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WPG for "very high light" plants?



 
 
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  #1  
Old May 12th 05, 03:16 AM
Bill Stock
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Default WPG for "very high light" plants?

The Tropica site lists certain plants as "very high light" requirements.
Anyone care to hazard a guess how this translates to WPG? I'm assuming
somewhere close to 6 WPG?



  #2  
Old May 12th 05, 04:54 AM
djay
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"Bill Stock" wrote in message
...
The Tropica site lists certain plants as "very high light" requirements.
Anyone care to hazard a guess how this translates to WPG? I'm assuming
somewhere close to 6 WPG?




I'd think that 4 WPG would be sufficient


  #4  
Old May 13th 05, 02:25 AM
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Bill Stock wrote:
The Tropica site lists certain plants as "very high light"

requirements.
Anyone care to hazard a guess how this translates to WPG? I'm

assuming
somewhere close to 6 WPG?


I've yet to see a plant I cannot grow well at 2-3w a gallon.
All aquatic plants are for the most part, low light plants.

Yuo are welcomed to suggest a plant that cannot be grown at 2 w/gal,
I've grown close to 250-300species of aquatic plants over the years.
I've yet to meet one that does not do well at 2 watt gal.

I will say this: more light is not better.
More light= faster growth = faster uptake =more pruning and more chance
of algae.

Regards,
Tom Barr

  #5  
Old May 13th 05, 02:49 AM
Bill Stock
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Posts: n/a
Default


wrote in message
oups.com...

Bill Stock wrote:
The Tropica site lists certain plants as "very high light"

requirements.
Anyone care to hazard a guess how this translates to WPG? I'm

assuming
somewhere close to 6 WPG?


I've yet to see a plant I cannot grow well at 2-3w a gallon.
All aquatic plants are for the most part, low light plants.

Yuo are welcomed to suggest a plant that cannot be grown at 2 w/gal,
I've grown close to 250-300species of aquatic plants over the years.
I've yet to meet one that does not do well at 2 watt gal.

I will say this: more light is not better.
More light= faster growth = faster uptake =more pruning and more chance
of algae.

Regards,
Tom Barr


It's my Water Hyacinth again. It was doing OK for a while, but it's slowly
going brown and mushy now.





  #6  
Old May 13th 05, 06:14 AM
Elaine T
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Bill Stock wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...

Bill Stock wrote:

The Tropica site lists certain plants as "very high light"


requirements.

Anyone care to hazard a guess how this translates to WPG? I'm


assuming

somewhere close to 6 WPG?


I've yet to see a plant I cannot grow well at 2-3w a gallon.
All aquatic plants are for the most part, low light plants.

Yuo are welcomed to suggest a plant that cannot be grown at 2 w/gal,
I've grown close to 250-300species of aquatic plants over the years.
I've yet to meet one that does not do well at 2 watt gal.

I will say this: more light is not better.
More light= faster growth = faster uptake =more pruning and more chance
of algae.

Regards,
Tom Barr



It's my Water Hyacinth again. It was doing OK for a while, but it's slowly
going brown and mushy now.

Water hyacinth is a bit different than submerged plants. High light for
water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) means the equivalent of outdoor
full sun. I have water hyacinth growing well in a pond where it gets
about 8 hours of direct, strong Southern California sun. It's not
growing as well or as quickly in my other outdoor tank where it only
gets 6 hours.

Is your water hyacinth sitting right under your light fixture where it
can get direct light all day?

--
Elaine T __
http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__
rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com
  #7  
Old May 13th 05, 05:41 PM
Ozdude
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wrote in message
oups.com...
I will say this: more light is not better.
More light= faster growth = faster uptake =more pruning and more chance
of algae.


Agreed Tom!

I can't keep my plants under control any longer - they grow at least 1" per
week of lush thick bright green growth. I can keep the algae down by not
dosing liquid fertilizer frequently, but the pruning and amount of excess
plants that have gone back to the LFS are amazing. I wouldn't have believed
it a few months ago when I couldn't see my Val. gowing let alone sending off
side shoots all over the place as they are now.

I don't even have 2wpg - only ~1.4, substrate fertilizer, plant spectrum
tubes with yeast CO2 and the plants are almost out of control - almost

I've never seen Java Moss grow so fast as it does in the big tank and
luckily for Mr Male Dwarf Gourami I can cut it off once per week to give him
plenty of material with which to build his bubble nests (horny little
bugger he is).

BTW I have gone back to your diffuser design after installing a new canister
filter and ditching the two internals. I think this may have something to do
with the plant growth explosion - in combo. with fertilizer balancing and a
general settling of the "biotope".

I have also found that fast flowing water also causes, or seems to, an
increase in algae of the green variety, but you can get around that if you
have enough Gourami,Mollies/Platties, Apple Snails or SAE's (or similar).

Oz

--
My Aquatic web Blog is at http://members.optusnet.com.au/ivan.smith


  #8  
Old May 14th 05, 12:21 AM
Bill Stock
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Elaine T" wrote in message
m...
Bill Stock wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...

Bill Stock wrote:

The Tropica site lists certain plants as "very high light"

requirements.

Anyone care to hazard a guess how this translates to WPG? I'm

assuming

somewhere close to 6 WPG?

I've yet to see a plant I cannot grow well at 2-3w a gallon.
All aquatic plants are for the most part, low light plants.

Yuo are welcomed to suggest a plant that cannot be grown at 2 w/gal,
I've grown close to 250-300species of aquatic plants over the years.
I've yet to meet one that does not do well at 2 watt gal.

I will say this: more light is not better.
More light= faster growth = faster uptake =more pruning and more chance
of algae.

Regards,
Tom Barr



It's my Water Hyacinth again. It was doing OK for a while, but it's
slowly going brown and mushy now.

Water hyacinth is a bit different than submerged plants. High light for
water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) means the equivalent of outdoor full
sun. I have water hyacinth growing well in a pond where it gets about 8
hours of direct, strong Southern California sun. It's not growing as well
or as quickly in my other outdoor tank where it only gets 6 hours.

Is your water hyacinth sitting right under your light fixture where it can
get direct light all day?


Yes, they even got sunburnt once, when I filled the tank a bit too full.

They were doing poorly before, but I cranked the light up to 16 hours a day
and they started to prosper. Then they started to go mushy again, so I
raised their temp to 77 and they perked up again. The leaves are bright
green, but the bulbs are going soft and mushy. I can always tell when they
are doing well, they get the long white roots.

I think my lights are losing some of their brightness, although this is not
supposed to be a factor with CF bulbs. I don't know if it's the fertilzer
(too much iron) or something completely different. They actually seemed to
do better before I added the CO2, although I suspect this is a coincidence.
I've also got a minor case of string Algae, perhaps it's using something
they need?

Any ideas?



--
Elaine T __
http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__
rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com



  #9  
Old May 14th 05, 05:57 AM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Sure, it's the nutrients.

Not the light.

Use more KNO3, KH2PO4(can induce flowing by adding more of this and
backing off the KNO3), and traces.

It does well if you thin it out as needed and make sure there are
enough NO3 present.
We raise it to grow biocontrol weevils, it's a noxious weed in the
delta in CA.
But because pond folks like it so much and businesses can make $ on it,
they allow it to be legal.

The delta is surrounded by what? Farmland, and the runoff = rich
nutrients=horrid weed problems.

The issue with the biocontrol: they don't do well in the colder winters
here, but do well in Africa and other warmer areas, we cannot raise the
weeviles on artifical media, so we have to grow the weed and then pick
the little critters off the plants by hand.
I am lucky, I don't have to deal with that:-)

All we do, add some miracle grow to the tubs, change the water once a
month.


Regards,
Tom Barr

3rd annual Plant Fest July 8-14th 2005!
Get connected
www.BarrReport.com Get the information

  #10  
Old May 14th 05, 06:52 AM
Elaine T
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Bill Stock wrote:
"Elaine T" wrote in message
m...

Bill Stock wrote:

wrote in message
egroups.com...


Bill Stock wrote:


The Tropica site lists certain plants as "very high light"

requirements.


Anyone care to hazard a guess how this translates to WPG? I'm

assuming


somewhere close to 6 WPG?

I've yet to see a plant I cannot grow well at 2-3w a gallon.
All aquatic plants are for the most part, low light plants.

Yuo are welcomed to suggest a plant that cannot be grown at 2 w/gal,
I've grown close to 250-300species of aquatic plants over the years.
I've yet to meet one that does not do well at 2 watt gal.

I will say this: more light is not better.
More light= faster growth = faster uptake =more pruning and more chance
of algae.

Regards,
Tom Barr



It's my Water Hyacinth again. It was doing OK for a while, but it's
slowly going brown and mushy now.


Water hyacinth is a bit different than submerged plants. High light for
water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) means the equivalent of outdoor full
sun. I have water hyacinth growing well in a pond where it gets about 8
hours of direct, strong Southern California sun. It's not growing as well
or as quickly in my other outdoor tank where it only gets 6 hours.

Is your water hyacinth sitting right under your light fixture where it can
get direct light all day?



Yes, they even got sunburnt once, when I filled the tank a bit too full.

They were doing poorly before, but I cranked the light up to 16 hours a day
and they started to prosper. Then they started to go mushy again, so I
raised their temp to 77 and they perked up again. The leaves are bright
green, but the bulbs are going soft and mushy. I can always tell when they
are doing well, they get the long white roots.

I think my lights are losing some of their brightness, although this is not
supposed to be a factor with CF bulbs. I don't know if it's the fertilzer
(too much iron) or something completely different. They actually seemed to
do better before I added the CO2, although I suspect this is a coincidence.
I've also got a minor case of string Algae, perhaps it's using something
they need?

Any ideas?


Well, Tom says it's nutrients and it does sound like they have plenty of
light. Ponders say they need a lot of potash, so give that a try.
Perhaps your other plants sucked too much potash out of the water when
the CO2 started. Interesting on the root color - mine have thick clumps
of purplish, almost black roots.

--
Elaine T __
http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__
rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com
 




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