balancing light, co2 and nutrients

filipem

Prolific Poster
May 21, 2008
60
0
6
I'm still having some issues with one of my tanks.

here is some info some tank

- 46 gallon Approx 24" x 24" 22"T

- filtration 1 ehiem 2217 and one ehiem 2213

- light 5 55W CF bulbs @ 6400K. (2.3WPG) The fixture is a coralife deluxe unit. The bulbs were replaced two weeks ago

- C02, 20lb tank, aquamedic regulator, clippard needle valve, aquamedic500 diffuser. 2-3bps I think I'm getting 20-30ppm (drop checker is always bright green) using 4KH solution lab prepared. Solution is replaced once a week.

- fish, 1 juvie german ram. 4 endlers

- temperature is set @ 79

- Water, 35GH, 17KH, 7.8PH

- Plants
Ludwigia Repens (doing very well)
Brown Crypt (seems to be stunted and has never really grown)
Dwarf Sag (slowly dying off)
Dwarf Hair Grass (slowly dying off)
Limnophila sessiflora (melting)
Rotala Rotundifolia (doing very well)
Stargrass (killed it in two weeks)
HC (killed it in two weeks)
Ricca/cyrstalwort) added two weeks ago. (no change)
The tank is lightly planted

Dosing
KNO3 - 1/4 TSP 3X week
PO4 1/16 TSP 3X week
flourish 3X week
(I dose the flourish on a different day then all of the others)

Substrate is 50% fluorite and %50 regular aquarium gravel

So here's what's happening. I set this tank up two months back. At the time I was only was excel only no Co2 no ferts. I noticed that my plants were not really growing and other died within the first two weeks. I decided to add a co2 system to the tank. That was done about a month back. At the same time I removed some fish in order to decrease my bio load, and I stopped dosing excel. Once to CO2 was installed I started dosing as per the list above, and I added a powerhead to increase the circulation. Within day's there was algae growing like crazy and some of the plants began to start dying off. I have a few types of algae. One is green dust algae it only sticks to the glass, another is some type of black algae that is only found on the dwaf sag, and hair algae it's everywhere.

Is this a common occurrence in planted tanks when CO2 is added to a non co2 system?

I could wipe out the tank and start over but I really don't want to do that. I want to understand why this is happening. I am not known to quit and give up. The more I fail at something the more it drives me to learn and improve. I take this invasion of algae and poor plant growth as failure on my part and I take it personal.

I've been trying to solve this problem without posting to many questions in hopes of trying to figure this out myself. At first I thought the problem was that the light was to high so I reduced it. Then I thought the flow was to low so I added a powerhead.

now still I think it's a balancing issue. Perhaps I changed things around to quickly and the plants have yet to adjust. But what do I know :confused: I have dead/dying plants and a ton of algae.

Now I'm at the point where I don't know what to try next? Should I just say to hell with it and pack the tank with plants in hopes that the new plants adjust and out compete the algae? Or should I change nothing and try to keep the tank as clean as possible and hope that the plants recover and start growing.

Suggestions please?

Thanks,

Filipe
 

VaughnH

Lifetime Charter Member
Lifetime Member
Jan 24, 2005
3,011
97
48
88
Sacramento, CA
I assume there is a typo in your specs - don't you just have 2 55 watt bulbs?

It looks to me like you are underdosing fertilizers, assuming you are following the EI dosing method. You seem to be dosing half of the recommended amounts. The Ludwigia is a very competitive plant so I suspect it is getting most of the nutrients and starving the other plants.

L. sessilifolia should grow very vigorously with your conditions, based on my experience, and the fact that it is profoundly noxious weed. I'm not at all sure why it wouldn't compete well with the Ludwigia.
 

filipem

Prolific Poster
May 21, 2008
60
0
6
sorry yes it's 2 x 55W bulbs.

I was dosing that amount because from whatI understand dosing at full EI is only for high light densly planted tanks.

Am I wrong ? should I dose full EI ? I was dosing full strength for the first few weeks. It made little difference. So I scaled back.
 

VaughnH

Lifetime Charter Member
Lifetime Member
Jan 24, 2005
3,011
97
48
88
Sacramento, CA
Can you post a photo of the tank? Also, is your carbonate hardness 17 dKH or 17 ppm? If it is 17 dKH, that is really hard water.
 

ntino

Guru Class Expert
Apr 29, 2008
104
0
16
I am pretty sure that your measurements of KH and GH are in ppm, not d(degrees), dont think water gets that hard under normal conditions.
You have really low biomass in your tank, add plants - its very important to have a high biomass, if you dont, algae will grow. Make sure your co2 is around 30-40 not 20-30 - your fish will be fine and its not like you have many of them. also, dose more, its really hard to overdose - you can easily go 3 times the norm, it wont increase algae - algae dont need much either way - in other words, you can not done anything at all, and you will have more algae. The only thing to watch out for is phosphates, but even then, you can easily have 4-5ppm without adverse effects. recommended amount is 1-2 though.
Most imporatntly, get more plants in there. you also have a tall tank, so there is definately not too much light. too little if anything.
 

ntino

Guru Class Expert
Apr 29, 2008
104
0
16
If it is 17dKH, check that there is nothing in the tank that drives it up - test tap water. 17dKH is really really hard water, consider diluting with %50 RO water. Many plants don’t respond well to hard water - they don’t absorb nutrients as well, however, you can still make it work, just choose plants that are known to do well in harder water
 

filipem

Prolific Poster
May 21, 2008
60
0
6
Those readings are correct. We have some of the hardest water in the country.

If that's the case then I would rather try to find plants that will do well in hard water instead of trying to fight it.
 

VaughnH

Lifetime Charter Member
Lifetime Member
Jan 24, 2005
3,011
97
48
88
Sacramento, CA
You could make the tank an African Cichlid tank. People with those try to get the hardness way up, and they do find plants that will grow well in them. The trouble with adding RO water to reduce the KH is that every time you do a water change you have to try to match that KH, and that soon becomes a job that you probably won't enjoy.
 

filipem

Prolific Poster
May 21, 2008
60
0
6
What types of plants would do well with water this hard?

Any suggestions? I'm getting tried of watching plants die.
 

Gerryd

Plant Guru Team
Lifetime Member
Sep 23, 2007
5,623
22
38
South Florida
Hi,

I understand that vals and sagittaria work well in harder water. Anacharis will also do well.

As Vaughn suggests maybe go african cichlid tank, and then see what area they come from and look for plants in that area.

Many of these cichlids are algae scrapers and many plants are not native to their waters.
 

filipem

Prolific Poster
May 21, 2008
60
0
6
I don't think my tank is right size for African Cichlids. The footprint is to small. Aggression issues are bound to be a problem with most african cichlids.

I think at this point the fish are an after thought. I need to determine what plants I can keep in my water. Thank you for the list of plants Gerry that's a good starting point.
 

filipem

Prolific Poster
May 21, 2008
60
0
6
As always thank you VaughnH

I guess HC is out of the question.

Too bad I like the way that plant looks.
 

VaughnH

Lifetime Charter Member
Lifetime Member
Jan 24, 2005
3,011
97
48
88
Sacramento, CA
I'm guessing, but I suspect that Marsilea minuta would do well in hard water, and make a good carpet too.