water sprite heh
fern species, anubias species, moss species. By the way, don;t think your tank is low tech with 32W of light
>"< t5 12k lights not to mention.
$1, $1.5, $2 plants from LFS. Just make sure they are "aquatic plant". Then next is to ascertain when is the exact day the LFS stock up. Buy on that day, that should give you first choice instead of buying some leftovers. It's like buying vegetable from market. Get Fresh. hee.
If you want to be very careful, ask for permission to take a photo then post it to the forum for advice.![]()
If you have 32 W over a 1.5 ft tank (I guess 45 x 22 cm surface area) you are looking at 320 W/m2 which is very high light. To make plants happy at this quantity of light you will probably need to supply some CO2 or set the light on a timer so that the illumination period is no more than about 5 hours with a 5 hour rest period between (lights on at 07h00, off at 12h00 and on at 17h00 and then off again at 22h00 for bed).
Good plants for such a tank are HM and Rotala rotundiflora and pygmy swords. Water sprite will thrive but will quickly try to escape the tank as it takes over.
Good luck.
how to i dose Co2? what is the item to buy?
As mine is a shrimp only tank, is it wise to dose anything like co2?
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DIY CO2 is simple. Yeast + sugar solution. But the thing about DIY is that you can hardly control the bubble rate. Commercial ones with Guage and proper canister do offer that flexibility. But here is the thing, shrimps view CO2 like death god. E.g. have live shrimps for your fishing trips, less than half a day, most of these shrimps would be dead. There are examples of shrimps keepers using CO2, but they are very careful on the bubble rate. Until you have read up, or perhaps ask for more advice, try not to yet.
I can keep shrimps in a 3ft with 3-4 bubbles per second. But I don't dare to do that on a 2ft.
You might want to take a look at this link, it should answer some of your questions.
http://forum.aquatic-gardeners.org/v...ic.php?p=2454&
Hi Eightfold,
Like what blue whale have suggest you may consider DIY CO2, alternatively you can try using Seachem Excel Organic Carbon.
Cheers
Knight
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