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Anyone Tried Lava Rock in a Tank?
I was looking at some at my local Home Depot. The rocks seem very
porous and probably can support quite a good bio filter. Anyone with experience with these rocks instead of gravel? |
"ManWorld42" wrote in message
... I was looking at some at my local Home Depot. The rocks seem very porous and probably can support quite a good bio filter. Anyone with experience with these rocks instead of gravel? If used as a substitute for gravel, then I wouldn't have any bottom feeders, as the stones are usually quite sharp edged & abrasive. There are very good at harbouring micro-organisms (especially for feeding newborn fry), however they are equally good are harbouring less desirable things, like rotting detritus and algaes, so ymmv. As stonework, I usually don't recommend them as it's too easy for fish to damage their sides on them (especially when they get caught between a lava rock and the glass). jmo -- www.NetMax.tk |
Petsmart and such sells lava rock as when i used to work there people
bought it all of the time for their tank. The really small pieces my be to light and porous i am not sure as these were bigger pieces 6 + inches Marc __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ _______ Want to win a FREE new co2 system or a lighting system check out our forum for our newest contest coming up http://www.fish-forums.com Http://www.aquatic-store.com On 10 Oct 2004 01:51:54 -0700, (ManWorld42) wrote: I was looking at some at my local Home Depot. The rocks seem very porous and probably can support quite a good bio filter. Anyone with experience with these rocks instead of gravel? |
On 2004-10-10, ManWorld42 wrote:
I was looking at some at my local Home Depot. The rocks seem very porous and probably can support quite a good bio filter. Anyone with experience with these rocks instead of gravel? For one of my tanks, I dug some lava rock out of my mom's garden, washed it off and plunked em in. One of the pieces is in the new tank I setup recently. It's nice looking! I suspect that it might have contributed some of extremely high water hardness in a tank, but I also had Seachem Onyx substrate in there, so hard to tell. My rocks don't have sharp endges - they'd been out as a border for my mom's garden for a few years and had been worn pretty smooth by weather. -- Ross Vandegrift "The good Christian should beware of mathematicians, and all those who make empty prophecies. The danger already exists that the mathematicians have made a covenant with the devil to darken the spirit and to confine man in the bonds of Hell." --St. Augustine, De Genesi ad Litteram, Book II, xviii, 37 |
ManWorld42 wrote:
I was looking at some at my local Home Depot. The rocks seem very porous and probably can support quite a good bio filter. Anyone with experience with these rocks instead of gravel? I've seen lava rock recommended for this very use. As Netmax noted, the rock has lots of sharp edges, so it could be tough on any fish that bumped into it. Used in a sump or instead of bio-balls, though, it should make a pretty good home for bacteria. -- Eric Schreiber www.ericschreiber.com |
You can use lava rock with out any problems. However as others have
noticed it can be very rough and fish can scrape themselves on it. Especially if you have very active fish. __________________________________________________ Posted via FishGeeks - http://Aquaria.info |
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