It is hard to ID plants out of the water but will take a shot. The top plant I am almost certain is:
Hemigraphis colorata
Family Acanthaceae
Continent Asia
Region South-east Asia
Country of origin Java
Height 12-25 cm
Width 8-15 cm
Light requirements low-high
Temperature 18-28 °C
Hardness tolerance soft-hard
pH tolerance 6-8
Growth medium
Demands medium
A terrarium plant sometimes used in aquariums and goldfish bowls. Can be used as a decorative plant, but only lasts a few months. The good balance of an aquarium is disturbed if there are too many of this type of plant. Not eaten by herbivorous fish.
The above is from the Tropica site.
The bottom pic do not look like anubias to me- normally anubias have a green rhizome that tends to be twiglike not bulbous. Is it possible they are a crypt?
Thanks for the replies so far. I'll take some more pics in-tank later when the lights are on.
Swimfins:
haha yes good to have a good woman. The buys too many tho I always appreciate it but I tell her its just more aquascaping work for me heh. Now, if she dove into the tank to help that'd be different
The first pic is of a purple crinkle plant. It is NOT an aquatic plant. They keep selling it as one, it is frustrating. It is a terrarium plant and will just begin to melt right away in the aquarium. It'll last for a couple weeks though. I would take it back.
The bottom pics look like anubias lanceolata. They are a good find.
The first pic is of a purple crinkle plant. It is NOT an aquatic plant. They keep selling it as one, it is frustrating. It is a terrarium plant and will just begin to melt right away in the aquarium. It'll last for a couple weeks though. I would take it back.
The bottom pics look like anubias lanceolata. They are a good find.
Could the other by crypt ciliata? I have something like it I was trying to ID. But those leaves look longer like anubias congensis.
Lol I guess I was wrong on both counts. d'uh!
figured i'd just update my thread rather then starting a new one. some new plants were brought home again and ive never seen these before. i have a feeling they aren't truly aquatic.