Moss mesh/structures?

It is actully safe even when wet from what I have seen... It forms a skin right away so it does not spread out into the tank. I have only used it in the tank with water once myself on an emergency repair and suffered no loss of shrimp or snails. I had to glue down a java fern real close to the bottom of a piece of wood because it had come loose from the thread and I could not drain the tank that far. I but a dab on the roots of the fern stuck it in the tank and pressed it in place which broke the surface film exposing more glue and allowed it to bond to the wood. I do know reefers have done the same thing put a dab on the foot of a coral wait a second for the film to form place in tank and press into place breaking the film hold a second for it to bond let go. And we know how delicate reef tanks can be...

Superglue was created to seal battlefield wounds instantly so it is safe for that. I have personal experience gluing a finger tip back on and the doctor just looked at it chipped away some of the glue checked my shot record sent me home. He said superglue kills the bacteria in the wound and is porous so the skin can grow back with less scaring.

I just glued a load of moss down and a few baby ferns and filled a tank tonight as soon as the water settles I will try and get a picture up to see.
 
I'm not sure I could bring my self to use crazy glue quite so heavily. If it's safe for the hard stuff, then great.

On a related topic to the thread, does anyone know of a good looking bladderwort similar to graminifolia that'll take a high hardness and very high pH... maybe lake tanganyika like? The carniverous part is a prerequisite. Don't ask, it won't make sense until it's done :p
 
I used to use mesh and thread but once I got frustrated and started using superglue I never looked back..... :-)

This tanks sounds real interesting you must supply pictures when done....
 
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