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Скачать с ютуб Micro Sword Carpet Plant - No CO2 Low Tech? в хорошем качестве

Micro Sword Carpet Plant - No CO2 Low Tech? 2 года назад


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Micro Sword Carpet Plant - No CO2 Low Tech?

Aquarium Micro Sword Carpet with No CO2 Low Tech. The micro sword plant works great in fish tanks as a carpeting plant. This plant will grow under low light but it very much loves medium lighting. Micro Sword has a root system that grows below the substrate and covers a horizontal pattern. When planting this plant you can split up the stems into series of stems together or you can just plant the entire bundle as one. If you split up the stems and plant them separated you were going to get more coverage faster. But if you plant the entire bulk of all the stems to gather you’re probably going to have a higher chance of the plant doing well to begin with. More Talk Posted a couple days ago about my cloudy tank and you guys said just leave it alone, let it do it’s thing. Just wanted to show you the cloudy/dirty one vs the new one I just set up. I’ve done a 50% water change two days in a row and it’s only gotten worse. Should I just let it do it’s thing? It’s not harmful to my fish? Update - I know it’s dirty and get dirty fast because my tank is overcrowded. - I know my tank is overcrowded and my goldfish need more room - I KNOW ABOUT THE PINEAPPLE OKAY So these fish poop more which ultimately results in higher phosphates. These guys may require 20% changes twice a week, with a thorough vacuum of the bottom to get it back under control, then 30-50% changes weekly once under control. Be sure to rinse your media in tank water as it clogs. Just due to the smaller tank it will need more frequent cleaning essentially. Gotta get the poop out. Adjusting your lights will only help if you’re running 5+ hours while your having phosphate issues, but you can blackout the tank for faster results. Your filter will need time to catch the algae and I recommend dosing with hydrogen peroxide prior to water change as an extra ZAP. (Turn filter off, dose (up to 4ML per gallon- make the plants and algae bubble, then after 10 min do your water change. Do not squirt it directly in your fish. What peroxide does is remove CO2 and add oxygen so you’ll see bubbles coming out of your plants (oxygen they’re producing that is not dissolving into the water due to high oxygen content), and destroys the cells of algae. It may affect some plants but they’ll grow back once it’s under control and algae isn’t stealing allll the nutrients in your tank. But your fish may be a little more active but this won’t hurt them dose slowly. Once it’s cleaned up, you can likely back down on cleaning and peroxide. Be careful making LARGE water changes at once. Your want to dilute your changes, meaning fill as your remove as well if you’re doing them in a short period of time. Your bacteria colony needs to remain STRONG so porous rocks or a bag of bacteria housing should protect your fish through your water changes. The key to keeping your ammonia down, keeping a bacteria colony. Most of it lives in your filter but to clean and removes phosphates you don’t want that filter building up a lot in general. If you rely on a bag of porous housing instead of the cotton media that catches debri, you will have better success and less worry when cleaning the filter media that you’re going to accidentally kill the BB. Phosphates come from the breakdown of poop so cleaning the gunk off the filter stops phosphates from breaking down back into your water. And dead plants cause phosphate spikes. A heavily planted tank will require phosphates while a mid planted take will want lower levels of phosphates. Phosphates cause these algae blooms when the level your tank plants need is exceeded. Algae will begin to form and consume it at whatever rate the tank provides. I had a bacterial bloom happen in my tank it was cloudy for about 4 days I researched it said do nothing because water changes will only make it continue and it did go away after some days. I wonder are you having an algae bloom. The green is most likely free floating algae but the cloudiness is probably due to your cycle crashing because it can’t keep up with your Fish waste production. A bigger and over filtered tank would fix it. That's an algae bloom. If it was cloudy and white that would be a bacteria bloom which will correct itself after a few days, but with an algae bloom it's different. You could try a complete blackout and then a lower light setting once cleared up or add a UV sterilizer which will kill all of the algae in the water. Aquarium micro sword plant with carpet effect. Hi how's everyone? Can I get Help please ... I'm stressed... So I'm doing the cycle I guess this is supposed to happen ? Ii .got fishys inside all tanks too witch all will b similar cause started on same day together.. anyway most important I am putting prime daily but im still =/ I had few fish die lik I said I'm just tripping what should I do? No water change ? P.s I have da master kit too ... same results.

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