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Donald K wrote:
Sir Douglas Cook wrote: I do have a question for you. If fish and there waste produce CO2, Why don't you just add more fish? The CO2 added by the fish is small compared to levels needed for "triving plants." (Which, with even a little thought, means you're in an unnatural equilbrium, but I'm not gonna go there...) -Donald Ah, but thriving plants have a positive effect on the fish I've found - they help reduce nitr?tes (I can never remember which is the last one in the ammonia cycle), which means the tank (or at least mine) spends most of it's time needing very little input from me. I do a water change every few months, not every other week, for example. No algae problems these days, no fish problems, everything's healthy, my pair of angels are breeding in a community tank and raising to free-swimming fry stage (they're still learning so each batch gets another day or two further along the cycle before the parents presumably turn into cannibals and recycle the protein!). I seriously doubt I'd have a pair of angels breeding in the tank if there was something nasty going on (not pure wild angels I'll add though) or the water params were out of whack. B.P. (Before Plants) it was a constant struggle against algae, frequent water changes, fish weren't as brightly coloured and I battled with occasional instances of disease that would randomly crop up (without new fish being added). I take the view that the CO2 means I can grow the plants that will contribute to a better environment for the fish than a purely visual improvement. I'd much rather add the CO2 (small hassle, small cost) than go back to battling with algae and much more frequent water changes. At some point I'd love to go for a completely self-contained system, no filtration, fish and plants, natural lighting only, etc etc, but then I realise there's only one way to do that, and that's to Walk Outside ;-) -- Velvet |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Free C02 regulator | Ian Smith | Plants | 0 | May 19th 04 04:53 PM |
Free C02 regulator | Kris | Plants | 1 | May 19th 04 04:02 AM |