,
- please send me your email address and the specific topics you want
- to host. Please include an email path that is generally accessible
- to the greatest number of people.
-
- CO2 in the aquarium
- -------------------
- 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 enought
- 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. 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 gasses, which may be present in small amounts in the
- compressed CO2. These gasses 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. 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 but 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 you
- 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 be 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 flourescent
- 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
- equarium gods, at midnight when the moon is full.
-
- Disclaimer:
- -----------
- Some answers listed above may reflect personal biases of the author
- and the FAQ's contributors. In cases where the answers name
- specific products and their respective manufacturers, these are not
- to be taken as endorsements, nor commercials for the manufacturer.
- Where cost information is stated (magazine subscription rates),
- this is based on "street" information, and are in no way binding on
- the publisher. The answers contained in this series pertain to
- discussions on the rec. and alt.aquaria newsgroups, and are by no means
- exhaustive. This series is not intended to take the place of good
- aquarium books on the subject matter.
-
- Copyright:
- ----------
- The FAQ owes its existence to the contributors of the net, and as
- such it belongs to the readers of rec.aquaria and alt.aquaria.
- Copies can be made freely, as long as it is distributed at no
- charge, and the disclaimers and the copyright notice are included.
-
-