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Dosing nitrate and phosphate
I've tested my tank and nitrate and phosphate are almost
imeasurable.Plant growth is just not what I'd like so I've decided to dose those two compounds.I can't find any greenlight stump remover so I'm going to try Seachem's new nitrate and phosphate additives. Has anybody tried these yet? |
Dosing nitrate and phosphate
On Fri, 26 Sep 2003 15:20:36 UTC, Blarneytoad
wrote: I've tested my tank and nitrate and phosphate are almost imeasurable.Plant growth is just not what I'd like so I've decided to dose those two compounds.I can't find any greenlight stump remover so I'm going to try Seachem's new nitrate and phosphate additives. Has anybody tried these yet? Perhpas I'm years out of date, but I'd think twice before adding phosphate. See http://www.cam.org/~tomlins/algae.html which describes actual experiments (so rare in this business!) and concludes that keeping phosphate down to virtually nothing is the way to starve algae while growing healthy plants. Higher (vascular) plants appear to be extremely good at using low levels of phosphate. By the way, what tests are you using? I've bought a couple of phsophate kits and found that they just couldn't detect phosphate! Probably outlived their shelf life or something. Anyway, I could make a phosphate solution in the range they were supposed to measure, or way above it, and they wouldn't register. The expensive kit that I use now (Lamotte) always detects a solution of 1 mg / l or whatever. (However, I think the Lamotte low-level phosphate kit stinks. Its color samples are entirely different from the colors the test generates. This is not good enough for fifty bucks or so. I now run double tests routinely, one being a calibration with a known PO4 concentration. Does anybody know of a *good* PO4 test at any price?) Anyway, why not try adding just nitrate first? I currently add a small amount of nitrate daily, to keep up the level that's recommended on the web page I listed. (0.5 cc of 10% KNO3 today, but still trying to get it to a consistent level.) If your plants don't pick up, and your lighting is good, and you're sure you have enough iron and potassium and other things, then try phosphate. -- http://www.dandrake.com/ In the days after September 11, Yahoo searches for Nostradamus outnumbered those for Osama bin Laden and Sex, combined. |
Dosing nitrate and phosphate
On Sat, 27 Sep 2003 00:32:42 GMT, "Dan Drake" wrote:
On Fri, 26 Sep 2003 15:20:36 UTC, Blarneytoad wrote: I've tested my tank and nitrate and phosphate are almost imeasurable.Plant growth is just not what I'd like so I've decided to dose those two compounds.I can't find any greenlight stump remover so I'm going to try Seachem's new nitrate and phosphate additives. Has anybody tried these yet? Perhpas I'm years out of date, but I'd think twice before adding phosphate. See http://www.cam.org/~tomlins/algae.html which describes actual experiments (so rare in this business!) and concludes that keeping phosphate down to virtually nothing is the way to starve algae while growing healthy plants. Higher (vascular) plants appear to be extremely good at using low levels of phosphate. By the way, what tests are you using? I've bought a couple of phsophate kits and found that they just couldn't detect phosphate! Probably outlived their shelf life or something. Anyway, I could make a phosphate solution in the range they were supposed to measure, or way above it, and they wouldn't register. The expensive kit that I use now (Lamotte) always detects a solution of 1 mg / l or whatever. (However, I think the Lamotte low-level phosphate kit stinks. Its color samples are entirely different from the colors the test generates. This is not good enough for fifty bucks or so. I now run double tests routinely, one being a calibration with a known PO4 concentration. Does anybody know of a *good* PO4 test at any price?) Anyway, why not try adding just nitrate first? I currently add a small amount of nitrate daily, to keep up the level that's recommended on the web page I listed. (0.5 cc of 10% KNO3 today, but still trying to get it to a consistent level.) If your plants don't pick up, and your lighting is good, and you're sure you have enough iron and potassium and other things, then try phosphate. I forgot to ad that I'm using Seachem Iron,Potassium and Trace products and have been for awhile. The phosphate kit I used is an Aquarium Systems SeaTest kit. I will take your advice and start with NO3 though. The tank is a 55g with full CO2, 350watts MH lighting,cable heating,10g trickle filter,and has been set up like that for close to 10 years.Thanks for the heads up and the info. |
Dosing nitrate and phosphate
Blarneytoad wrote:
I forgot to ad that I'm using Seachem Iron,Potassium and Trace products and have been for awhile. Seachem makes two products: Flourish: What we on this list call "trace element fertilizer." Lots of us use this product successfully. Flourish Trace: A small subset of Floursish that Seachem claims get used up the fastest. This is NOT a complete trace element product. |
Dosing nitrate and phosphate
On Tue, 30 Sep 2003 13:48:01 -0700, Dave Millman
wrote: Blarneytoad wrote: I forgot to ad that I'm using Seachem Iron,Potassium and Trace products and have been for awhile. Seachem makes two products: Flourish: What we on this list call "trace element fertilizer." Lots of us use this product successfully. Flourish Trace: A small subset of Floursish that Seachem claims get used up the fastest. This is NOT a complete trace element product. Thanks for clarifying that ...it's a little confusing determining which is which based on looking at on-line catalogs that don't carry the Trace product.Guess I should try some of that maybe. Are you familiar with the 2 new products that I mentioned? Nitrate and Phosphate? |
Dosing nitrate and phosphate
Blarneytoad wrote:
Flourish: What we on this list call "trace element fertilizer." Lots of us use this product successfully. Flourish Trace: A small subset of Floursish that Seachem claims get used up the fastest. This is NOT a complete trace element product. Thanks for clarifying that ...it's a little confusing determining which is which based on looking at on-line catalogs that don't carry the Trace product.Guess I should try some of that maybe. Not many people seem to use Flourish Trace. Many, many, many people use Flourish as their trace element fertilizer. Are you familiar with the 2 new products that I mentioned? Nitrate and Phosphate? According to people on this list, they work. So do Potassium nitrate (KN03) and Potassium monophosphate (KH2PO4) from hydroponics supply houses, if you don't mind getting your hands dirty with mildly harmful chemicals. |
Dosing nitrate and phosphate
dump all the commercial junk and start using PMDD solutions. much cheaper,
lasts much longer and has everything (almost) your plants need. check out The Krib for PMDD info: http://www.thekrib.com/Plants/Fertilizer/pmdd-tim.html "Blarneytoad" wrote in message ... I've tested my tank and nitrate and phosphate are almost imeasurable.Plant growth is just not what I'd like so I've decided to dose those two compounds.I can't find any greenlight stump remover so I'm going to try Seachem's new nitrate and phosphate additives. Has anybody tried these yet? |
Dosing nitrate and phosphate
I've been using Flourish K and N for about a year, they are both great
products however as many others have done, now that my supplies are running out I'm mixing my own to save some $. The PMDD article is aimed at reducing algae, while limiting phosphates will work, it will also limit the growth of your plants. Phosphate does not = algae in my opinion, a balanced nutrient load and good plant growth will fix many algae problems. If you have a high light tank with CO2 then you shouldn't have any problems keeping a PO4 level of 0.2-0.5ppm in the water colum (as long as nothing else runs out such as NO3, traces....), if you have a slower growing tank it's sometimes best to keep phosphates in the substrate, if this is the case, Flourish Tabs are rich in phosphates. You can compare the contents of Flourish, Trace and Tabs he http://67.89.4.174/aqua/fert_table.htm Sometimes I with Seachem had chosen better names for Flourish and Trace, they can be very misleading. Flourish Trace and Flourish Trace Supplement would have been better titles IMO Hope that helps Giancarlo Podio Blarneytoad wrote in message . .. I've tested my tank and nitrate and phosphate are almost imeasurable.Plant growth is just not what I'd like so I've decided to dose those two compounds.I can't find any greenlight stump remover so I'm going to try Seachem's new nitrate and phosphate additives. Has anybody tried these yet? |
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