Posts tagged plants
Floating Pond Plants
Sep 3rd
Floating Pond Plants
One of the types of pond plants is the water hyacinth. The water hyacinth is a fast grower and has powerful water filtration capabilities, so much so that many cities in the United States use them to pre-filter the waste water in their water treatment plants. They need to get acclimated to the sun at first but once they are, they can be placed anywhere in sun or shade. Periodically the water hyacinth will get its root masses entangled and it is suggested that they be pulled apart to encourage new growth.
The Frogbit is a miniature floating pond plant with smooth shiny green heart-shaped leaves 1-2” across. The leaves are deeply notched at the base with thick spongy tissue in the center and on undersides. The name of the plant is derived to its resemblance to the chin of a frog in the water. Frogbit grows best in still water with full sun to shade and will take root wherever possible. It can also be a fast grower that requires periodic thinning
The Sensitive Plant is a creeping plant with small delicate diamond-shaped leaves. Sensitive Plant can grow to heights of six inches with spreads of up to 36 inches in full sun to partial shade. They should be placed in a pond once the water temperature of the pond has reached 70º F. The Sensitive Plant is considered an annual aquatic. At night, as well as when touched or injured, the leaflets which are then, sensitive and narrow fold up and close. The Sensitive Plant has been used extensively as an ornamental plant and propagates by seed or by cutting. Sensitive Plant blooms in summer and its yellow flowers are similar to those of the Sweet Pea.
Parrot’s Feather is an aquatic perennial that has a silvery-gray color in the shade, and a lime green colored in full sun. It serves to softens the edges of a pond and add oxygen to the water. The stem and leaves can grow up to a foot above the water surface, giving the appearance of small fir trees. Fish are not known to eat Parrot’s Feather. It can be grown floating on a pond’s surface or placed in rock crevices in steam beds, or waterfalls where it will take root and grow out across the pond. Parrot’s Feather can also be used in aquariums. The plant grows quickly and easily in full to partial sun. Plumes will grow to about 8 inches tall while the roots will filter the water. In the evening, the plants will close up and drops of water will form on plant that sparkle in the light.
http://www.tnnursery.net
Tn nursery is a state certified tree nursery specializing in native plants and trees,shrubs,fern and perennials as well as pond plants and wetland mitigation species.
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biOrb Autumn Fern Plants – 2 Pack
Aug 2nd
biOrb Autumn Fern Plants – 2 Pack
- Fits 8 gallon biOrb or larger
Autumn Fern Easy Plants – New style plants that are incredibly easy to use. These realistic Fern style plastic plants are ceramic weighted – simply drop them in.
Rating:
(out of 1 reviews)
List Price: $ 8.99
Price: $ 8.99
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Aquarium Fish School Complete Aquatic Pet Training Supply Accessory Kit NEW
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biOrb Winter Fern Plants – 2 Pack
Jul 24th
biOrb Winter Fern Plants – 2 Pack
- Fits 8 gallon biOrb or larger
Winter Fern Easy Plants – The winter style Fern plants that are incredibly easy to use. These realistic winter Fern style plastic plants are ceramic weighted – simply drop them in.
Rating:
(out of reviews)
List Price: $ 8.99
Price: $ 8.99
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Basic Freshwater Aquarium Principles; Filters, Heaters, Bio-cycling, Live Plants, Feeding, Cleaning and Chemistry
Jul 16th
Basic Freshwater Aquarium Principles; Filters, Heaters, Bio-cycling, Live Plants, Feeding, Cleaning and Chemistry
AQUARIUM:
Start with as large an aquarium as you can afford. There is a very BASIC priciple (this only applies to beginners), that is to have 1-2 inches of NARROW bodied fish per FILTERED aquarium gallon. Goldfish are dirty and fatter, so I would triple this with them (3″). This also only applies to a standard rectangular aquarium.
Obviously longer fish need more tank width and length. I would decrease the amount of fish proportional to the gallons in a tall aquarium or hexagon aquarium.
Remember, many fish purchased can grow much larger than your original purchase size (ex: goldfish), so keep this in mind too.
FILTERS:
I always recommend two filters minimum per aquarium for redundancy and for improved biological (denitrifying) filtration. For a small aquarium, a combination of a hang on the back and a sponge filter. Or a sponge filter and an internal power filter. You want to make sure and rinse your sponge or cartridge out in used aquarium water to maintain your beneficial bacteria for bio filtration.
Other filters of note include canister, wet/dry, under gravel, and fluidized bed.
There are four types of filtration:
Biological; the removal of nitrogenous waste (ammonia, ECT), which is the most important type.
Mechanical; the removal of larger debris (organic and inorganic) before it can go through the nitrogen cycle (organic)
Chemical; The removal of chemical contamination via carbon, zeolite or many other products. This becomes less important in a healthy, established aquarium.
Germacidal; The use of UVC or ozone to kill disease pathogens and control the Redox potential.
HEATER:
Most tropical fish do well at a temperature between 76 and 80 degrees Fahrenheit. (Discus prefer warmer).
Goldfish do not need a heater.
I recommend 25 watts for every 10 degrees of ambient temperature you need to raise your aquarium temperature. EX: If your home is 68 degrees and you have a 40 gallon aquarium, to reach a temperature of 78 degrees you would need a 100 watt heater.
BIO-CYCLING:
Your aquarium will not be at peak biological filtration for 6 weeks (or more). To start your biological filtration, there are many cycling products available, such “Cycle” by Hagen. My success with these products is mixed at best, it is very difficult for the aerobic bacteria that are needed for cycling your aquarium to live in a sealed container kept at room temperature, as they die very quickly without oxygen.
I prefer to add gravel and/or used filter sponge or cartridge from another aquarium.
This method of adding media is much faster (you still have to take it slow), and provides all the necessary bacteria, the only negative is adding disease pathogens to your aquarium, but I have rarely encountered this problem.
We used this method for our Aquarium Maintenance route for years and never lost a fish to Ammonia or nitrite poisoning.
Another method is fishless cycling where un-scented ammonia is poured into the aquarium (3-5 drops per gallon pure ammonia) so as to bring your ammonia level to 4-5 ppm. Then it takes about 3-8 weeks for the aquarium to cycle. Although this method is growing in popularity, I do not recommend it, not because it does not work (it does), but because human nature is to want to add fish sooner than the 3-8 weeks it takes for this method.
The method of adding media is much faster (you still have to take it slow), and provides all the necessary bacteria, the only negative is adding disease pathogens to your aquarium, but I have rarely encountered this problem.
Cycling is what is referred to as the Nitrogen cycle. Waste (nitrogenous) from the fish is broken down first from ammonia (NH3, the most toxic) to nitrites (NO2, less toxic) to nitrates (NO3, least toxic- but high amounts can stunt fish growth and lower disease resistance).
At a pH of 6.5, NH3 (ammonia) converts to NH4 (ammonia) which is basically non-toxic to most fish (many ammonia removing chemicals to a similar ion change, as they do NOT actually remove ammonia). If you have plants in your aquarium they will directly consume the ammonia (especially hornwort), thus rendering the NO2 (nitrite) part of the nitrogen cycle null. The danger here is if your pH climbs above 6.5 the ammonia can change to much more toxic NH3 and the aerobic bacteria needed for nitrite consumption will be sparse.
For more about th nitrogen cycling, see this article: AQUARIUM NITROGEN CYCLE
LIVE PLANTS:
Live plants are desirable in my opinion, but many artificial plants can look quite realistic when properly arranged or used in conjunction with live plants. For a beginner live plants are more difficult, but not a lot.
The benefits of live plants are they are great at nitrate removal and keep a natural balance to the aquarium, removing CO2 and adding oxygen (only during daylight). Hornwort is an excellent plant for nitrate removal (even ammonia removal), and is relatively easy to grow. Banana plants (when available) are also a very easy plant.
Here is a list of “easy” beginner plants:
Compacta swords, hornwort, Red wendtii, spiral valis, dwarf subulata, Hygro, Java fern regular or lace.
Be careful with many fish that will “mow down” your plants such as: Silver Dollars, most African cichlids, and even goldfish.
For healthy plants I suggest a substrate of #00 sand mixed with laterite about 3-5 cm deep with a layer of #3 gravel on top about 2 cm deep. This combination works well for plant roots, ease of vacuuming the top layer ONLY (where plant roots are), and for better bio filtration. You can substitute laterite with a sandy top soil (although usually not as good a source of iron), by preparing the soil thus; Gather sandy top soil, add water with a 10/1 bleach solution, mix for a couple of minutes, then rinse (with a de-chlorinator for first rinse) until the water runs relatively clear. The sand that is left is what you mix with your plant roots.
FEEDING:
I recommend feeding high quality fish and plant based foods. Quality ingredients include: spirulina, fish meal, FD Brine Shrimp, shrimp meal, Vitamin C & E, lobster shell.
Fish cannot digest proteins from beef well, and fish get most their energy requirements from fats. Some quality foods include: Omega, Spirulina 20, Ocean Nutrition, Hikari, Sanyu.
Feed you fish two to three times per day what they will consume in three minutes.
Feeding foods high in poor quality proteins can increase your nitrate levels, as an essential ingredient in protein is nitrogen, and if unusable by the fish, it is excreted, entering into the nitrogen cycle.
CLEANING:
You should try and have a schedule of changing 20% (or more) of your water every week. I recommend using a gravel vacuum, you need not remove the fish while using a gravel vacuum. Make sure the water you add back in is the same temperature and ph, and has no chlorine or chloramines.
CHEMISTRY:
Keep your ammonia level at 0, your nitrite at 0, your nitrates below 20-30, and your KH above 80 ppm. Ph depends very much on the fish you are keeping. Discus prefer under a ph below 7.0, while Mbuna African cichlids prefer above 8.0
A very general ph of 7.2 -7.5 works for many community fish. Crushed Coral and/or Wonder Shells can help maintain a high pH when you desire an aquarium with a higher pH, KH, & GH, especially where tap or well water is very acidic (Wonder Shells are much faster at dissolving to the desired KH and add electrolytes crushed coral does not!).
For a lower pH in aquariums where the tap water used is very high (usually 7.8 or above), I have used blends of RO (Reverse Osmosis) water and tap water. The ratio varies with the tap water pH, KH, & GH and the water conditions I want to achieve. With Discus it can be as high as 75% RO. Then to maintain these conditions I use peat in my filters. Note that GH does not affect pH, and magnesium (a major ingredient of GH) is important to fish metabolism. Also note that calcium which is the main factor in KH (which does affect pH!) is also important for fish metabolism and fish health and healing. With the above method of using RO (or DI) water in a blend with tap water and peat, I have still been able to maintain a KH above 80 ppm (for proper calcium absorption), sometimes with additives such Wonder Shells or Calcium Polygluconate.
CONCLUSION:
This is only very general information, there is much more in depth articles about each of these subjects and more available. But these are sound principles to follow, based on 27+ years of aquarium maintenance experience. As new and better methods become available, I regularly update my information to reflect this.
For my more in depth full article:
Aquarium Information
By Carl Strohmeyer
http://www.americanaquariumproducts.com/
wet dry filter acrylic fabrication
Video Rating: 4 / 5
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Aquarium Filters Maintain Healthy Fish And Plants
Jun 30th
Aquarium Filters Maintain Healthy Fish And Plants
Have you ever sat and watched fish swimming gently in the crystal clear water of an aquarium. The entire atmosphere of an office or home can change as it adds a calming soothing ambiance to the environment. The gently trickling sound of an aquarium filter adds to this peaceful surrounding. The use of a good filter can make all the difference in an aquarium both in its appearance as well as for the fish that live there.
Maintenance is a person’s primary concern when wanting to have an aquarium in their home or office; they think that caring for the fish and plant will be too difficult. With the proper aquarium filter fitted in your aquarium it can save you lots of time and energy. The filter does all the hard work for you ensuring your tank is always beautiful and clean. If a person does not have a filter the process can become messy and time consuming as the job becomes more laborious. A person would have to change the water by hand every couple of days. This means they would have to remover the fish to a safe place until the cleaning job was done.
Aquarium Filters Save Time And Energy
A good quality filter can provide the perfect environment for maintaining the life of all your fish and plants. Remember a person can spend a large amount of money on the setup of the tank with beautiful fish, plants and accessories only to have them die very quickly because the quality of the water and air in the tank goes bad. The use of a good aquarium filter can provide the perfect conditions to sustain your fish, plants and their environment
A good aquarium filter will maintain an aquarium in a variety of ways.
- A quality filter works to eliminate the waste from the inside of the aquarium.
- It removes different types of debris from the tank as well. Different filters use some kind of screen or sponge to achieve this task.
- A good filter also removes any kind of chemical build up that might be in the tank.
- A high-quality filter removes or treats any unwanted biological material that is in the tank.
There are different types of materials used in an aquarium filter, and all of these can be most useful for an owner devoted to the care of their beautiful fish.
For more articles and information on home aquariums please visit: http://www.enchantedaquariums.com
I tried turning my pool into a fish aquarium, and my fish keep dying for some reason anyone know why?
Mar 25th
Its a pretty big pool, I moved all of the plants and aquarium decorations into the pool. I gradually moved the fish from the tank into the pool, i thought it would work. I just wanted to swim with my fish. My dad said he’ll talk to the pool store tomorrow. The last time I called the pool store they hung up on me, maybe they think im a little kid. Thank you for all your answers.
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Tropical fish aquarium
Mar 19th
Here is my tropical fish aquarium. This has lots in it, plecs, angels, crabs, frog, loaches, sharks, congos, alsorts. Of course tho most went into hiding when the camera came out.
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