Rocksor
Thanks. should I only keep the fishes and no plants?
That's entirely up to you.
Rocksor
Thanks. should I only keep the fishes and no plants?
And a whole lot of luck with silvers lol. Still amazed that you pulled that off.Keeping fish in planted tanks is entirely possible. But it takes the right kind of plants and fish, and some planning.
View attachment 1470226
Puffers may nibble but really aren’t plant eaters.Aimara
Thanks very much for your useful analysis. this is not just a plant tank. I have many fishes in this tank.
I have 8 pea puffers, 1 green spot puffer , 1 figure 8 puffer and 4 amazon puffers. are these puffers plant eaters?
As far as the snails go, I remember he added them as puffer food.Very hard to give objective suggestions without additional information (water characteristics, temperature, frequency of plant liquid food and root tabs, etc.), were the plants doing well before?
1st photo - Amazon swords like both liquid fertilizer and root tabs. The former, perhaps once a week, the latter perhaps once in na while (2-3 months or so).
2nd photo - (seems to be Bacopa, or similar), in flower pot, seemingly still with the "cotton" that they are sold with? Need to be planted in real substratum, and responds well to fertilization as described above.
3rd photo - Can't tell what plant, as it is covered with algae. Presumably something attached to driftwood, such as java fern or Anubias? Algae needs to be removed mechanically (as frequently as needed), or there is no hope. After removing most, removing from tank, spraying with peroxide, and placing back should help.
General observations-
1- The black gravel is too coarse. Although plants can grow in it, they prefer sand, or much finer gravel. In addition, that gravel allows too much waste to go to deeper layers. Sand will not.
2- You have a lot of Assassin snails, possibly introduced to combat other snails. When numbers of snails that serve as food fro assassin snails decline (due to they preying upon them), assassin snails turn to eat whatever they can find, including detritus and plants. In nature they are scavengers.
3- There seems to be at least one puffer? (perhaps I am wrong). Not the best friend of plants (even though primarily carnivores).
But better description is needed for real suggestions. Good luck!
General observations-
1- The black gravel is too coarse. Although plants can grow in it, they prefer sand, or much finer gravel. In addition, that gravel allows too much waste to go to deeper layers. Sand will not.
Can I replace the black gravel with sand? will it not kill all the good bacteria? can you refer some good sands so that I can buy?


