Thanks, Really these are not the best pictures I just want to edit, archive and post them as documentation of what they look like. Yes, the Ludwigia has alternate leaves. Thanks for that determination.
The other night I took some time to get some shots of a real nice plant. This is an Anubias hastifolia that I had growing in my 55-gallon riparium setup.
It is a slow grower. It sprouts a new leaf only every 8 weeks or so. I have it growing in a riparium planter cup. I moved it out of the 55 because it was getting to be too big. I really like the shapes of the leaves and petioles.
I have a shot here of another unusual plant, Cyrtospoerma johnstonii is originally from Southeast Asia. It has these wild leaves.
I have two little divisions of this plant that are growing well, albeit slowly, in riparium planters. The slow growth is advantageous, because mature specimens can be more than 4' tall. This one would make a nice centerpiece for a riparium setup with other Southeast Asia selections.
The background is a wrinkled white bed sheet--I just hung it up to try another different background color.
This image is a montage made with a shot at slower shutter speed, which I used to cut and paste the underwater area. This corrected for my camera's tendency to overemphasize glare and shadow.
Really beautiful tanks, the closest I got to a riparium was putting those really common vine plant cuttings in my tank and letting then extend their roots in.
Those aren't rainbows, but they are shaped like rainbows and swim around in a similar way. They are Ilyodon furcidens (Goodeidae). I caught the original parental fish a few years ago in Mexico and I have had them going ever since. Here is a shot from one of them from after I got them into this tank a couple of weeks ago.
I. furcidens are great aquarium fish and I like them a lot.
Rainbows would be great in a setup like this one because it has a broad footprint with lots of room to swim around.
Those planters are available from Riparium Supply.