levahe said:
The OP is running a high energy co2 injected set up which accelerates plant growth. The plants uptake of nutrients is very high so the only way to keep up with demand is to add the required nutrients manually and often. There is a high amount of organic waste produced and this needs to be kept under control by large weekly water changes that also 'reset' the plant nutrients. Water changes and a clean aquarium are important to a successful high energy planted tank, and the fish appreciate the fresh water too
I have never done a planted tank so this is interesting to me. I am curious what the differences would be and the reasoning behind things.
This tank is flourishing and has more greenery growing out of it than I could comforatbly fit into it.
The only nutrients that I add is the food I feed the fish. The fish waste creates nitrogen that the plants consume. The vitamins and minerals in the fish food that the fish don't metabolize is disolved into the water. This tank has done fine no matter what the PH is or what I put in the water.
I have another tank with tomatos, basil and a couple other plants that are much more sensitive to PH. As long as that is maintained right around 7 they grow fine and show no signs of nutritonal deficiency.
Now the actual physical waste will be caught by the filter so if you have a traditional filter then those changes will require the same regularity.
The tank in the first pic ran no filter for about 3 months before the water started to get murky so I have since added a small bubble biofilter in the tank. Since then the water has cleared up again.
The second tank pumps the waste up into the bed behind it where there are red wiggler worms so I never have to worry about filter changes.
The point though is that there are plenty of nurtients to grow these plants just from the food I feed the fish. There is also enough root system, plant bacteria and surface area that the nitrites and nitrates never get out of hand. They are actually for the most part self sustaining aside from feeding the fish.
Since water evaporates and I am constantly adding water I am constantly ading minerals and micronutrients. If anything the ocasional water change might be good just in case something is building up too much due to evaporation. It still wouldn't need to be very often.
So I'm just curious what is different about a planted aquairum where all this work is nescecary vs aquaponics where it has been proven unnececary.