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Quarantining/Treating New Plants


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@KBOzzie59 some people like to put in a dip to kill of any pests like algae, snails, etc.

Now to answer your questions @Idgyroo :

As mentioned before some people like to dip their plants in a chemical to get rid of any pests. Now I think its safe that the overwhelming majority of people dont do this. And I for one dont do this also.

If your not scared of snails coming into your tank (you shouldnt be...) then I would intorduce your java moss to your display tank now. 

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4 hours ago, Mmiller2001 said:

I do 3ml hydrogen peroxide in 1 gallon of water for 10 minutes. However, if I remember correctly, mosses might not like that so much. User discretion advised. 

Apology: It's 10ml per gallon for 10 minutes. Then rinse.

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I've had an experience with my terrarium with Scottish moss.  I got slugs.  So with plants I've been sketchy when buying them.  My terrarium was just plants. No pets. This is for my aquarium shrimp.

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I stage purchased plants in tanks or buckets, with lights and sponge filters, so that I can take my time planting.

I quarantine locally-collected plants in buckets, with lights and sponge filters, so that I can check for invasive species.

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I am in the middle of setting up a new pond....I just got my plants a few days ago and they are setup in a 15 gallon tote with a sponge filter with a couple squirts of easy green awaiting for my pond to be ready for them to be planted. This way I can see if there are any hitchhikers (not snails. I like snails) but I do not want any dragonfly nymphs so this gives me an opportunity to check everything out before adding to the display just to be safe.  

3835620B-32BD-402E-905B-B95612C86A87.jpeg.1c3d902951be31e70ef6a0bd76462e3d.jpeg

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  • 1 month later...

If you are quarantining plants, or keeping them in a tub until you are ready to plant, does this work with bunched stem plants? They don't typically have much in the way of roots. I ask because I tried to hold over a shipment of plants once until I could plant, had them in an empty tank with a filter, and a light, and I lost the bunched plants. I'm abut to start a 48 gallon planted tank, and I'd like to pre-buy the plants, quarantine them for pests (no planaria!), and let them convert to  underwater foliage before I plant them. If I need to avoid bunched plants, so be it.

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Usually, if I buy plants, I place them in an alum bath before I put them in my tank.

To make an alum bath, get a 5 gallon bucket with a lid. Put 9 Tablespoons of alum (available in the spice aisle of any grocery store) in the bucket followed by 3 gallons of dechlorinated water and stir it up. 

Place your aquarium plants in the bucket and allow them to soak for 3 hours. The alum bath will kill living snails right away, but it takes the alum 3 hours to penetrate the snails egg masses to kill the eggs,. I believe the alum will immediately kill any parasites ( Hydra and others (?)) that may be clinging to the plants.

After 3 hours, remove the plants from the bucket, rinse them off under running water, and then you can place them in your aquarium even if you don't plan on setting them until another day. 

Remember to put the lid on the bucket so that it's ready for the next time you buy plants, with a lid, this stuff lasts for years.

 

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  • 2 years later...

Does a simple rinse of the plants after the alum bath get rid of the alum enough that it doesn't hurt the fish in the tank?  I ordered plants from here and they arrive today.  I was just going to put them in my tank, but I don't want to hurt the fish or other plants that are already in my tank!

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@Irene did an experiment on the best ways to remove pest snails from aquarium plants. It’s pretty interesting!

 

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Posted (edited)

@Kristina, might I suggest reverse respiration instead of an alum dip?

https://reverserespiration.com/

Not that those other systems won't work (they will!) and not that you necessarily need to quarantine plants, but if you want to, you should look into reverse respiration. Among the other benefits, the only by-product is water, so you don't have to worry about adequately rinsing the treated plants.

Edited by Rube_Goldfish
Added @ tag for Kristina
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Posted (edited)
On 5/27/2021 at 9:54 AM, Idgyroo said:

I just ordered java moss and was wondering what are the proper procedures to quarantine and treat this type of plant.

Hi, here's a series of images of relative cellular damage to the plants with various cleaning methods. Reverse Respiration was by far the least caustic and was the only one that enjoyed 100% pest elimination and 98% algae kill-off. In fact, only RR killed Malaysian Trumpets due to the pressure penetrating their protective operculum. RR also is the only method that poses no toxic residue risk.

There's an instructional video here: www.reverserespiration.com

 6CleaningImages.jpg.5040d1c9777f36b647cb92a2ace54a4b.jpg

 

 

 

On 6/5/2024 at 11:07 AM, Rube_Goldfish said:

@Kristina, might I suggest reverse respiration instead of an alum dip?

https://reverserespiration.com/

Not that those other systems won't work (they will!) and not that you necessarily need to quarantine plants, but if you want to, you should look into reverse respiration. Among the other benefits, the only by-product is water, so you don't have to worry about adequately rinsing the treated plants.

 

Edited by dasaltemelosguy
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On 6/5/2024 at 2:07 PM, Rube_Goldfish said:

@Kristina, might I suggest reverse respiration instead of an alum dip?

https://reverserespiration.com/

Not that those other systems won't work (they will!) and not that you necessarily need to quarantine plants, but if you want to, you should look into reverse respiration. Among the other benefits, the only by-product is water, so you don't have to worry about adequately rinsing the treated plants.

Thanks!  I did see this reverse respiration mentioned in other posts and thought about that as well.  Sounds like it would be the safer option!

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