Bruce Leyland-Jones
Fish Aficionado
All of this looks really good, but I have a horrible and persistently nagging feeling that some plant roots might be toxic.
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Interesting the Severums nibble. My goldfish ignore the pothos roots & these guys have made quick work of many aquatic plants.I can offer a little information on this topic. In truth, almost all Epipremnum and riparian plants have that 'toxin' throughout the entire plant, Calcium Oxalate (although the greatest % is in the leaves). It actually is not toxic per se but rather, it forms caustic crystals that can damage some creatures tissues who attempt to eat it.
Calcium Oxalate remains solid in a solution where the PH is 4.5 or higher. It cannot dissolve in higher PH's such that it never goes into solution in a normal aquarium.
In fact, you can test this yourself inexpensively with most home urinalysis test strips. The "Calcium Test" on most of these test for Oxalic Acid as well as Calcium content. Calcium Oxalate can only exist in water if Oxalic Acid is present, as the latter indicates the Calcium Oxalate has begun to dissolve:
Test for Calcium Oxalate
As the above is calibrated in mmol's, it needs conversion to PPM but we don't actually need an absolute value as we're only seeking to know if any Calcium Oxalate has leeched into the water, so all you really need is a relative value. Test the water before and after the addition of the pothos after 2-3 weeks and see if any Calcium Oxalate is present. After a year, I still read 0 change on this.
Still, I feel the best approach with these plants is to do as Jenny Solano did and wash the roots vs cutting them. Even if leaching were possible, (and you can test for this as above) the probability would be much greater with cuttings than roots. That adds additional protection against leeching. But again, this cannot occur above PH=4.5.
This is entirely anecdotal but these guys (the Severums that is, the Acaras don't care!) have been eating pothos roots for over a year and all I've seen is the pothos grows a little more slowly than in my other tanks:
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This section is not entirely correct. all plant Aquatic and non-aquatic will consume ammonia, urea (CO(NH2)2, and nitrate. They only difference is that it takes little to no energy for plants to use ammonia or urea but using nitrate does require expending a little more energy to extract it. Anubis and many plants used in aquarium are actually terrestrial plants.They evolved with leaves under the sun, and in turn, enjoy more light energy which allows them to directly process nitrates more efficiently. Aquatic plants first absorb ammonia and will attempt to expend more energy if need be photosynthetically to consume nitrates so long as enough light energy is present.
There is a very good reason why these big filters failed . Too Much oxygen. to insure we have enough oxygen in the water for fish we want good surface water flow. However for nitrate consuming bacteria you want low oxygen conditions. And probably the bet way to achieve that is low water flow (less than 1GPM) through a sand bead filter. When the oxygenated water from the tank enters the filter conventional bacteria will use the available oxygen to consume the organics in the water. As they do so oxygen levels will fall and CO2 level will increase. So for each in of travel through the filter oxygen levels will drop. Eventually all most all of the oxygen and has been replaced with CO2. At that point in the filter nitrate bacteria start consuming the nitrate because it is the only available source of oxygen left to break down organics. The bacteria will continue to consume nitrates and organics as long as oxygen levels remain low.One example being a massive 900gph canister filter with some 6L of media capacity and TWO of these filters with a total of 12L of media, still cannot support enough media for effective anaerobic colonies for a ‘typically stocked 125G cichlid tank’ for significant nitrate reduction.
and some plant roots are yummy to snails, my mystery snail wrecked a plant i was trying to growAll of this looks really good, but I have a horrible and persistently nagging feeling that some plant roots might be toxic.
Hi, I added a decent sized pothos, a smallish monstera and 4 tall Lucky Bamboos to my cichlid tank. As I recall, you observed nitrate reduction from pothos 2 weeks and 4 with the “bamboo.”I had the good fortune of limited access to an ichthyologist and marine biologist who operate an LFS here in Southern California and work at an aquarium in San Diego. We began what became almost a full year of informal but largely quantified gatherings of data on nitrate reduction techniques and efficacy. Some is unfortunately anecdotal but much of it was quantified in a way that some Aquarists may find helpful.
Filtration options for nitrate reduction, can be difficult, expensive and surprisingly fragile. The aerobic bacteria consume ammonia and nitrite, the anaerobic consume nitrates...but the latter are fussy eaters! Nitrate reduction via filtration often has little to no effect as it can take 6-8 months to build a sufficient anaerobic colony to actually reduce nitrates meaningfully...and this requires enormous volumes of media.
Far more than would be need for the rest of the nitrogen cycle!
We began cultivating anaerobic colonies in pond media and found the amount of media required for an efficacious anaerobic colony to be far greater than we hoped for or that would be practical. Nitrate reduction via anaerobic colony filtration is VERY inefficient and requires voluminous amounts of media for meaningful nitrate reduction.
One example being a massive 900gph canister filter with some 6L of media capacity and TWO of these filters with a total of 12L of media, still cannot support enough media for effective anaerobic colonies for a ‘typically stocked 125G cichlid tank’ for significant nitrate reduction.
One such filter has ample amounts of flow and media capacity for aerobic colonies (the bacteria that removes ammonia and nitrite), but for anaerobic colonies (the bacteria that consumes nitrates), you’d need FOUR such canisters (25L pond media or similar) to have enough media to reduce nitrates just 10PPM!
I also find anaerobic colonies are MUCH more fragile than aerobic such that they are easily killed by accident. I cannot quantify this but I have experienced the results and I’ve yet to successfully neutralize rechargable media well enough to NOT reduce the anaerobic colony count.
In fact, re-using rechargable (with bleach) media that was then soaked in dechlorinator for 24 hours still killed off almost 6 out of 8 months growth of the anaerobic colony! Yet the aerobic bacteria saw no drop in population.
(I believe Pond Guru mentions a similar test and results in some of his videos)
I went a different route after months of trying to get meaningful nitrate reduction in the filters. Instead of trying to get nitrate reduction with more filters or additional media, I tried Epipremnum/riparian plants: roots in the water, leaves out the top.
I replaced part of the glass with plastic lighting grid to support the roots and stalks:
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I had initially added Epipremnum/riparian plants primarily because I thought it was pretty. I had NO idea the degree of nitrate reduction this would have. I was not prepared for the results.
One tank was a 120G heavily stocked with adult, SA cichlids, 12 Acaras, 2 large plecos and 8 Severums in this case:
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A 2nd tank, a 125G was heavily stocked with larger fishes, plecos, Oscars and pacu’s (I’ve since had to rehome my beloved pacu’s as they were approaching 18″ in length!):
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The following are before and after a two week period with Epipremnum/riparian plants above in these tanks:
-The 120 typically reached circa 40ppm after a week when I’d do a WC.
-Inside of two weeks, the 120G at 40ppm has yet to ever reach 10ppm.
-The 125 was more problematic with nitrates I was having enormous difficulty controlling. This tank (prior to rehoming the pacu’s) would typically reach 80ppm-160ppm inside of 1 week (!) such that I was performing 2-3 WC’s/week until I could rehome them!
-Same time frame, the circa 80ppm-160ppm tank had still not risen to even 30ppm!
There was also little question that the nitrates fell further still once we installed grow lights. This is not shown in the pictures as they were not installed yet;
-With the lights on 12-16 hours/day or so, the 120 dropped from 10ppm to 5ppm, or possibly 0, it’s that difficult to read.
-The 125 dropped to 10ppm and has yet to ever reach 20ppm since adding the grow lights.
There are two properties to be mindful of in play and it’s entirely photosynthetic. Terrestrial plants use more nitrates vs ammonia than aquatic plants due to the availability of greater photosynthetic energy. They evolved with leaves under the sun, and in turn, enjoy more light energy which allows them to directly process nitrates more efficiently. Aquatic plants first absorb ammonia and will attempt to expend more energy if need be photosynthetically to consume nitrates so long as enough light energy is present.
The latter is more efficacious when the lighting is stronger which is not optimal for most aquatic plants nor the fish as the efficacy of nitrate consumption is quite related to the amount of light the plants are exposed to. Naturally submerged plants would see diminished light and evolve accordingly. But terrestrial plants evolved for this environment.
I used pothos and monstera in my tanks as well as Lucky Bamboo in a 3rd tank. A single, $20 pothos plant has virtually eliminated nitrates in the 120 and the same with the 125 since rehoming the pacu’s:
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The big (literally and numerically) surprise was the dracaena or Lucky Bamboo. The pothos reveled its full potential in under 2 weeks. Lucky Bamboo took longer to display results, about 4 weeks vs only 2 weeks for pothos, but the 'bamboo' in particular has reduced nitrates so greatly, I’m not confident I can measure any at all with a liquid test kit now:
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In my disbelief, I went out and bought a fresh liquid test kit to see if mine had spoiled but again, NO nitrates! A fully stocked SA cichlid tank with 0 nitrates? It sounded crazy to me but of all of the plants I’ve tried, Lucky Bamboo is the nitrate eating champion thus far.
What the image does not show is their growth. In case you were wondering where all those nitrates went, the Lucky Bamboo has grown from 24" stalks to now 6' in height!
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One topic that will no doubt be raised and rightfully so, is the toxicity of certain plants and their utility in an aquarium. In particular, pothos is known to be toxic to some animals.
But in truth, nearly ALL Epipremnum/riparian plants, even monstera have this same toxin throughout the entire plants, leaves and roots. The toxin is Calcium Oxalate. It's not actually toxic to fish due to it's insolubility as it requires a very acidic environment to leach into the water as it becomes soluble at PH = 4.5. Above 4.5 it's remains crystalline which is the actual issue for dogs and cats as the crystals can cause irritation or sores in mammals.
But even if it contains any toxins, if your PH is above 4.5, it cannot leach into the water as it's insoluble.
Admittedly we performed no tests on this as the LFS owners have actually not seen an incident of toxicity with Epipremnum/riparian plants in any of their aquariums nor their customers. In truth, even if it were toxic, the leaching ability can only occur when the plant is cut AND the PH is below 4.5.
I don't bother with rooting cuttings. I just wash the roots and let them drape into the tank through the plastic lighting grid. Of all my fishes, only the Severums eat the roots (and the plecos eat the algae on the roots). I have seen my Severums eat the roots for years without incident:
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While it may not appeal to everyone, a single Epipremnum/riparian plant can remove virtually all the nitrates directly from the water column if given enough time (weeks). I wish this could be more extensive and exhaustive but given the limitations of our testing, one thing I can say with confidence is there's no greater nitrate reduction one can get for a freshwater tank for $20!
The primary variable is nutrients and growth. Plants will not consume nitrogen if they cannot grow. Plants use nitrogen to make DNA and other compounds involved in growth. If the plant is not growing or growing slowly nitrogen consumption will be minimal to low. Other than nitrogen 13 other elements are needed for growth. If you just run out of one growth will stop and the other nutrients such as nitrogen can build up.Is uptake time dependent solely upon root volume? I have yet to see results. It’s been maybe 3 weeks. Would more roots increase uptake, or are other variables involved?
Just a note Pothos plats are the of the same family as Anubis. I did put my one in my tank experimentally some time ago. It didn't suffer any shock at all and immediently started to grow. But at that time I was making my own fertilizer and was confident that i had all nutrients available in my tank. Based on my experience most of the shock people report seeing in aquatic plants is do too the plant adjusting from getting all its utreints from nutrient rich soil to much lower nutrients levels in aquariums.That looks beautiful! This is anecdotal but for example, in my 75G, I have 10, 2' stalks (originally, now 6'), an anthurium and an entire pothos plant. Each time I added one, it drooped for 2-3 weeks before coming out of 'shock' if you will.
I would recommend not using Flourish. it is basically deficient in copper, zinc, and Molybdenum and didn't work in my RO water tank. I basically confirmed that in my own tan by making my own fertilizer using the same ingredients that are used in Flourish. I basically had to use about 20 times the amount of copper and about 30 time the amount of zinc that was in the bottle. And I had to dose Molybdenum separately because I found it was not compatible with the other ingredients. What I am using now is very similar to what is in the GLA product I recommend. The ingredients GLA uses are not toxic at the recommended dry dose of 1/64 tsp per 10 gallons. But if you are still concerned I am using a dose about 1/5 of what GLA recommends in my 5 gallon shrimp tank.Someone gave me a bushel of chemicals that includes Seachem’s Flourish. I only used it once, given an aversion to adding anything to the tanks. I need to get past thIs ASAP as my terrestial & aquatic plant inventory is rapidly
By “first new growth“ do you mean leaves or roots?That looks beautiful! This is anecdotal but for example, in my 75G, I have 10, 2' stalks (originally, now 6'), an anthurium and an entire pothos plant. Each time I added one, it drooped for 2-3 weeks before coming out of 'shock' if you will. I didn't see any nitrate use until I saw the first new growth. Then it really takes off. As they grow, nitrates slowly drop until as said above, you don't have enough to maintain growth. I didn't see 0 nitrates in that tank until month-8. All I saw at that point was slower growth.
Although a good idea, I wouldn't worry about adding nutrients right now based on what happened here as your plants are still small and they will grow a great deal over the next few months. I wish I could find it but there's a 55G with pothos on reddit with 25' vines!