Austin Burgess
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Also, would dark substrate be preferred to play sand?
For the black water look, is using real leaves preferred to fake? I know some professional aquascapers had almond tea to the water in water changes but that seems above my head. What about real vs fake wood?
There are two things to keep in mind. "Blackwater" as the term is generally used in the hobby tends to refer to the very dark tea-colour tinted water, but the parameters of the water are also part of a "blackwater" fish setup. I do nothing to tint the water, but my parameters are identical to blackwater streams, zero GH and KH, and a pH that is so low I cannot even measure it with our aquarium tests because they do not go below 6 (I had a Tetra ppH test that went down to five, and my tanks were at least that low but more likely from the colour even lower).
Organics cause blackwater. The water in such areas of the tropics does not usually (there are always exceptions) come into contact with mineralized rock so the GH and KH are basically zero. But such areas are also full of organic matter; the wood and leaves that are continually decomposing cause CO2 and CO2 creates carbonic acid which lowers the pH. With no GH/KH to buffer this, the pH can become very acidic. A pH of 4-5, and in some waterways in the 3's, is normal. The presence of all these organics in a watercourse that might come into contact with calcareous rock would result in similarly-stained water but with some dissolved mineral content and a higher pH.
Organics are continually accumulating in any aquarium with fish; all the food they eat ends up as organic matter, and various species of bacteria in the substrate (primarily) break this down, producing CO2 and ammonia. Plants readily take this up, which is one reason why even floating plants are so beneficial. This however does not tint the water much, at least it never has in my tanks. Adding dried leaves, wood, and/or peat will add tannins. Wood is usually pretty slow at this and over time you would not likely see much tinting unless you had a tank full of wood, but even then it is not usually much, given that regular substantial partial water changes will remove much of it anyway. Peat is frowned upon these days because it is destroying natural ecosystems, and there are better and more responsible methods. Such as dried leaves. So long as we have trees we will always have dead leaves. I use oak leaves collected from my former back garden; I moved last year but I have a box of plastic bags full of dried leaves that I collected by the hundreds every autumn. I have had my 10g tank turn quite a nice tint of chestnut brown when I used to stuff it with dried oak leaves for the spawning pygmy cories to feed on, and I grew out some Farlowella vitatta fry in this tank. Decomposing leaves are a rich source of infusoria, the ultimate first food for any fry--another advantage of real over fake.
Fake leaves may give you the look but obviously not the bacterial benefits nor the tinting. And the bacterial properties of dried leaves is very beneficial. Some aquarists do add various teas, but I tend to prefer the appearance as much as the results, and nothing is more natural that a substrate littered with bits of wood and layers of dried leaves.
Also, would dark substrate be preferred to play sand?
But that begs the question, can wood and leaves added be from the back yard, or from the LFS?
The help is greatly appreciated!
I thought of another question as well. With the eques pencilfish, I am reading conflicting reports online that they need live food. Is that true in your experience? How would a novice keeper go about that?
Curious, reading up some more on the biotope of glowlights (I’m too far into this now to go back), and they are commonly found alongside Hemigrammus stictus, the Red-base Tetra, and found often on in the flood plains where terrestrial grasses find themselves underwater.
Thoughts on this as a setup in a 20 tall?
So glowlights may be from a couple of different biotopes?The species is primarily in tributaries of the Essequibo River, in forested areas. During the wet season the rivers/streams flood the surrounding forest. Flooded forest is another aquascape, but here you obviously need plants. From the photos I have seen, the forest is quite thick.
While something like jungle Val would be ideal it gets way too big for a 20 gallon tank. Corkscrew Val stays a bit smaller and will give a good grass effect. Not sure how well vals will do in a black water set up as they need bright light and do better in higher ph with higher gh. One could try dwarf hair grass though it requires high light as well. A good low light grass like plant is cryptcorne balenase (spelling) it has thinner leaves though not native to south america. Maybe a thin leafed saggitaria or thin leafed chain sword might do well. Another low light plant one could use in background is a narrow leaf java fern again not native to S america and needs a little calcium as the leaves are harder than alot of other leaves. Not sure what else would work in dark water bio tope as a back ground grass reed typeCurious, reading up some more on the biotope of glowlights (I’m too far into this now to go back), and they are commonly found alongside Hemigrammus stictus, the Red-base Tetra, and found often on in the flood plains where terrestrial grasses find themselves underwater.
Thoughts on this as a setup in a 20 tall?
So glowlights may be from a couple of different biotopes?