BJ is a plant that gets injured easily if improperly handled during planting from what I have read somewhere. I doubt it has anything to do with CO2 or nutrients from the initial meltdown since the rest of the plants are fine.
You cannot get rid of Greenwater by means of proper CO2 and fertilization. What you can do is by means of a long blackout, UV or Diatom filter. The concern here is why an outbreak of Greenwater in the first place? Too much critters? New filter with no mulm added? No mulm added to the new substrate? You do the proper stuff of adding mulm to both the bottom of the substrate and filter plus low bioload to high plant load and you will not get this. I really don't know why folks like ADA aquasoil though...![]()
Regards
Peter Gwee![]()









. Anyway, so I proceeded to determine the root cause of the problem. First, I checked my nitrate. Ok, it's a bit high. 20-25ppm but acceptable. Phosphate <1 ppm. I don't really trust these test kits that much but I think it's not totally out of whack either, so can trust a little bit. By the way, my fert regime is 20ml TMG (will increase later but still cycling tank), 2 tablespoons of Potassium Sulphate every week.
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