Apologies if this is covered in another thread.
As far as fishless cycling goes...if I buy substrate (EcoComplete plant substrate to be specific), should I put the substrate and plants and whatnot in before adding the initial dose of ammonia, or should I completely cycle the tank first and then add substrate/plants/etc.? I'm asking because apparently this particular brand of substrate material contains some sort of bacteria that break down fish waste into plant food and I don't want to screw them up by cycling to create bacteria. If that even makes sense...
As far as CO2...is it necessary? I know that seems like a dumb question, but unless a CO2 diffuser or whatever costs around $20 I'm probably not going to be able to get one. Are there other ways to keep live plants healthy in an aquarium?
In case it helps to know this...I'm in the early planning stages of creating an Amazon River tank. I want to keep a school of Neon Tetras and I was hoping to create an environment as similar to the actual Amazon River as possible. I had a 20-gal tall tank in the past with a bunch of different types of tropical fish but I never really knew what I was doing and ended up giving the whole thing including the fish to a friend of mine when I could no longer maintain it. Now that things are more stable for me I'd like to get into fishkeeping again, and do it the right way this time lol.
As far as fishless cycling goes...if I buy substrate (EcoComplete plant substrate to be specific), should I put the substrate and plants and whatnot in before adding the initial dose of ammonia, or should I completely cycle the tank first and then add substrate/plants/etc.? I'm asking because apparently this particular brand of substrate material contains some sort of bacteria that break down fish waste into plant food and I don't want to screw them up by cycling to create bacteria. If that even makes sense...
As far as CO2...is it necessary? I know that seems like a dumb question, but unless a CO2 diffuser or whatever costs around $20 I'm probably not going to be able to get one. Are there other ways to keep live plants healthy in an aquarium?
In case it helps to know this...I'm in the early planning stages of creating an Amazon River tank. I want to keep a school of Neon Tetras and I was hoping to create an environment as similar to the actual Amazon River as possible. I had a 20-gal tall tank in the past with a bunch of different types of tropical fish but I never really knew what I was doing and ended up giving the whole thing including the fish to a friend of mine when I could no longer maintain it. Now that things are more stable for me I'd like to get into fishkeeping again, and do it the right way this time lol.