Stan Z Posted August 28, 2022 Share Posted August 28, 2022 New aquarium, new user of real plants. I saw a couple leaves from the new anubias floating around this morning and thought maybe the current from the filter was too rough for the plant so I began to re-tie the rhizome in another spot. It was all mushy. I have no experience with real plants so I’m here to learn. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Seattle_Aquarist Posted August 28, 2022 Share Posted August 28, 2022 Hi @Stan Z That does sound like Anubias Rot. https://www.aquariumcoop.com/blogs/aquarium/anubias-rot It started showing up in the hobby in the early 2000's and can infect healthy Anubias in a tank where there is an infected Anubias. I would remove and dispose of the infected plant. -Roy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CJs Aquatics Posted August 28, 2022 Share Posted August 28, 2022 Your on the right track. Best advice I have for most things, at least that works for me, set it and forget it. Obviously you do maintenance including ferts and tabs and algae removal, assess water quality issues and lighting, but all in all I’ve had the best success when I set the plants up for success and just allow them to do there thing. You will probably find that some plants grow like crazy for you, and some you have trouble with. Example, everyone can grow guppy grass so it was one of the first plants I tried many years ago… it all died immediately, but hornwort grows daily in my water… things like that. Once you find what grows well for you in your water, and dial in the nutrients and lighting, I would guess your going to love live plants… make sure your rhizome doesn’t get buried, Not sure why it’s mushy, best guess, eighter it’s about to die or it’s transitioning, I typically glue rhizome plants or weigh them rather then tying them personally but which ever way ends up working for you. Plants are trial and error but in my opinion worth it… Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stan Z Posted August 28, 2022 Author Share Posted August 28, 2022 I like the anubias for a foreground plant. I read to plant it in good water circulation to help avoid algae and the leaves moved quite a bit so when I saw a piece had come off the rhysome I thought it was too much current. So far I have Amazon sword, Java fern and hornwort. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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