I don't mean to put you on the spot, as your suggestion is general advice I see everywhere, but I really don't see how this is effective. I've tried numerous times, and every method except a breeding divider has failed to keep floaters out. Suction cups randomly fail, the water level decreases to the point where tubing no longer obstructs the surface, and floating pylons get pushed or dislodged by buffeting water. To be fair, I have not looked at a product that is designed to solve this issue, but DIY methods are questionable to me at best. But, if it works for others, good for them I suppose.To avoid an "invasion", you should stretch a clear hose of the smallest diameter between aquarium walls, this would prevent effectively - while remaining discreet - any floatings invasion.
Putting it that way, it sounds like duckweed provides a bit too much surface cover. I guess I kept it around because I figured the more cover the better for the fish. But ill definitely start doing that.I have duckweed in one tank (deliberately), and regularly I scoop out some and toss it in the compost. It can reproduce incredibly fast. Good floaters for fish are substantial plants like Water Sprite, Frogbit, Water Lettuce, and some of the stem plants grow well floating too.
Putting it that way, it sounds like duckweed provides a bit too much surface cover. I guess I kept it around because I figured the more cover the better for the fish. But ill definitely start doing that.
Would you have any specific recommendations for plants that provide surface cover for cardinal tetras?
Ok, I'll look for this at my LFS. If they don't have it, I'll look into the others you mentioned.Water Sprite (Ceratopteris cornuta) is my favourite, this is a true fern and a lovely plant once established.
Can you explain how you deal with lowering water levels? Do you just have to adjust the positioning on a regular basis, or is it self-adjusting somehow? Also how do you secure the tubing?