Greetings! I just set up my first heavily planted FW aquarium and thought I'd post here as I want to do all I can to ensure their survival. I've been keeping aquarium pets for years now, but this will be my first heavily planted FW tank. I set the tank up about 3 weeks ago. It's a 46 bowfront and has a Fluval 404 canister. I realize the 404 is a bit strong for a planted tank, but its what I had laying around. Substrate is a mixure of florite and regular gravel, about 4-5" deep. I added some baby angel fish a couple days after that I got from a fellow reef aquarium hobbiest who bred them. To help ease the biological shock, I also stuck an established Bio-wheel 330 HOB filter from another aqaurium on the tank. This was untill yesterday, when I added the plants, and I removed the HOB filter. I figured the oxygenation from the bio-wheels and surface agitation wouldn't help the plants any. So now we are at the present. I've cut back on feeding the angels to almost nothing. And I have no CO2 injection. Here is a photo of what it looks like:
Not the best aquascaping job *yet* I know. :huh:
Now for my questions:
1.) Besides a way to dose C02, what other supplements are really necessary? And would it be more cost effective for me to DIY a C02 injector with a tank and regulator, or dose one of the many C02 liquid additives available on the market... if these even truely work as claimed. Just wondering what people's oppinions are... if these liquid C02 addivites are truely any good or not, and what *other* liquid additives I *should* be dosing to keep the plants lush and healthy.
**I have a bottle of "Natural Aquarium Vital" by Marc Weiss Products. It claims, "the Carbonator for the natural freshwater aquarium with laterite extract! Liquid, time released C02 production as needed by the natural aquarium! No C02 cylinders, controllers or monitoring devices needed!" Being well versed in the reef aquarium hobby, I know to be very suspicous of claims such as this, that claim to be the perfect solution to something like C02 injection. Is there any science guys on here that have scientifically proved or disproved that products like this work or not?
2.) Is 2x96 watts enough light over a 46 bowfront for *most* plants? I know this is a loaded question... but I'm so used to looking at my reef aquarium which has just under 800 watts of lighting over it that I can't help but think 192 watts isn't enough.
3.) Any other suggestions or reccomendations?
Thanks
Alan
Not the best aquascaping job *yet* I know. :huh:
Now for my questions:
1.) Besides a way to dose C02, what other supplements are really necessary? And would it be more cost effective for me to DIY a C02 injector with a tank and regulator, or dose one of the many C02 liquid additives available on the market... if these even truely work as claimed. Just wondering what people's oppinions are... if these liquid C02 addivites are truely any good or not, and what *other* liquid additives I *should* be dosing to keep the plants lush and healthy.
**I have a bottle of "Natural Aquarium Vital" by Marc Weiss Products. It claims, "the Carbonator for the natural freshwater aquarium with laterite extract! Liquid, time released C02 production as needed by the natural aquarium! No C02 cylinders, controllers or monitoring devices needed!" Being well versed in the reef aquarium hobby, I know to be very suspicous of claims such as this, that claim to be the perfect solution to something like C02 injection. Is there any science guys on here that have scientifically proved or disproved that products like this work or not?
2.) Is 2x96 watts enough light over a 46 bowfront for *most* plants? I know this is a loaded question... but I'm so used to looking at my reef aquarium which has just under 800 watts of lighting over it that I can't help but think 192 watts isn't enough.
3.) Any other suggestions or reccomendations?
Alan