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it's a complicated answer but in most cases you won't see anything.Quick question, does anyone know if aquarium plant fertilizers (I'm using Seachem micro and macros) affect the PH of the tank?
from https://news.asu.edu/20191114-asu-study-shows-some-aquatic-plants-depend-landscape-photosynthesisHowever, plants which live completely submerged will pretty much all chose co2 over carbonates when both are in adequate supply.
“In this study, we’re able to show that yes, when in an environment where carbon dioxide is limited, then plants use strategies to extract carbon from bicarbonate,” said Lars Iversen, principal investigator for the study and a research fellow at the School of Life Sciences.............
The study, which focused specifically on aquatic plants that live completely submerged, also showed that when plants have easier access to carbon dioxide, they will use that as their carbon source, even if bicarbonate is available.
And this is where a hobby becomes so complicated that everyone, but a scientist jumps ship.Not all plants use carbonates or bicarbonates, but the nitrifying bacteria do. Both can also use CO2. They are also mostly what contribute to KH in an aquarium. And as we all should know, the higher the KH in a tank the more difficult is is to lower the pH. Calcium, on the other hand contributes to GH. If we add calcium carbonate to a tank we will raise both KH and GH.
Sodium bicarbonate in a tank does two things, it adds sodium and it adds bicarbonates and that part will drive the pH towards an equilibrium value of 8.2 pH. Unfortunately, a lot of fish will not do well with the elevated sodium.
from https://news.asu.edu/20191114-asu-study-shows-some-aquatic-plants-depend-landscape-photosynthesis
It is normal, as posted, for the pH to change from night to day. It is also true for other things in water. CO2 in water creates carbonic acid which in turn will lower pH. Plants use CO2, fish exhale CO2 and surface agitation allows for CO2 to enter or leave the water. So it is easy to see why parameters are contantly changing within a range when things are working normally. Who is using what in a planted tanks can change as the plants grow or when they get pruned back a bunch. They can change when one changes co2 levels or fertilizer levels.
As far as I know the best way to avoid the lack or excess of things in a tanks is via water changes. They remove the excesses and will add back some things. What they do not add back, we add instead. Depending on the types and mass of plants in a tank, how often fertilizing is needed as well as how often to do water changes can change.
Correct me if I am wrong, but isn't it magnesium oxide which can raise pH rather than magnesium? Also, how much magnesium is required to raise pH? When I needed to hold up the pH in my pressurized CO2 added planted tank, I used a bag of crushed coral (calcum carbonate. But I always used Tropica's comprehensive fertilizers in the tank starting with Mastergrow.
magnesium and calcium are very similar. iMy understanding is that n their pure metal state they have no effect on PH. However in air they corrode to a oxide. but when the oxide gets wet it covers to hydroxide which does push PH up. And then they converts to carbonate.Correct me if I am wrong, but isn't it magnesium oxide which can raise pH rather than magnesium? Also, how much magnesium is required to raise pH?