Plant growth hormone?

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FishFanMan

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Jun 13, 2013
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I know no one here will advocate the use of plant growth hormone in our tanks, but what about using it in say a separate tank to get the plant growing then transferring it to the main tank? I hear many people struggling to get their plants to grow just after getting their plants. I'm thinking of trying this as an experiment.
 

JAY973

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Dec 24, 2005
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I've never heard of using hormones for plants.

I would think the problem will still occur of the plant adjusting to the conditions in this case having to adjust more than once.
My logic (assuming I get what your shooting for)
Step 1-you purchase plants (emersed or the tank conditions of another hobbyist)
Step 2-you temporarily place them in a hormone tank (assuming all things being equal lights, fertz, co2 etc. to it's final destination)
Step 3-you move to the permanent tank without hormones

I would think your end results would be the same had you gone from step 1 to step 3 because the plant will still have to adjust to the conditions of not having the hormone. Or is the point of the experiment that hormones work or that it has some benefit to transitioning plants?
 

FishFanMan

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I was thinking if you could get the plant to start actively growing then transfer it to the main tank, it might establish better. I know there are hormones that gardeners use when they plant new plants or plant cuttings.

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SnakeIce

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Uh those are rooting hormones and would be washed off in an underwater situation. It might help with a dry start method, but I'm not thinking it is really needed. I don't know of a plant hormone available for top growth.
 

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Josh Holloway--Be mine!!!
Sep 1, 2003
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CO2, high lights, and ferts would do a better job then hormones.

And of course the right kind of plant helps too.
 

THE V

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Nov 25, 2007
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Ethylene (a gas) is one of the most common plant hormones that triggers many different processes. It's involved with the the transitioning from emmersed to immersed growth.

How about injecting it into the water like CO2 to see if it helps?

AUXIN's (rooting hormone) will likely stunt the growth of the new plants depending upon the species.
 
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