mikey12421
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- Jan 4, 2007
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Hi -
I've tried growing glosso a couple of times and it never seems to take. The first time I removed it from the rockwool and planted it as a bunch. It slowly deteriorated until there was just one tiny plant hanging on. Then that plant died.
My lfs then suggested I try growing it in-pot because the roots are too fragile to be removed. I've heard that leaving rockwool in your tank can lead to algae problems, but I figured it was worth a try. The plant didn't die - but it didn't really spread either, and it collected a ton of hair algae.
So now I've removed the plant from the rockwool (very carefully of course) and planted each of the plants a few centimeters apart along the substrate. Mollies and algae eaters took care of the algae quickly once it was less dense - so the pieces look pretty good. I also removed the apple snails that were busy on tank cleanup because, while they did not eat the glosso (or any other plants), they did try and eat the algae off of it and seemed to be breaking the fragile stems. The few ghost shrimp I have seem to have a more tender cleaning method. The plants look okay, but seem to be staying put - no real growth.
The tank is a 20 us gallon community, heavily planted, with onyx sand substrate. The lighting is very high (4.75 wpg with one coralife aqualife c.f. 6700K, 65 W and one VHO 10000K 30W) I use DIY fermentation with two canisters and Nutrafin ladders. I dose occasionally with flourish, but it always seems like that causes algae to spike (in a tank that barely needs cleaning its so clear and algae free most of the time). The other plants grow like crazy - I have to prune every other day.
So my question is, is this going to work this time? Is there something else that I should be doing that I'm not? Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!
Mike
I've tried growing glosso a couple of times and it never seems to take. The first time I removed it from the rockwool and planted it as a bunch. It slowly deteriorated until there was just one tiny plant hanging on. Then that plant died.
My lfs then suggested I try growing it in-pot because the roots are too fragile to be removed. I've heard that leaving rockwool in your tank can lead to algae problems, but I figured it was worth a try. The plant didn't die - but it didn't really spread either, and it collected a ton of hair algae.
So now I've removed the plant from the rockwool (very carefully of course) and planted each of the plants a few centimeters apart along the substrate. Mollies and algae eaters took care of the algae quickly once it was less dense - so the pieces look pretty good. I also removed the apple snails that were busy on tank cleanup because, while they did not eat the glosso (or any other plants), they did try and eat the algae off of it and seemed to be breaking the fragile stems. The few ghost shrimp I have seem to have a more tender cleaning method. The plants look okay, but seem to be staying put - no real growth.
The tank is a 20 us gallon community, heavily planted, with onyx sand substrate. The lighting is very high (4.75 wpg with one coralife aqualife c.f. 6700K, 65 W and one VHO 10000K 30W) I use DIY fermentation with two canisters and Nutrafin ladders. I dose occasionally with flourish, but it always seems like that causes algae to spike (in a tank that barely needs cleaning its so clear and algae free most of the time). The other plants grow like crazy - I have to prune every other day.
So my question is, is this going to work this time? Is there something else that I should be doing that I'm not? Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!
Mike