Plants purify the water for my fish breeding setup, so they HAVE to be good growers. Today, I compiled a list of plants that I have been using in my guppy tanks for last 6 months and that are growing well. Bacopa caroliniana, Water Sprite, Amazon Swordplant, Vallisneria spiralis, Sagittaria graminae, Sagittaria subulata, Frogbit, Hornwort, Duckweed, and Water Lettuce (Pistia stratiotes). I did include some slow-growers (Anubias nana and a couple Cryptocoryne), but they are strictly supplemental.
Lately, I have noticed way too many hobbyists starting tanks with a whole bunch of poor growers (many Cryptocoryne, etc).
In the old days (20th Century), you didn't have many plant species to choose from. You didn't have CO2 injection, so generally everyone had good growers. Now the market is flooded with poor growers--plants that don't grow well unless they get artificial fertilizers and CO2 injection. These plants are not efficient at extracting CO2 and nutrients from the water or-like many stem plants-they can't use bicarbonates as an alternate carbon source.
My other gripe is that people are setting up tanks with soil but without good-growing, rooted plants. There's absolutely no point in using soil, if you only plant poor growers or ones (stem plants) that don't have a decent root system.
This is all a sad outgrowth of aquascapers using plants for artistic purposes and/or plant connoisseurs looking for the "latest fad species." Beginning hobbyists have to wade through the confusion to find plants that will do well in an NPT.
Attached are pictures of four of my fish-breeding tanks filled with good growers. I've stuck all the rooted plants in pots with soil so I can catch the fish more easily. I depend on plants to keep my fish healthy. That way, I can stuff the fish full of food and not have to worry about changing water every day.
APCer's feel free to add to this list!
Lately, I have noticed way too many hobbyists starting tanks with a whole bunch of poor growers (many Cryptocoryne, etc).
In the old days (20th Century), you didn't have many plant species to choose from. You didn't have CO2 injection, so generally everyone had good growers. Now the market is flooded with poor growers--plants that don't grow well unless they get artificial fertilizers and CO2 injection. These plants are not efficient at extracting CO2 and nutrients from the water or-like many stem plants-they can't use bicarbonates as an alternate carbon source.
My other gripe is that people are setting up tanks with soil but without good-growing, rooted plants. There's absolutely no point in using soil, if you only plant poor growers or ones (stem plants) that don't have a decent root system.
This is all a sad outgrowth of aquascapers using plants for artistic purposes and/or plant connoisseurs looking for the "latest fad species." Beginning hobbyists have to wade through the confusion to find plants that will do well in an NPT.
Attached are pictures of four of my fish-breeding tanks filled with good growers. I've stuck all the rooted plants in pots with soil so I can catch the fish more easily. I depend on plants to keep my fish healthy. That way, I can stuff the fish full of food and not have to worry about changing water every day.
APCer's feel free to add to this list!
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