cooledwhip
Fishaholic
I have had an aquascape and many other planted tanks for almost 6 months now. I think I have about 10 tanks, all thriving. My first one which is using seachem flourite is not doing too well. Most of my plants are substrate based, and when I first started this tank I washed the flourite until it was like gravel, no powder in it, which I assume was all the nutrients.
I do the E.I. fert method with Potas nitrate, mono potas, and nutritrace + CSB or something CSM idk.
I also do occasional flourish iron, flourish excel and I am starting to use co2 again. Not the best method, it's manual, and it doesn't have a solenoid. Basically its diy co2. I use a paintball can.
My plants list is extensive. Most of the plants are nutrient based and I am wondering why they aren't rooting too well. There are some roots but there aren't so many roots. I know for a fact the next tank I do I will dirt it.
One of the main parts of the tank is a massive rotala indica forest. It used to be massive and awesome, but now lots of the plants are slowing down and not growing. It looks like it's a light issue. I have a single T5HO over the tank, (tank is 20 long) and the part of the forest that is under neath the light is doing great. Lots of light and the plants have color on the tips and are very thick leaved. However, on the part that is not directly under the light, it struggles to grow, and often times I can go in there and just pluck a stem up from under the substrate and only find a couple if any roots.
I don't know if this is a substrate problem or a light problem. I used to have trouble with lights in the past, and ever since I upgraded to the T5 my plants have been doing great. I just don't know if that is the reason why the rotala indica on the "right side of the forest" isn't growing too well. I can try doing some fert tabs, I can't say if that will work t hough. It MAY be the lights, IDK. Can I please have some help? Also what happens lots of times is random segments of upper portions of the rotala are just floating up top. I look and the bottom is all brown. and it looks like the stems are browning as th ey aren't getting nutrients. But then again, that happens when you make a thick forest of plants. It's common for the bottom parts to not get light. I don't know if it is happening to me because it isn't getting light, or just no fertilizers.
BTW, my tanks water quality is perfect, every single other plant is flourishing. Water changes once a week, and I DON'T gravel vacuum, I leave detritus in the gravel and the fish poop so the plants can get more fertilization that way.
I do the E.I. fert method with Potas nitrate, mono potas, and nutritrace + CSB or something CSM idk.
I also do occasional flourish iron, flourish excel and I am starting to use co2 again. Not the best method, it's manual, and it doesn't have a solenoid. Basically its diy co2. I use a paintball can.
My plants list is extensive. Most of the plants are nutrient based and I am wondering why they aren't rooting too well. There are some roots but there aren't so many roots. I know for a fact the next tank I do I will dirt it.
One of the main parts of the tank is a massive rotala indica forest. It used to be massive and awesome, but now lots of the plants are slowing down and not growing. It looks like it's a light issue. I have a single T5HO over the tank, (tank is 20 long) and the part of the forest that is under neath the light is doing great. Lots of light and the plants have color on the tips and are very thick leaved. However, on the part that is not directly under the light, it struggles to grow, and often times I can go in there and just pluck a stem up from under the substrate and only find a couple if any roots.
I don't know if this is a substrate problem or a light problem. I used to have trouble with lights in the past, and ever since I upgraded to the T5 my plants have been doing great. I just don't know if that is the reason why the rotala indica on the "right side of the forest" isn't growing too well. I can try doing some fert tabs, I can't say if that will work t hough. It MAY be the lights, IDK. Can I please have some help? Also what happens lots of times is random segments of upper portions of the rotala are just floating up top. I look and the bottom is all brown. and it looks like the stems are browning as th ey aren't getting nutrients. But then again, that happens when you make a thick forest of plants. It's common for the bottom parts to not get light. I don't know if it is happening to me because it isn't getting light, or just no fertilizers.
BTW, my tanks water quality is perfect, every single other plant is flourishing. Water changes once a week, and I DON'T gravel vacuum, I leave detritus in the gravel and the fish poop so the plants can get more fertilization that way.