| El Natural Diana Walstad's low-maintenance, soil-based 'El Natural' method for keeping plants and fish. |  | |
07-01-2009, 08:37 AM
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#1 (permalink)
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Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Houston, TX, USA
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iTrader Positive Rating: 100% Plant Points: 140700 | Green Water in El Natural So, you aren't supposed to do alot of water changes for NPT's, but what about green water? The one I set up for my daughter gets to looking like pea soup in 1 week's times after 80% water changes. Am i just making things worse by adding so much 'fresh' water so often?
Do I just wait it out for a few months, or do I continue heavy water changes until the water stays clear of green water blooms? Since it's a natural set-up, I want to do the least artificial 'combat' possible. However, I'm not opposed to taing extreme measures if I have to.
-Dave
Tank is a 12 gallon hex, 1.5" "loamy clay" soil substrate capped with .5 - .75" gravel, heavily planted, no floaters (might be my problem? ) , more fish than I'd feel comfortable putting in a non-planted tank (also may be a problem? - 6 Black Skirts, 4 adult Platy, 1 Bristlenose, 20+ platy fry, a dozen Blue Pearl shrimp, MANY tiny pond snails)
**NOTE: There are NO other algae issues AT ALL in this tank. Only Green Water. |
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07-01-2009, 01:44 PM
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#2 (permalink)
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Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Near San Francisco
Posts: 467
Plant Points: 24050 | Re: Green Water in El Natural Blackout is about the most natural 'algacide' that I know of.
UV Sterilizer will work, too, and not harm the beneficial organisms.
Floating plants will create a natural 'blackout'. When they get too dense you can remove half of them, allow more light into the tank to help the other plants. If (when) algae comes back, allow the floaters to cover the surface for a while. Floating plants remove lots of nutrients, too.
Be best to figure out what triggered it, though, or else it can come back. |
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07-01-2009, 02:19 PM
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#3 (permalink)
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Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Nacogdoches, Texas
Posts: 264
iTrader Positive Rating: 100% Plant Points: 15350 | Re: Green Water in El Natural Just out of curiosity, when did the pea soup form compared to when you set the tank up and how long has it been this way? I don't have the answers to your question, I just want to take notes in case this happens to my ACF tank. |
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07-01-2009, 02:35 PM
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#4 (permalink)
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Join Date: May 2009 Location: redondo beach, ca
Posts: 58
Plant Points: 3650 | Re: Green Water in El Natural what are the leading causes of green water. when i set up my 20 g. npt. the water was sort of a greenish, brackish color the minute i finished filling the tank with tap water. this is kind of fast for greenwater infestation isn't it? if not what else could it be. and more importantly how do i clear the water. there are several live plants plus a bunch of corie catfishes in the tank |
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07-01-2009, 05:01 PM
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#5 (permalink)
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Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Houston, TX, USA
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iTrader Positive Rating: 100% Plant Points: 140700 | Re: Green Water in El Natural Okay, so from what I'm reading here and elsewhere, floating plants are the best option.
To answer gr8nguyn1, green water is caused by too high light + ammonia among other things.
Mudboots, I'm going to use floating plants to combat this. It's been going on for over a month and now humbletex's tank is doing the same thing. Neither of us have floaters right now. Between you and me  I"d recommend something that won't get eaten by the average fish, such as Red Root Floater or Salvinia. Maybe Lemna major? The mollies that Dustin and Rita have ate all the Mosquito Fern and Lemna minor. What do you think? Didn't you recently collect some floaters?
By the way, if you'll be in Bryan Saturday, I'll bring that light fixture for your 20 gal. And you can maybe bring me some floating plants for Rita.
Diana K, I think it was triggered by a sloppy job filling up the tank whenit was first set up a couple months ago, so organics got into the water column. The only thing that makes me suspicious as to whether that may or may not be true is that fact that I've been changing water heavily. So it seems like I would have cleared that up? I do have a very thin gravel layer compared to most NPT's.
-Dave
Last edited by davemonkey : 07-01-2009 at 05:23 PM.
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07-01-2009, 05:57 PM
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#6 (permalink)
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Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Nacogdoches, Texas
Posts: 264
iTrader Positive Rating: 100% Plant Points: 15350 | Re: Green Water in El Natural Yes, I'll be in Bryan so bring on the wattage. On the floaters, I collected 3 species of Lemna and it turns out that the mosquito fish I collected love to eat them and tear them up, leaving naked root pieces lingering all over the place. I'll bring you what I have left. With your wattage they should reproduce pretty quick. Also, I have to go to Linden tomorrow and will pass the Big Cypress Creek bottom, so I might hop off in there a while and see if I can't find some goodies to share with anyone who'd be interested in whatever diseases and toxins I can muster up. |
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07-01-2009, 10:41 PM
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#7 (permalink)
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Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Near San Francisco
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Plant Points: 24050 | Re: Green Water in El Natural Sunlight and fertilizer is about the only way I have managed to grow green water. I was culturing some Daphnia and they do eat green water algae, but I was having a hard time growing it.
Old tank water by itself did not work (and this was the water that I had rinsed filter media in, really high level of organics).
Perhaps when you stirred up the substrate there was also some fertilizer in it?
gr8nguyen, A new set up should not grow green water algae so fast, but there are no other green cloudy water issues.
Hetertrophic bacteria will grow very fast in a new set up, and can cloud (white or slightly grey-white) the water in just a couple of days. This bacteria explosion will settle down pretty fast, too, and the cloudiness usually goes away in a week or less.
pH issues can cloud the water. If you are using some sort of pH altering materials you can get cloudy water (also, usually white or slightly grey). Some of the materials seem to linger for quite a while, perhaps in the substrate, and re-cloud the water with each water change until they are sufficiently diluted.
Very fine bubbles in the water can also look cloudy, but they usually out gas overnight. These bubbles can be a problem for fish, though. The bubbles start as individual molecules of gases, kept that way as long as the water is in the pipes. When the water is released from the pipes the molecules join together to form bubbles. If these bubbles form in the gills or other delicate areas it is bad for the fish.
If this is the cause of the cloudiness then in the future you will need to run the water into a bucket or barrel (depends on how much you need) and let it out gas before adding it to the tank. |
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07-02-2009, 06:10 AM
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#8 (permalink)
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Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Houston, TX, USA
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iTrader Positive Rating: 100% Plant Points: 140700 | Re: Green Water in El Natural Quote:
Originally Posted by Diana K Sunlight and fertilizer is about the only way I have managed to grow green water...Perhaps when you stirred up the substrate there was also some fertilizer in it?
| Diana K, I think you are on to something. This tank does get sunlight from a window (although humbletex's does not) and I used yard soil which may have had some fertilizer in it (although it would have been pretty old by then).
Mudboots, let this be a lesson learned by someone else's mistakes. Don't dig around in your yard unless you know for sure, and don't use potting soil with fertilizers in it. It sure would be a downer to have 125 gallons of Pea Soup.
So, now to combat the nutrient-flooded water column. I do believe that some floating plants (Salvinia, duckweed, Red-Root Floater, etc... ) , along with a couple months of patience, should do the trick.
More thoughts or suggestions?
-Dave |
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07-02-2009, 06:28 AM
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#9 (permalink)
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Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Nacogdoches, Texas
Posts: 264
iTrader Positive Rating: 100% Plant Points: 15350 | Re: Green Water in El Natural Yep; 125 gallons of pea soup would be frustrating, plus my wife would kill me because I keep telling her how pretty it's going to look once it's been set up for a month or so.
I'll bring you some Lemna this weekend. If you have any other species bring me a sample, as Lemna is not working out for me (the "guppies"). Perhaps after I get the new light fixture on there this will change, but for now it's a mess. |
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07-02-2009, 11:31 AM
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#10 (permalink)
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 168
iTrader Positive Rating: 100% Plant Points: 12650 | Re: Green Water in El Natural I have always found adding a spare HOB filter with nothing but a sack of activated carbon in it helps with the overload of organics in the water. Change it often.
I also noticed that large water changes just seemed to be feeding it so I backed off the volume I change when I get an outbreak like that. |
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