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Joey_Jojo

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Posts posted by Joey_Jojo

  1. I'm not sure why, but my anubias are getting terrible pinholes and algae. I have two and both look about the same. I thought maybe I had a nutrient deficiency, but if anything I need a water change because my nitrates are at about 80ppm. Phosphates are pictured as well, but I'm not too sure how to dial those in. Too low is bad and too high is also bad...

    I also dose Potassium, as I have read that can be a common deficiency. 

    Light schedule pictured as well.

    Thanks to all!

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  2. I have a great big sword in my 54g. I'm not sure what kind; it has a little red tint but it isn't a red melon. If anything it just looks like an Amazon with some red if that matters. In any case, the old growth leaves are all wasting away. It started slowlyas some pinholes here and there, and I have been trying to stop it since it started but I can't seem to get it right. I've done two rounds of root tabs a few weeks apart, as well as regularly dosing Easy Green and supplemental potassium (which I read can cause the pinholes). I also have some pinholes on my red crypts and my lily, so I think it has to be some nutrient deficiency, but I have added a bunch of root tabs over time, plus the tank itself has an organic soil base under the substrate which i had hoped would last. 

    If you look at the second image you can see there is healthy new growth. I'm wondering if the damage to the old growth is done and I should just prune heavily or what. Thanks for your help 🙂 

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  3. I have two angelfish in my community tank. I never knew if they were males, females or a pair. They share the tank with a variety of community fish including swordtails, harlequin rasboras, a cleanup crew and two pearl gouramis. Sometime yesterday one of them seems to have laid a large clump of eggs on a great big Amazon sword. I wouldn't know what type of eggs they are, but for the behavior of the angels this morning. They are absolutely terrorizing everyone in the tank, particularly the poor gouramis. 

    How long will be acting like this?

    Will these eggs hatch?

    Any advice for what to do in general?

    Thanks all!

  4. It's weird... a lot of internet sources say high phosphates cause algae. Here is a top google result. Other results say it can be too low or too high. My test showed ~2ppm, and this site calls 3ppm "much too high." So suffice to say, I'm confused.

    All the plants are doing great, so honestly I hesitate to add more ferts. I will stick with the reduced photoperiod for a while, throw in a water change and see how I do. I'll report back for anyone interested. Thanks all 🙂 

  5. I am in what I think is the early-ish stages of a green spot outbreak. I am hoping that, maybe if I list some parameters, perhaps one of you kind folks will lead me in the right direction 🙂  Some stats:

    pH - 7.5

    Ammonia and nitrite - 0ppm

    Nitrate - 10ppm

    Phosphate - 2ppm

    I had blackbeard growing for a while, but that seemed to go away when I increased the light intensity by adding a second light. My tank is a corner, so it's deep. The BBA went away for the most part, but now I'm getting this green spot. It's on a bunch of anubias and sword leaves. I dose Easy Green and Liquid Carbon a couple times a week, but nitrates never really go up.

    Lights were on a siesta with two five-hour stints, but I recently dropped it to two fours.

    Thanks 🙂

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  6. I thought it could be a sword, but I have noticed that the bottom of each leaf/stem stays fairly broad, rather than thinning out toward the bottom and becoming more broad in the middle. Follow the leaves all the way into the substrate and they're still pretty wide. I took another photo, so I would love any ideas. I got it at my LFS a while back, and it grew so slow I didn't really notice it much until recently. 

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  7. 5 minutes ago, Andy's Fish Den said:

    To an extent it would be if you are using what was known in the past as a trickle filter where the water goes into a tray with a bunch of holes drilled in it, then trickles down through some bioballs. 

    I does indeed pass through a tray like you describe. And in fact the bio balls compartment is not submerged, so it is trickling through emerged bio balls before submerging again.

    • Like 1
  8. I have always had the general idea that, given the fact that the water is cascading over a compartment of bio balls, my sump filter is aerating my water and I probably don't need an air stone. Do you folks think that's accurate?

    • Like 1
  9. Howdy everyone. I'm getting back into fish keeping after five or six years out of the game, and I've really come to appreciate Aquarium Coop content for helping me learn more about plants especially, as that wasn't my thing before. I can share some photos of my other setups later on, but for now here's my new crowntail betta. I was worried he'd eaten all the shrimp, but they've slowly been coming out of hiding. Fortunately they have a lot of cover. Stay well, everyone!

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    • Like 7
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