Anyone try this? I am hoping to find a couple of hardy species that will grow in my RES turtle tank. The turtles are quite destructive, and tend to eat or heavily damage most species. So far I have only had luck with one plant in the turtle tank: Anubias Nana. Apparently they don't taste good. For two months the nana's have been doing just fine in low light, no CO2, and constant battering from turtle feet. The other half dozen or so species I have tried have either been eaten, can't tolerate the harsh water conditions, or get uprooted by standard turtle oafishness. Here is what I have tried:
Anachris: eaten and melted
Hairgrass: Uprooted (If it could get a start, this might work)
Java Fern: eaten and torn up by claws (I had high hopes for this one)
Java Moss: pulled out of the fishing line, strewn about tank, may have been chewed on.
Emmersed lily pond plant: eaten
Hedge: (I know its not true aquatic) this sort of works. The turtles love to lay on top of it (even more than their drift wood island) they don't seem to eat it, but it does shed a lot of leaves due to the constant turtle love. I consider hedge as my "distraction" plant: it supposed to keep them from messing with some of the others.
OK, so anyone got any recommendations? I will increase the lighting soon, so don't limit your recommendations to low light plants.
Anachris: eaten and melted
Hairgrass: Uprooted (If it could get a start, this might work)
Java Fern: eaten and torn up by claws (I had high hopes for this one)
Java Moss: pulled out of the fishing line, strewn about tank, may have been chewed on.
Emmersed lily pond plant: eaten
Hedge: (I know its not true aquatic) this sort of works. The turtles love to lay on top of it (even more than their drift wood island) they don't seem to eat it, but it does shed a lot of leaves due to the constant turtle love. I consider hedge as my "distraction" plant: it supposed to keep them from messing with some of the others.
OK, so anyone got any recommendations? I will increase the lighting soon, so don't limit your recommendations to low light plants.