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I googled the group for an answer to this. There was a similar question
in 1999, with no responses. I was reading with interest about the benefits of Aloe Vera (eg. Stress Coat), and was wondering whether it was safe to add raw Aloe Vera extact (juice) to my tank to achieve the same results as Stress Coat (minus the de-chlorinating effect, of course). I have heaps of Aloe Vera growing at home, and this could be a good potential use. |
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Rod Bacon wrote:
I was reading with interest about the benefits of Aloe Vera (eg. Stress Coat), and was wondering whether it was safe to add raw Aloe Vera extact (juice) to my tank to achieve the same results as Stress Coat (minus the de-chlorinating effect, of course). It should be, as aloe juice is even safe enough to drink, although I've read it does something to the water that might cause an unwanted increase in algae production. - Logic316 "Socialism is the equal distribution of poverty" |
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"Rod Bacon" wrote in message
oups.com... I googled the group for an answer to this. There was a similar question in 1999, with no responses. I was reading with interest about the benefits of Aloe Vera (eg. Stress Coat), and was wondering whether it was safe to add raw Aloe Vera extact (juice) to my tank to achieve the same results as Stress Coat (minus the de-chlorinating effect, of course). I have heaps of Aloe Vera growing at home, and this could be a good potential use. Remember the expression, "too much of even a good thing is bad". The problem with adding chemicals (even natural non-toxic ones) is concentration and accumulation. Aquariums are already at a super-high density in regards to the fish-load (and all their by-products) relative to the volume of water that they are in. In their natural state, any chemical changes would be gradual and diluted. Also keep in mind that Aloe Vera increases the water's level of TDS which is ordinarily something we try to keep low, and the effect of Aloe Vera on their respiration through the gills is basically empirical (we know that it doesn't kill them), but does it help? (not likely) so anything which has the potential to make respiration more difficult should be regarded with some caution and scepticism imo. -- www.NetMax.tk |
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