Correct: b. jap Yes, drop checker with 4dKH plus bromophnol blue. Looking forward to new shots from you soon then! :headbang2:
Let me know maybe in a short while i can send you blyxa aubertii.
Correct: b. jap Yes, drop checker with 4dKH plus bromophnol blue. Looking forward to new shots from you soon then! :headbang2:
Well done Doc. Meticulously managed without compromising aesthetic appeal. I'm sure there're others who, like me, appreciate your taking the time to outline hardware, water chem, stock species and densities, etc. Very helpful. Cheers,
Greg
Looking really good, Vader. Know you, though, that the vals are going to throw runners, and, given your success with the lawn, I'd say you have about an 80% chance of them filling in really thickly. On the other hand, I have found Val. tortefolia to be highly variable in size. I planted 10" plants in my 110, and they died back and regrew in a patch about 4 to 5" tall. If they stay tall for you and take off, the one behind the triceratops skull and the one beside the manzanita are going to overgrow and dominate the crinium (Gorgeous, those. C. natans, I think). I'd scoot the one to the right further behind the triceratops and let it fill in behind, and I'd scoot the one by the manzanita back a bit further so that it's easier to trim out of the way of the crinium if the runners start heading that way.
Unfortunately, I know precisely bubkis about how blyxa spreads or fails to, so I can't begin to guess about that. If it starts propaging, it would look great to frame your lawn with it, maybe run it out along the front of the Triceratops and around the rotala and into the front right corner, basically extending what you have. Another plant that might really work in there with the blyxa (about the same size) is downoi (which is the Thai name for the plant, and what it generally goes by. Means "little star", but the latin name escapes me at the moment).
A terrific looking tank!