Stan Z Posted November 25, 2022 Share Posted November 25, 2022 These Anubias had been fine until very recently. I had a lot of brown algae on them, took them out of the tank and doused them with peroxide. Could that have caused this? They’ve been in the tank too long for melting. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheSwissAquarist Posted November 25, 2022 Share Posted November 25, 2022 Maybe try Reverse Respiration? Add some Easy Root Tabs to see if they do any better afterwards. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nabokovfan87 Posted November 25, 2022 Share Posted November 25, 2022 On 11/25/2022 at 6:06 AM, Stan Z said: I had a lot of brown algae on them, took them out of the tank and doused them with peroxide. Could that have caused this? They’ve been in the tank too long for melting. I would need to see the actual rhizome. I don't know if it's attaches or just the roots are in the substrate? They Anubias is usually going to respond or adapt based on feeding behavior (bioload), lighting, and then dosing schedule. If you're having brown diatoms they can usually be removed with a toothbrush on the leaves and then you just clean the tank itself to get ahead of them. Cut back lighting, dosing a bit leaner, reduce overfeeding, might be all you need. If the leaves in question are on one end of the rhizome it's likely best to pull the most damaged ones off. at this point I don't think it's necessary. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mmiller2001 Posted November 25, 2022 Share Posted November 25, 2022 On 11/25/2022 at 7:06 AM, Stan Z said: These Anubias had been fine until very recently. I had a lot of brown algae on them, took them out of the tank and doused them with peroxide. Could that have caused this? They’ve been in the tank too long for melting. How long did you leave it on there? Was it diluted? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jungle Fan Posted November 26, 2022 Share Posted November 26, 2022 (edited) Could be damage from the peroxide if too high a dose was applied. I'm not very subtle with my Anubias whenever something happens to a leaf due to the fact of how many I have in my tank to take care of I just cut them off, and in about a month there are new leaves. I've even had rhizomes where I cut all the leaves off and new leaves were sprouting in about a month and a half, not in my current tank but a previous one where two Anubias had basically taken over a complete 55 gallon tank. I ended up chopping the two rhizomes into about fifty small pieces and attached them to rocks with twine and ended up having fifty new small Anubias plants. Edited November 26, 2022 by Jungle Fan typo 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stan Z Posted November 26, 2022 Author Share Posted November 26, 2022 @Mmiller2001I put them in a bucket and sort of drizzled the peroxide over them from the bottle, which is 3%. @nabokovfan87they are all glued to rocks. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mmiller2001 Posted November 26, 2022 Share Posted November 26, 2022 Yeah, that will damage them. I do 10ml H202 to 1 gallon of water for 10 minutes. Or spot dose 15ml per 10 gallons of water. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Windsor Aquarium Society Posted November 26, 2022 Share Posted November 26, 2022 It is definitely damage from the peroxide. I had the same thing happen. I was doing it as an experiment of how much peroxide the anubias can take. I soaked the BBA covered leaves in 3% peroxide. I was devastating to the anubias. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Patrick_G Posted November 26, 2022 Share Posted November 26, 2022 I’ve also damaged some with an extra strong dose of peroxide or glut. I’d take @Jungle Fan’s advice and do some trimming. You’ll have new leaves in no time! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
glenn anthony Posted November 26, 2022 Share Posted November 26, 2022 (edited) I have used peroxide 3% in a spray bottle and have never had an issue as far as Anubias goes, but that was with small spot treatments and the spray bottle (which if i remember i used about 75-80% H2O2 and 25 or 20% dechlorinated water there was one time i was attempting to clean up a Java fern and did soak it for a min. or 2 next day i had alot of yellow leaves (thinner leafs maybe?? I would just to be on safe side use the 3% but dilutted with some water keep in mind this is just my experiences HAVE a GREAT WEEKEND PS the leaves themselves do not seem that bad, actually look like your average anubias leaves Edited November 26, 2022 by glenn anthony forgot to add last sentence Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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