You are correct star_rider.
Some of the Walstad camp advocate using CO2 while others are purists. I say if it can help, use it.
Some of the Walstad camp advocate using CO2 while others are purists. I say if it can help, use it.
http://www.aquariacentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=108172
This is his tank from about a month ago, with the stocking listed you should of had water quality issues, there isn't many plants in the tank at the time of that post, not enough to eliminate tank maintenance, i would check the water parameters again just to be sure, you have enough stock to create a good bio load, and not enough plants to take the load off...![]()
Yes you can. However the bio load wont necessarily guarantee that you are getting the proper levels of ALL nutrients. If the plants are happy and show no signs of any defeciencys, you are golden. You cant mess with success right?
Adding crushed coral will only add calcium back to your system. it is being depleted by your CO2 and that is why the low ph.
Do you use liquid test kits or the strips?
Sure, it's handled in nature... in open systems. Aquariums, obviously, are closed systems. I see what you're saying if the bioload is light, but in most cases people don't keep a light bioload... myself included.![]()
I see where you are coming from, but water changes are a safer bet, to me.
Ticking time bomb? Its gonna blow up one day?
Just keep doing what you are doing. Watch your fish and plants and use some common sense. If things are going great....."If it aint broke dont fix it"
Otherwise if you see problems start to arise, dont be afraid to do a water change and post here for some help.
Good job using the liquid test kits, the strips are horrible.
For all you who are pressing the issue of water changes. Go to a river or lake if you have one in the area. Take a test kit with you and test your local waters and compare that to your results from your tank at home. How clear is the water in your tank vs. the huge body of water.
Im not advocating that everybody stop doing water changes to their tanks. Certainly some tanks need it more often than others. Often times people tend to get caught up in all the technology in this hobby, which is a great thing. However there are practices out there that people have been using successfully for hundreds and hundreds of years. One persons success could be the next persons downfall and one system is definitely not best for everybody.
In the other "photo" thread the OP stated it was his first tank in 25 years making it seem like it was a new tank, but in this thread he stated the tanks been running for 2 years ... Possibly that is a different tank? The fish surely dont appear to be 2 years old.
Hmmmm you are correct, something doesnt quite seem right.