Saturday, May 25, 2013
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Even though I had lots of hitchhiking pond snails I read that these were very good for Algae control and would not reproduce in fresh water. In their natural environment the adults live in fresh water but lay their eggs in salt water and the young eventually migrate back to fresh water. They are very good at cleaning algae off plants but could not control the hair algae. So I heard that theSiamese Algae Eater was the only fish that would eat hair algae. So I brought them in.
This was not a good idea. They eat some algae but prefer fish food. They also grow to six inches and are aggressive towards other inhabitants when it comes to chasing them away from a food source. They can't do any damage with their little sucker mouths but they can intimidate smaller fish. There is also the issue of my very heavily planted tank which once I put fish in are going to be very difficult to remove. Then I read a really great book. The Ecology of the Planted Aquarium. I wish I had read this before I started an Aquarium. It is excellent, a bit on the academic side but still full of practical advice on setting up and maintaining the ecology of the Planted Aquarium backed up by the Science which she explains and cites the literature. I noticed after about three weeks that the Algae I was having an issue with was starting to die back being controlled by the plants dominating the Aquatic environment. I have though one mass that has taken up a large area of the surface. Removing it is difficult. I found away of taking a chop stick and swirling it through the algae mass I could tangle up the algae and then turning the chopstick I could wrap it up and pull it out one mass of slime at a time. I 've decided to try a tact based on the science behind this wonderful book. I am taking specimens of Water Lettuce, Pistia stratiodes, and planting it right in the Algae mass. Water Lettuce has leaves that float on top of the water being able to take advantage of the greater volume of dissolved CO2 in the atmosphere. In the case of my Aquarium with CO2 injection they will be getting a rich environment of CO2 that will be bubbling up from the water and trapped under the glass cover. The roots going down in to the Algae mass will be taking up the nutrients and hopefully starving the Algae, the leaves of the Water Lettuce will shade the Algae from the light. Should be interesting to see how this works and if I can ever catch those two pesky Siamese Algae Eaters that have already increased in size after two weeks.
Sunday, May 12, 2013
The Aquarium at 4 weeks. My first introduction of fish. I was primarily going with algae eating creatures like snails, shrimp and algae eating fish like Otocinclus and the Siamese Algae eater. At three weeks though the impact of the plants on the suppression of Algae growth became evident. If I waited another few days I probably wouldn't have bought so many Algae eating fish. I like the Otocinclus catfish because they are small and busy little cleaners. The Siamese Algae Eaters though I should have passed on they get large and I think their aggressive especially around feeding time. The Aquarium is so heavily planted I probably couldn't get them out with a net without damaging the plant scape so I guess I'll just have to deal with them. The Amano Shrimp though not all that attractive are very busy around the tank and seem to be doing really well. The Caridina Shrimp are great. I've ordered some more online. I am looking forward to them breeding.
Sunday, May 05, 2013
Saturday, May 04, 2013
Clithion diadema
With the Algae issues with the new Aquarium. I've been breaking some of my rules about when I'd start introducing animals but I have to get something in there to control. I've gone with these Nerite snails from Indonesia that cannot reproduce in freshwater so they won't take over the tank. Have also got Amano Shrimp and two species of Algae eating fish.