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Hi all,
Most are all right in soft water, the ones from Sri Lanka are more likely to like harder water. I use mainly Cryptocoryne pontederiifolia and C x willisii.
It has pretty plastic growth rate, if you feed it plenty it <"grows like wild fire">, but it will subsist on <"petrol fumes">...
Hi all,
I agree with @rasmusW, a <"lot more plants"> would help.
As well as a quick growing plant (Ceratopteris thalictroides?) for "now", I would actually recommend plants that "take a long time to grow", like <"Cryptocoryne spp., Bolbitis heudelotii and Anubias barteri">.
The reason for...
Hi all,
It does, via ion exchange. The cation exchange sites are initially populated by a proton (H+) ion, which is swapped for a cation, with higher valency, like Ca++, from the water column.
Yes that is it, it's ion exchange and depends on both the concentration of ions and their valency
No...
Hi all,
In the UK they should say "100% silica sand". I think the last bag I bought was from the (UK) supermarket Morrisons. It was something like £5 for 20 Kg.
"Kiln Dried Paving Sand" might be another option? I'm not sure about the USA or Europe but "block paving" is very popular in the UK...
Hi all,
I'll put this here: On UKAPS we've recently talked to Josh Neufeld, a scientist from the The University of Waterloo and also a fish keeper.
<"Strangers in your home: Archaea thrive in aquarium biofilters – Dr Josh D Neufeld"> pages 14 - 20.
This is the UKAPS thread. I know the "microbes...
Hi all,
I've gone over to using finer sand, and I like it, and so do the fish.
Somewhere @Mike Wise or @Tom C posted a picture of the substrate that they picked up when they collected some fish, and it was very fine particles.
Edit: Found it...
Hi all,
The problem with identification is that Apistogramma spp. are part of the on-going <"Geophagine adaptive radiation">* and I'm guessing that forest clearance and climate change will lead to most species becoming extinct before they are ever scientifically described.
At some point in the...
Hi all,
I'm sorry to hear that, but it may be nothing to do with you and just be that they are very inbred and unhealthy fish now, a bit like Rams (Mikrogeophagus ramirezi).
cheers Darrel
Hi all,
Not that then, it doesn't contain any fixed nitrogen.
and is only a "fertiliser" in the loosest of terms.
I'll be honest I don't know the actual numbers.
At some point I will attempt to quantify that (using the <"Solufeed combination"> above) and either urea (CO(NH2)2) or ammonium...
Hi all,
Perfect, I'm going to tell you that you have more fixed nitrogen then you have measured.
Why (and how) can I say this? It is because the plants can't <"lie"> and
tells me that fixed nitrogen isn't the <"limiting nutrient"> for plant growth.
The <"leaf colour chart"> has to work as a...
Hi all,
The original version of the <"Duckweed Index"> used <"a rooted emergent plant">, because of this access to aerial gases.
The reason for a floating plant is purely convenience. They may not be <"quite as good"> as an emergent plant, but they are much more <"plug and play">.
cheers Darrel
Hi all,
You may find that test kits are a viable option, purely because you may have a lot more NO3- to measure. You would need to use serial dilution to give you a more accurate reading, basically carry on diluting the water to be tested, and then multiply the value of a colour (that reads in...
Hi all,
You can "dial in" <"leaf colour"> (and growth rate) to any nutrient dosing regime. Like @MacZ says I try and just keep the <"plants in slow growth">, but other people use much heavier nutrient additions.
I went away from Common Duckweed (Lemna minor) because it doesn't do well in very...
Hi all,
It was actually the difficulties in nitrate (NO3-) testing that started me down the route to the <"Duckweed Index">.
Because all nitrate compounds are soluble, you <"need to reduce the NO3- to nitrite"> (NO2-) and then combine that NO2- with another reagent to produce a coloured...
Hi all,
What the others have said.
It really depends how much you want to spend, and semi-titrimetric methods, (drop tests) are generally better than strips, but I wouldn't base decisions based on their results.
The only "test kit" I use is conductivity meter, they are plug and play and even...
Hi all,
I just wouldn't fill it all the way up with water. That way you have plenty of room for emergent and/or emersed plants.
This is @MacZ's tank <"https://apistogramma.com/forum/threads/food-web-in-a-south-american-biotope-tank.25346/#post-124480">
cheers Darrel
Hi all,
That one. I'm also a <"great moss fan">.
What is your water like in terms of hardness (dGH), alkalinity (dKH) and conductivity (micro S. ~"ppm TDS"). If you are located in the UK? and don't know? An approximate location is all I need.
The reason I ask is that Vallisneria isn't a <"fan...
Hi all,
What @MacZ says. You might be interested in the <"Duckweed Index">, it is a simple technique for maintaining water quality using a floating plant as both <"nutrient level indicator and nutrient reducer">.
Same again, basically "good things come to those who wait". I've just called it...