Bruce Leyland-Jones
Fish Aficionado
For the sake of clarity, is that middle 'day', or middle 'night'.Its a slow process and needs to ideally be done in the middle of your light cycle.
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For the sake of clarity, is that middle 'day', or middle 'night'.Its a slow process and needs to ideally be done in the middle of your light cycle.
Gooood point. Middle of the day. The CO2 should have been turned off at least 1-2 hours before the lights are off.For the sake of clarity, is that middle 'day', or middle 'night'.
That is going to depend entirely on your CO2 uptake and diffusion %.
Personally I would turn it allllll the way down to a bit less than 1 bubble a second. Leave it 2-3 hours and check your drop checker. If it isn't where you want it at then turn it up or down a bit, give it another 2-3 hours and check again. This may need adjusting several times over the life of the tank as you get more or less plant mass/growth.
Its a slow process and needs to ideally be done in the middle of your light cycle.
Also just making sure are you using 4dhk or 5dhk solution in your drop checker with the regent and not tank water?
CO2 makes a huge difference, you'll be trimming back big, healthy, luscious plants daily
I have always thought there was a fine balance between the light and dark phases of photosynthesis. If you just play with the light phase, what happens to the dark phase.
Yeah personally I wouldn't be running two separate photoperiods, its likely going to mess with both the fish and the plants.
Is your inline diffuser not mixing the majority of the CO2 into the water before it hits the tank? Ideally you shouldn't be seeing any bubbles of CO2 around the tank.
Is the tank subjected to sunlight from a window?I got the last batch of plants today. It includes Alternanthera Reineckii "Mini" as a middle-ground plant. I will also try to develop a carpet with dwarf baby tears (Hemianthus Callitrichoides).
View attachment 144970
Here is the final configuration of the aquascape with the new plants:
View attachment 144971
Second day of CO2: Everything looks fine,. The drop checker is consistently green during the period the lights are on. However, green algae is forming on the glass. What should I do to counter that? Should I reduce the lighting period?
Sounds good. I will keep monitoring the tank's evolution in the next weeks.There is an old saying. "Only change one thing at a time". You have put the CO2 on your system, now you need to leave everything else the same. Until you see something change. If you change more than one thing you will never know what had what effect.
Is the tank subjected to sunlight from a window?
If not then yes, i would reduce light period/intensity. You have a good amount of plants but they're new and not fully established so not yet fully utilising all available resources: light/co2/nutrients. Algae will take advantage of any excess of these
Algae on the glass is the least of your worries where algae is concerned, there are far worse types to contend with