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Do plants remove nitrites or just nitrates?
I know fish and pond waste produces ammonia, then bacteria breaks down
the ammonia into nitrites then other bacteria convert nitrite into the relatively-harmless nitrates. I know plants will absorb the nitrates, but do they also absorb nitrites? I haven't been able to find much on the web mentioning this and I've found some posts saying "yes" and others saying "no". I've noticed my fish hanging out near the bubble fountain which is something they don't normally do. They also don't seem to be swimming around all that much - usually they're just hanging out together. At night I can hear them splashing around out there too. They look healthy because they're plump, have bright colors, and their fins seem intact and not clamped against their bodies. They haven't been too eager to eat though, because I'll throw food in and they ignore it. I assumed this was due to the pond not having much in the way of plant cover and that my fish don't seem to like me all that much - "what did I ever do to them???" My colorcoded water test strip shows that my nitrite level is over 1 which is considered safe, but I did read that long-term exposure to elivated levels can be harmful too. Most of my submerged vegetation either died off in the winter or was eaten by my fish so if more plants will suck in the nitrites I'd like to stock up. I live in central Florida so my daily temps have been in the 80s for a few weeks. Thanks |
Do plants remove nitrites or just nitrates?
plants use ammonia directly. with the temps that high how is your aeration?
with nitrites that high did you add some salt and definitely do some water changes to get it down. dont throw food in if the fish arent eating, maybe cut way down on food and get the highest quality food you can, less waste. time for a veggie filter. fish dont eat veggie filters. Ingrid (scs0) wrote: I've noticed my fish hanging out near the bubble fountain which is something they don't normally do. They also don't seem to be swimming around all that much - usually they're just hanging out together. At night I can hear them splashing around out there too. They look healthy because they're plump, have bright colors, and their fins seem intact and not clamped against their bodies. They haven't been too eager to eat though, because I'll throw food in and they ignore it. I assumed this was due to the pond not having much in the way of plant cover and that my fish don't seem to like me all that much - "what did I ever do to them???" My colorcoded water test strip shows that my nitrite level is over 1 which is considered safe, but I did read that long-term exposure to elivated levels can be harmful too. Most of my submerged vegetation either died off in the winter or was eaten by my fish so if more plants will suck in the nitrites I'd like to stock up. I live in central Florida so my daily temps have been in the 80s for a few weeks. Thanks ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
Do plants remove nitrites or just nitrates?
scs0 wrote:
snip My colorcoded water test strip shows that my nitrite level is over 1 which is considered safe, but I did read that long-term exposure to elivated levels can be harmful too. Most of my submerged vegetation either died off in the winter or was eaten by my fish so if more plants will suck in the nitrites I'd like to stock up. I consider 1ppm nitrite to be right on the edge of 'bad news'. Nitrite poisoning is a nasty thing. If nitrite is taken up into the fishes' bodies, it will bond with hemoglobin in the blood, creating a form that is unable to transport oxygen. If too much hemoglobin gets thusly converted, the fish essentially suffocate to death because their blood is unable to transport sufficient oxygen. The signs this is getting serious is when they are gasping at the surface or gathering in oxygen rich areas. Given than your fish are displaying such symptoms, I would think you're very close to the critical threshold. Now, in a normal tank I would add rock salt to mitigate the effects of nitrite poisoining after doing a water change. The chloride ions in salt compete with nitrite in the gills for uptake. If you have sufficient chloride ions (usually as little as a teaspoon per 20 gallons is enough in this case), they will be absorbed instead of nitrite. Water changes of course reduce the nitrite concentration. How this would translate over to a pond situation, I can't quite say, having never added salt to a pond. You should however think about doing a water change to get some fresh water in there. Also check for (and remove) any sources of nitrogen such as decaying plant or food matter. As for plants, I did a study for plant bio classes years ago using terrestrial plants. There were three groups fed ammonia, nitrite and nitrate as their nitrogen sources. Those fed nitrite were the worst in terms of growth. Most plants prefer ammonia and nitrate as a nitrogen source. They will use nitrite, but it is not preferred. Now, on the flip side, adding plants might help by absorbing enough ammonia before the bacteria converts it into nitrite, thus indirectly reducing the nitrite levels. Plus, removing nitrates will help allieviate some of the stress on the fish. Just make sure they are healthy plants that won't decay and add to the problem. Also make sure you don't add so many plants that they compete with the fish for oxygen at night. Right now you also want to focus on keeping the water well-oxygenated so the fish can get sufficient oxygen even with the nitrite poisoning going on. Perhaps focus on oxygenating plants for the moment and replace other plants later on. |
Do plants remove nitrites or just nitrates?
scs0 wrote:
snip My colorcoded water test strip shows that my nitrite level is over 1 which is considered safe, but I did read that long-term exposure to elivated levels can be harmful too. Most of my submerged vegetation either died off in the winter or was eaten by my fish so if more plants will suck in the nitrites I'd like to stock up. I consider 1ppm nitrite to be right on the edge of 'bad news'. Nitrite poisoning is a nasty thing. If nitrite is taken up into the fishes' bodies, it will bond with hemoglobin in the blood, creating a form that is unable to transport oxygen. If too much hemoglobin gets thusly converted, the fish essentially suffocate to death because their blood is unable to transport sufficient oxygen. The signs this is getting serious is when they are gasping at the surface or gathering in oxygen rich areas. Given than your fish are displaying such symptoms, I would think you're very close to the critical threshold. Now, in a normal tank I would add rock salt to mitigate the effects of nitrite poisoining after doing a water change. The chloride ions in salt compete with nitrite in the gills for uptake. If you have sufficient chloride ions (usually as little as a teaspoon per 20 gallons is enough in this case), they will be absorbed instead of nitrite. Water changes of course reduce the nitrite concentration. How this would translate over to a pond situation, I can't quite say, having never added salt to a pond. You should however think about doing a water change to get some fresh water in there. Also check for (and remove) any sources of nitrogen such as decaying plant or food matter. As for plants, I did a study for plant bio classes years ago using terrestrial plants. There were three groups fed ammonia, nitrite and nitrate as their nitrogen sources. Those fed nitrite were the worst in terms of growth. Most plants prefer ammonia and nitrate as a nitrogen source. They will use nitrite, but it is not preferred. Now, on the flip side, adding plants might help by absorbing enough ammonia before the bacteria converts it into nitrite, thus indirectly reducing the nitrite levels. Plus, removing nitrates will help allieviate some of the stress on the fish. Just make sure they are healthy plants that won't decay and add to the problem. Also make sure you don't add so many plants that they compete with the fish for oxygen at night. Right now you also want to focus on keeping the water well-oxygenated so the fish can get sufficient oxygen even with the nitrite poisoning going on. Perhaps focus on oxygenating plants for the moment and replace other plants later on. |
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