![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "jonboy" wrote in message et... My LFS sold me Hagen Plant Grow spikes. They claim that they will last 1 year after they are activated. Anyway, the sticks contain phosphates: Here are the contents: Total Nitrogen: 16% 7.5% Ammonical Nitrogen 8.5% Nitrate Nitrogen Available Phosphates 9% Soluble Phosphates 12% Iron .45% Anyway, these spikes have several other trace elements. My concern is that I'm adding phosphates to my water and not enough iron. Should I pull these plant tabs and buy Seachem Flourish tabs. I don't want to change my substrate and thought that the tabs would work better then a liquid that you pour in to the water. I could really use some advice. Thanks If you get some Flourish tabs, post the ingredients. Also list the trace elements in the Hagen plant grow spikes. I have some Jobe's food spikes here (for ferns, 16-2-6) Total nitrogen: 16% 2% Nitrate nitrogen 10.5% water insoluble nitrogen 3.5% urea nitrogen available phosphoric acid (P2O5) 2% soluble potash (K2O) 6% derived from ureaformaldehyde nitrogen, triple superphosphate, potassium nitrate. I'm going to rumble your post over to rec.aquaria.freshwater.plants. That's where the experts on this hang out. NetMax |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"NetMax" wrote in message ...
"jonboy" wrote in message et... My LFS sold me Hagen Plant Grow spikes. They claim that they will last 1 year after they are activated. Anyway, the sticks contain phosphates: Here are the contents: Total Nitrogen: 16% 7.5% Ammonical Nitrogen 8.5% Nitrate Nitrogen Available Phosphates 9% Soluble Phosphates 12% Iron .45% Anyway, these spikes have several other trace elements. My concern is that I'm adding phosphates to my water and not enough iron. Should I pull these plant tabs and buy Seachem Flourish tabs. I don't want to change my substrate and thought that the tabs would work better then a liquid that you pour in to the water. I could really use some advice. Thanks If you get some Flourish tabs, post the ingredients. Also list the trace elements in the Hagen plant grow spikes. I have some Jobe's food spikes here (for ferns, 16-2-6) Total nitrogen: 16% 2% Nitrate nitrogen 10.5% water insoluble nitrogen 3.5% urea nitrogen available phosphoric acid (P2O5) 2% soluble potash (K2O) 6% derived from ureaformaldehyde nitrogen, triple superphosphate, potassium nitrate. I'm going to rumble your post over to rec.aquaria.freshwater.plants. That's where the experts on this hang out. NetMax Hey... Whatever you do, dont get the Nutrafin Plant Gro Spikes!!!! I had them for a week and my Phosphate level went through the damn roof like a rocket!! Went well over 5ppm. Luckily I was able to identify them as the culprit and removed them. Now my ratios are all outa wack, and I have Nutrafin Plant Gro Spikes to thank for it! Read the ingredients...the NPK is NOT in a 10:1 ratio! I think, from my experience, it will add more harm than good...try the Seachem if you want... You have been warned... Nick |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
contents:
Total Nitrogen: 16% 7.5% Ammonical Nitrogen 8.5% Nitrate Nitrogen Hey... Whatever you do, dont get the Nutrafin Plant Gro Spikes!!!! I had them for a week and my Phosphate level went through the damn roof like a rocket!! Went well over 5ppm. Luckily I was able to identify them as the culprit and removed them. Now my ratios are all outa wack, and I have Nutrafin Plant Gro Spikes to thank for it! Read the ingredients...the NPK is NOT in a 10:1 ratio! I think, from my experience, it will add more harm than good...try the Seachem if you want... You have been warned... Nick Rather than reading anything about ratios read the part about Ammonical Nitrogen==== urea/NH4. Try this, add KH2PO4 to 5ppm and then try adding .2ppm of NH4. Keep C02 and the other paratrmeters the same for each run. A bunch of PO4 will not do anything as far as algae presence but even a small amount of NH4/urea will cause blooms. We commnly add NO3, PO4, K and traces, the only thing missing is the NH4/urea. Therein lies the problem with terrestrial fertilizers, not PO4. I commonly dose 1ppm of PO4, the algae has the same access as the plants do, its entirely orthophosphate which in inorganic highly available in the water column PO4. This level is maintained 0.5ppm to 1.0ppm or higher so algae certainly are not limited nor are the plants in terms of PO4. Adding more is not going to give you more algae or plants beyond their intital needs/storage. Algae need far less nutrients than the plants do also. N:P ratios for aquatic plants= 10:1. FW algae= 14:1. More PO4 will favor the plants. My tanks have no had algae issues for over decade. If you toss a jobes stick into the water column you will get instant algae bloom. It's simple enough to do and prove it to your self. This is myth about PO4 = algae in planted tanks. Regards, Tom Barr |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() " wrote in message om... contents: Total Nitrogen: 16% 7.5% Ammonical Nitrogen 8.5% Nitrate Nitrogen Hey... Whatever you do, dont get the Nutrafin Plant Gro Spikes!!!! I had them for a week and my Phosphate level went through the damn roof like a rocket!! Went well over 5ppm. Luckily I was able to identify them as the culprit and removed them. Now my ratios are all outa wack, and I have Nutrafin Plant Gro Spikes to thank for it! Read the ingredients...the NPK is NOT in a 10:1 ratio! I think, from my experience, it will add more harm than good...try the Seachem if you want... You have been warned... Nick Rather than reading anything about ratios read the part about Ammonical Nitrogen==== urea/NH4. Try this, add KH2PO4 to 5ppm and then try adding .2ppm of NH4. Keep C02 and the other paratrmeters the same for each run. A bunch of PO4 will not do anything as far as algae presence but even a small amount of NH4/urea will cause blooms. We commnly add NO3, PO4, K and traces, the only thing missing is the NH4/urea. Therein lies the problem with terrestrial fertilizers, not PO4. I commonly dose 1ppm of PO4, the algae has the same access as the plants do, its entirely orthophosphate which in inorganic highly available in the water column PO4. This level is maintained 0.5ppm to 1.0ppm or higher so algae certainly are not limited nor are the plants in terms of PO4. Adding more is not going to give you more algae or plants beyond their intital needs/storage. Algae need far less nutrients than the plants do also. N:P ratios for aquatic plants= 10:1. FW algae= 14:1. More PO4 will favor the plants. My tanks have no had algae issues for over decade. If you toss a jobes stick into the water column you will get instant algae bloom. It's simple enough to do and prove it to your self. This is myth about PO4 = algae in planted tanks. Regards, Tom Barr Tom, how do the Nutrafin Plant Gro Spikes compare. Should I recommend these or not? Any special conditions favour them or any they should not be used under. Please try to keep your answer relatively basic for my benefit ;~), and so I can remember most of it to pass along to my customers. NetMax. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Tom:
Can you suggest a fertilizer and fertilization routine for a fairly well planted 55 gallon tank with community fish? Thanks " wrote in message om... contents: Total Nitrogen: 16% 7.5% Ammonical Nitrogen 8.5% Nitrate Nitrogen Hey... Whatever you do, dont get the Nutrafin Plant Gro Spikes!!!! I had them for a week and my Phosphate level went through the damn roof like a rocket!! Went well over 5ppm. Luckily I was able to identify them as the culprit and removed them. Now my ratios are all outa wack, and I have Nutrafin Plant Gro Spikes to thank for it! Read the ingredients...the NPK is NOT in a 10:1 ratio! I think, from my experience, it will add more harm than good...try the Seachem if you want... You have been warned... Nick Rather than reading anything about ratios read the part about Ammonical Nitrogen==== urea/NH4. Try this, add KH2PO4 to 5ppm and then try adding .2ppm of NH4. Keep C02 and the other paratrmeters the same for each run. A bunch of PO4 will not do anything as far as algae presence but even a small amount of NH4/urea will cause blooms. We commnly add NO3, PO4, K and traces, the only thing missing is the NH4/urea. Therein lies the problem with terrestrial fertilizers, not PO4. I commonly dose 1ppm of PO4, the algae has the same access as the plants do, its entirely orthophosphate which in inorganic highly available in the water column PO4. This level is maintained 0.5ppm to 1.0ppm or higher so algae certainly are not limited nor are the plants in terms of PO4. Adding more is not going to give you more algae or plants beyond their intital needs/storage. Algae need far less nutrients than the plants do also. N:P ratios for aquatic plants= 10:1. FW algae= 14:1. More PO4 will favor the plants. My tanks have no had algae issues for over decade. If you toss a jobes stick into the water column you will get instant algae bloom. It's simple enough to do and prove it to your self. This is myth about PO4 = algae in planted tanks. Regards, Tom Barr |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
" wrote in message
om... I commonly dose 1ppm of PO4 [ ... ] Adding more is not going to give you more algae or plants beyond their intital needs/storage. Algae need far less nutrients than the plants do also. N:P ratios for aquatic plants= 10:1. FW algae= 14:1. More PO4 will favor the plants. [ ... ] This is myth about PO4 = algae in planted tanks. Now I am royally confused! I've been working very hard to control algea through limiting phosphate. How is it done otherwise? Thanks |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() There are different forms of Nitrate/Ammonia. Urea is a form of ammonium which comes from fish waste and jobes stix and soil. Algae loves Urea, so limiting phosphate is a waste of time as its the urea or other forms of Nitrogen that algae love. Plants need phosphate to survive healthily, limiting phosphate = limited plant growth. Plants can utilise different forms of Nitrates, and so can algae. I suppose urea is more easily digested than NO3 as far as algae is concerned, this is why we are dosing KNO3 and not Urea, sorry I dont know the elemental abbreviation for that form of Nitrogen. I'm sure this post is confusing, I'm speed typing at the moment. I'll clarify the above mess tomorrow when I'm of sane mind. -- **So long, and thanks for all the fish!** "Nemo" wrote in message ... " wrote in message om... I commonly dose 1ppm of PO4 [ ... ] Adding more is not going to give you more algae or plants beyond their intital needs/storage. Algae need far less nutrients than the plants do also. N:P ratios for aquatic plants= 10:1. FW algae= 14:1. More PO4 will favor the plants. [ ... ] This is myth about PO4 = algae in planted tanks. Now I am royally confused! I've been working very hard to control algea through limiting phosphate. How is it done otherwise? Thanks |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ok, all. Two questions/facts.
1) I have dosed phosphate, to continuous detectable levels, and have triggered algae in an otherwise stable, long term stable, tank. Yea, like-like, no other changes made. 2) Ammonia is indeed a preferred form for plant/algae. But, what do bio-filters do? Convert Ammonia to Nitrate, they do that quite quickly, and adjust to sustained higher levels also quite quickly. In light of how many tanks face algal issues, are we saying that "everyone" is running material levels of Ammonia, routinely? My tried and true recommendation... Obviously, don't dose Ammonia, Urea, or other forms of Ammonium - it's flat out fish poison, if nothing else. If you don't have algae, then make no mistake, you are limiting it in some way. YOU may be depending on limits in N, P, Fe, heck, even B or any of the other dozen odd nutrients plants need. Algae has a fast turnover rate compared to plants, and plants will, ultimately, "win" on the uptake of rare nutrients. *I* AM P limited. Item 1 above made that completely clear. *YOU* may be able to dump tons of P into your tank, and live a long and algae free life - if you are in fact limiting on something else. Now, being "X limited" doesn't mean absolute 0, absolutely all the time. You may have to dose, small bits now and again, to make sure the higher plants can occasionally find what they need. ******************************* Happy'Cam'per wrote: There are different forms of Nitrate/Ammonia. Urea is a form of ammonium which comes from fish waste and jobes stix and soil. Algae loves Urea, so limiting phosphate is a waste of time as its the urea or other forms of Nitrogen that algae love. Plants need phosphate to survive healthily, limiting phosphate = limited plant growth. Plants can utilise different forms of Nitrates, and so can algae. I suppose urea is more easily digested than NO3 as far as algae is concerned, this is why we are dosing KNO3 and not Urea, sorry I dont know the elemental abbreviation for that form of Nitrogen. I'm sure this post is confusing, I'm speed typing at the moment. I'll clarify the above mess tomorrow when I'm of sane mind. -- **So long, and thanks for all the fish!** "Nemo" wrote in message ... " wrote in message .com... I commonly dose 1ppm of PO4 [ ... ] Adding more is not going to give you more algae or plants beyond their intital needs/storage. Algae need far less nutrients than the plants do also. N:P ratios for aquatic plants= 10:1. FW algae= 14:1. More PO4 will favor the plants. [ ... ] This is myth about PO4 = algae in planted tanks. Now I am royally confused! I've been working very hard to control algea through limiting phosphate. How is it done otherwise? Thanks |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Midposted
1) I have dosed phosphate, to continuous detectable levels, and have triggered algae in an otherwise stable, long term stable, tank. Yea, like-like, no other changes made. How much lighting do you have on this tank.? I'll bet its round about 2 watts per gallon or less, right? My small 10 gallon is running just over 3wpg, 2 two litre DIY bottles pumping about 1-2 bubbles per second into the intake of a slow running AC. I have used the Barr method for the last 6 months or so. It took a while for the tank to settle into this routine but the results have been great. In fact better than ever. I understand this method is "balls to the wall" as far as the ammount of light, co2 and ferts go. But if you keep up on it, it works astoundingly. I dump about 8ppm no3 and 3-5 drops of fleet enema twice a week into the tank with ZERO algae, a whisp of BBA on one or two leaves but nothing to stress about. I think as far as your light and co2 are strong/high you can pretty much go well above the recommended dosing levels. 2) Ammonia is indeed a preferred form for plant/algae. But, what do bio-filters do? Convert Ammonia to Nitrate, they do that quite quickly, and adjust to sustained higher levels also quite quickly. In light of how many tanks face algal issues, are we saying that "everyone" is running material levels of Ammonia, routinely? Its hard to say, I think each tank's algae problems are unique, some may be co2 or light issues while others may be from a high fishload resulting in an influx of NH4. If the bacteria cannot convert the NH4 to less harmful NO3 quick enough then it stands to reason that there's alot of NH4 floating around the water column. Thus plants and algae alike would help themselves to the more preferred form of NH4. My tried and true recommendation... Obviously, don't dose Ammonia, Urea, or other forms of Ammonium - it's flat out fish poison, if nothing else. Ditto. If I did not have fish in the tank I would really like to experiment with this. It would be good to see the effects on the algae and plants by adding certain ammounts of NH4 . I'm sure Tom has done this but he does not state at which levels the algae take off. If you don't have algae, then make no mistake, you are limiting it in some way. YOU may be depending on limits in N, P, Fe, heck, even B or any of the other dozen odd nutrients plants need. Algae has a fast turnover rate compared to plants, and plants will, ultimately, "win" on the uptake of rare nutrients. Not necessarily. Is'nt this what this thread is about, the algae will do better with 'rare nutrients' (do you mean urea?) than the plants will if the other nutrients are not in a good range, thats why were all dosing another form of Nitrate, NO3. As long as you have all nutrients in a certain range and not limit ANYTHING, things will be fine. Ultimately it will be the tank that decides whats good and whats not, I think its best just to play it by ear. *I* AM P limited. Item 1 above made that completely clear. *YOU* may be able to dump tons of P into your tank, and live a long and algae free life - if you are in fact limiting on something else. I have all nutrients in a good range, so far so good (6 months). Why not add Light to this as a limiting growth factor?? Dose all your ferts within a good range, get the co2 bubbling and play with different ammounts of light until you find the 'sweet spot'. Limiting a plant with ferts is just to much trouble for me. Bill, got any pics of your tanks? I'd love to see ![]() -- **So long, and thanks for all the fish!** |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Happy'Cam'per wrote:
Midposted How much lighting do you have on this tank.? I'll bet its round about 2 watts per gallon or less, right? 135G tank, running an IceCap 660 VHO ballast and 3 5', high PAR (2x50/50; 1 actinic), tubes. Just over 3 watts/G. Not that W/G is anything more than a guideline, I could be using yellow stoplights, or something equally horrible. My small 10 gallon is running just over 3wpg, 2 two litre DIY bottles pumping about 1-2 bubbles per second into the intake of a slow running AC. I have used the Barr method for the last 6 months or so. It took a while for the tank to settle into this routine but the results have been great. I use PMDD with fine results. Many regimens provide success, for random values of end-user "success". I like PMDD because Conlin & Sears' are somewhat better at stating expectations, operating theories, and matching them through experiments than Bob. If you don't have algae, then make no mistake, you are limiting it in some way. ... Algae has a fast turnover rate Not necessarily. On the plants "winning" point, you may be correct in regards to certain nutrients. On the you're limiting algae by some means point, a hundred years of Biological Science will disagree with you. form of Nitrate, NO3. As long as you have all nutrients in a certain range and not limit ANYTHING, things will be fine. If you don't limit "ANYTHING", then you are feeding the algae, without limit, as well. You, I, nor anyone reading this post, knows what you're limiting, but I assure you that you have some limiting factor - else you'd have a tank full of algae. I have all nutrients in a good range, so far so good (6 months). Why not add Light to this as a limiting growth factor?? Got plenty. Running 400 odd Watts 12x7 adds up. Dose all your ferts within a good range, No thanks, I spike and limit P. get the co2 bubbling 25 odd ppm from a pressure tank/controller. and play with different ammounts of light until you find the 'sweet spot'. Can't tolerate anymore growth. Too much pruning already. (My goal is one hour a month of wet maintenance). I feed/fert daily, and can't quite make a month without yanking/trimming some of the plants. Bill, got any pics of your tanks? I'd love to see ![]() Some on 35mm. No digital camera, tho :-( |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Plant Fertilizer | J | Plants | 0 | February 29th 04 12:15 PM |
Why good plant growth= bad algae growth | [email protected] | Plants | 2 | February 22nd 04 10:45 PM |
Planted tank help - Nutrafin CO2 Natural Plant System (Hagen) ?? | Shawn P. Good | Plants | 12 | February 6th 04 12:48 AM |
General plant keeping question | Bruce Abrams | Plants | 4 | December 31st 03 12:33 AM |
Numbers on plant fertilizer bottle | Wellman | General | 5 | July 7th 03 07:54 PM |