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#1
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I went to a website recommended by members here (Stapeley Water gardens) and
they mention that in a new pond, green water will prevent new plants from gaining a foothold and establishing themselves due to the lack of light (makes sense). They suggested instead of putting fish in, to put loads of Daphnia instead (for the first season) because Daphnia will eat the Algae that causes the Green water in the first place and so the Green water cannot form and the plants will be free to settle in. Another site told me that Daphnia is a form of water flea that fish like to eat -My question is then can I fill my pond with Daphnia and put just a couple of fish in on the assumption that the Daphnia will keep breeding fast enough to always make sure that there is more than the fish can eat -after all natural selection dictates that the strong will survive to breed the next generation and then in theory I'll never ever get Green water. Will that work or will it just stress the fish that all these fleas are constantly zipping and darting around the pond? |
#2
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![]() The problem with using daphnia for algae control is that they need to eat algae. So if they were able to eat up all the algae then they'd die and the algae would all come back as it would be feeding on the organic mess the dead daphnia make. And when you put in fish with the daphnia they'll eat many of them up. The balancing act of algae cells to daphia to higher predators sounds like a big headache to me. There are easier ways... click on the site below my sig. for all of them. kathy :-) algae primer http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html |
#3
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![]() The problem with using daphnia for algae control is that they need to eat algae. So if they were able to eat up all the algae then they'd die and the algae would all come back as it would be feeding on the organic mess the dead daphnia make. And when you put in fish with the daphnia they'll eat many of them up. The balancing act of algae cells to daphia to higher predators sounds like a big headache to me. There are easier ways... click on the site below my sig. for all of them. kathy :-) algae primer http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html |
#4
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Im not sure but here is a daphnia link that might answer the question.
I found it through Bluegill perch surfing. http://www.caudata.org/daphnia/#further |
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