wings8888":2cu5swkc said:
It's a term from a public aquarium in that dutch town back in the 1900's that used plants to maintain their tanks
Also, it appears that gpodio uses a filter.
yes and Fw planted tank can also use co2 injectors, high lighting, water changed and all that. I don't
So, how to you start plant life in a sterile tank?
~wings~
Simple you don't start with a sterile system. My 3-4 step:
1) set up tank with play sand, tap water and plants. wait a week.
2) add a single male live bearer ( i use a red wag platty)
3) don't add food for a week. then feed a single flake per day for a week.
4) add female
in 6 months you will have a thriving tank with 20 or so fish, snails and thriving plant growth.
no filtration, no air stone, only replace the water that evaporates, have the top open to the air, and just enough lighting so the plants grow but not so much that you get green water.
the platties eat the surface scum, the plants prevent algae growth, and the snails from the plants help with ditrious.
but you have to add lotsa fast growing plants right from the start. The entire back wall should be thick with anacorus. then some slower growing plants with a centerpiece like a sword. with say about 1/3 or so of free swimming area towards the front.
What happens the plants establish the system and the slowly growing bioload and plants keep each other in balance. And it lasts for years and years. Anything I do just seems to get in the way of that balance. For instance, I used to feed a flake per day during the first week. And that first fish, just like clockwork would slow down on the 4th day, start breathing heavy on the 5th and die on the 6th. With no feeding that first week he lived. When he did die his replacement the second week lived.
My first tank that way lasted 8 years with 6 years in the same location. And I had descendants for the original pair of fish. Plus I have done this in ~6 different cities in the US when I was in the air force. So the quality of the tap water was not a factor.
Finally there obviously is nothing new about this. It was named after an aquarium in the 1900's after all.