In a planted tank, is there such a thing as not enough nitrates for the plants?
I'm still working out how much to actually feed this tank since I've never had this many fish in one setup before. I'm aiming for feeding what they can consume in about 1 minute, but so far they have been hogs and the only thing that lasts more than 20 or 30 seconds are the sinking algae wafers, which take most of the evening to be eaten. I think this is due to the fact that they need to soften before my cories or mollies can get anything off of them.
Anyhow, I test my nitrates fairly regularly and I've never had them above 5. Is this going to cause issues? The plants are extremely slow growing, but it's also a low wattage setup (less than 2 WPG), and they are all low-light plants, so I'm not terribly concerned about fast growth, but want to be sure I'm not going to kill off the plants I spent all my $$ on.
I've got hornwort, crypts, guppy grass, java moss, java fern (which has some brown tips on some of the leaves), dwarf sag (which sometimes seems to die off and then come back), and something else that at the moment i cannot remember the name of (and which isn't looking terribly healthy). I'll go back and hunt for my thread when I bought these and see if I can't locate the name of it.
It's a 75 gal setup with pool filter sand as a substrate, and a variety of quartz rocks for decor in addition to the plants. I don't have any other "fake" decor or anything in it. I'm trying to do the "natural" look in this tank.
I've got 7 adult mollies, and a few molly fry, 15 red-eye tetras and 12 julii cories. I probably could fit more fish, but I'm happy with the amount that I've got, and don't want to overcrowd them. I like that they have room to swim and enjoy themselves.
Anyhow - if I should be worried about the nitrate being so low, is there anything I can so to help it out? The tank is almost fully stocked. I have one more fish to add (red spot gold severum) and then I'm done adding fish.
I'm still working out how much to actually feed this tank since I've never had this many fish in one setup before. I'm aiming for feeding what they can consume in about 1 minute, but so far they have been hogs and the only thing that lasts more than 20 or 30 seconds are the sinking algae wafers, which take most of the evening to be eaten. I think this is due to the fact that they need to soften before my cories or mollies can get anything off of them.
Anyhow, I test my nitrates fairly regularly and I've never had them above 5. Is this going to cause issues? The plants are extremely slow growing, but it's also a low wattage setup (less than 2 WPG), and they are all low-light plants, so I'm not terribly concerned about fast growth, but want to be sure I'm not going to kill off the plants I spent all my $$ on.

I've got hornwort, crypts, guppy grass, java moss, java fern (which has some brown tips on some of the leaves), dwarf sag (which sometimes seems to die off and then come back), and something else that at the moment i cannot remember the name of (and which isn't looking terribly healthy). I'll go back and hunt for my thread when I bought these and see if I can't locate the name of it.
It's a 75 gal setup with pool filter sand as a substrate, and a variety of quartz rocks for decor in addition to the plants. I don't have any other "fake" decor or anything in it. I'm trying to do the "natural" look in this tank.
I've got 7 adult mollies, and a few molly fry, 15 red-eye tetras and 12 julii cories. I probably could fit more fish, but I'm happy with the amount that I've got, and don't want to overcrowd them. I like that they have room to swim and enjoy themselves.

Anyhow - if I should be worried about the nitrate being so low, is there anything I can so to help it out? The tank is almost fully stocked. I have one more fish to add (red spot gold severum) and then I'm done adding fish.