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Old July 10th 06, 03:18 AM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
Jason Tsangaris
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Posts: 4
Default Vivarium/Terrarium

Marco Schwarz wrote in news:e8rdlh$tsi$3
@news.albasani.net:

Thanks for the response.I found paludarium on the internet. How does one
create the land section and the water section. What keeps the land up
high above the water. Where would you put, and what kind of heater would
you use. What type of filter would you use for the aquarium part.

that's it for now,

Thanks,

Viper



Hi..

I have a spare 29g, and I thought it would be cool to
create a vivarium. I would like to have land with the
appropriate plants, and a "swimming" area for a couple of
small fish.


I suppose you mean a palludarium.

The following Austrian link (in German) shows a pretty
_open_ palludarium..:

http://members.chello.at/gerhard.klotz/page16.html

An easy to manage _closed_ palludarium for example is an
ordinary aquarium with a lamp hood..

I had a closed 110l palludarium, too..:

# 39cm / 15" hight
# 2" black basalt gravel (2-5 mm / 0.1-0.2")
# 5" water zone
# finally 8" land zone
# water zone heavily planted.
# land zone with a big branched book root and several
aquaria plant species what are able to grow outside the
water
# land zone plants grew in a long and tall plastic flower
box for the window sill with a dark brown oak surface
filled with natural 0.1" quartz gravel.
# flower box stood onto the basalt gravel bed in the
background.
# inner side of the rear pane was completely sticked with
peat plates..
# sucked peat plates look very natural and were an ideal
rooting ground for emerse growing ("kreeping") aquaria
plants and mosses..
# used a tiny water pump that pumped the tank water into the
emerse planted flower box..

I would like to keep a couple of frogs,


Dwarf African Frogs (Hymenochiris )..?
Why not..

and have plants that thrive in a moist environment.


A lot of well known aquaria plants are bog plants and are
able to grow outside the water, too..

Is a 29 to big?


Well.., tank-related there is _no_ "too big"..! :-)

This could be a fun project


Have fun..!

P.S.: Don't know where you are from but evaporation, air
moisture *and* lower room temperature might cause dewy
glass panes. Personally I had a 200 l/h air pump. The air
hose ended in the _land_ zone and changed the air
continuously. Alternatively a PC ventilator with a time
switch might be fine, too. As far as I remember others used
glass pane heaters..

HTH.