George Farmer
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I haven't contacted my water supplier yet. Where do you live?
gf225 said:I haven't contacted my water supplier yet. Where do you live?
gf225 said:Just a thought but wouldn't the PO4 level be higher through the tap than at the supply end. I would think the water may take up phosphates from the pipe's protective coatings - or am I talking rubbish?
gf225 said:So I was talking rubbish then, thought so. Cheers Iggy.
No worries pal.iggy01 said:gf225 said:So I was talking rubbish then, thought so. Cheers Iggy.
No! I didn't say you were talking rubbish
There's bound to be phosphate in the old pipework also.
Thanks for the tip but if you read through this entire thread you'll understand more on the reasons why I haven't done that. In part I put the outbreak down to an actual LACK in nutrients - Nitrates mainly.spiffymeister said:My one tip will probably to stop fertilizing since its probalby an excess in nutrients. If al else failsd, use an antibiotic that will kill it.
Thanks again for the advice but -spiffymeister said:Oh, then I suggest not to do too much water changes. Plants love fishwastes especially ammonia.
Or, feed the fishes more(Use food that doesnt have too much phosphate). Rotting foodstuff disintegrate to ammonia which the plants prefer over nitrates. If your plants are healthy enough(and I think I read that you have a hightech tank?), they should suck in the ammonia as they are being released so your little fishies won't be hurt.
And thanks for the warm reception.
gf225 said:I understand you have read Diana Walstad's "Ecology of the Planted Aquarium" and your advice reflects this but remember that her principles are more relevant for low-tech tanks with relatively low-light, soil-based substrate (no heater cable), no additional CO2, very infrequent water changes and slow plant growth.
My tank on the otherhand as you have mentioned is high-tech. 3 Watts per Gallon of high-output fluorescent, CO2 injection, Dennerle substrate with heater cable etc. and fast plant growth.