halocaridina Ruba Ammonia/ Light
Moderator: Mustafa
halocaridina Ruba Ammonia/ Light
I am keeping Halocaridina on a newly establish tank. Nitrates and nitrites are very close to zero. Ammonia is constantly elevated but on the "safe " side. I dont want to introduce plants to the tank. Can I use zeolite on a filter bag directly into the tank? (using sponge filter). Or just wait as long as the ammonia levels dont increase? How much light should I give them? is this a factor?
Sorry for that many question I just want to provide them with the best environment that I can.
Sorry for that many question I just want to provide them with the best environment that I can.
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- <b>BANNED</b>
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- <b>BANNED</b>
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No freshwater plant will survive and *grow* at those salinity levels, no matter what people tell you. Forget about having plants in a H. rubra tank. Algae are a much better solution. I have a type of string algae (that I collected from highly brackish water) that grows very fast in a ball/wad and keeps my water quality where it should be.merlin03 wrote:salinity is 16ppt. will it survive? thanks for helping.
The real question here is: Why did you not cycle the tank before introducing the H. rubra?

- Shrimp&Snails
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- badflash
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I'm running an experiment with anacharis right now at SG 1.018. I'll keep the group posted. Other things I never would have thought could thrive in salt water are doing just fine too, like the MTS and Olive Nerite snails, so never say never. On another board I was subjected to accusations of snail cruelty when I explained what I was doing, so keep an open mind.
I live near the Hudson River where the water goes from fresh to salt on a daily basis, yet fish, snails and plants all live there. I can't say they will all live in an aquarium, but they do exist in nature.
I live near the Hudson River where the water goes from fresh to salt on a daily basis, yet fish, snails and plants all live there. I can't say they will all live in an aquarium, but they do exist in nature.
- Neonshrimp
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Remember that I told you about how to acclimate the MTS to saltwater. I only told you that because 1. I researched the issue and found out that MTS occur naturally in brackish to fully marine waters 2. I actually tried it and had offsrping of MTS in a marine tank.badflash wrote:Other things I never would have thought could thrive in salt water are doing just fine too, like the MTS and Olive Nerite snails
Olive nerites (and also virgin nerites) are known to science as animals that can live at various salinities ranging from freshwater to hypersaline (more salty than marine) conditions. So, no surprise there either.
With regards to plants, I have researched the issue and the conclusion is that even "brackish tolerant" freshwater plants like java moss, java fern etc. die at salinities over about 1.005 SG. I have tried it and can confirm this. Some plants will stay green and take forever to die at the lower end of their lethal salinity range, but they are not growing and hence are useless as "filters."
so never say never.
Ok, I won't say "never." I'll just say "NO WAY" your anacharis is going to survive at that salinity.

That's because those people had no idea what they were talking about.On another board I was subjected to accusations of snail cruelty when I explained what I was doing, so keep an open mind.

Yeah, but up where you are the salinity won't go up to 1.018 SG. It can get brackish up there, but on the lower end of the brackish scale. Plus, the life in the Hudson river delta area is adapted to salinity changes. You won't see "pure" freshwater animals there. Here in Manhattan, where the salinity of the hudson river is much higher, you won't be seeing any plants at all, nor any pure freshwater animals, just like you would not see a neon tetra in the amazon delta.I live near the Hudson River where the water goes from fresh to salt on a daily basis, yet fish, snails and plants all live there. I can't say they will all live in an aquarium, but they do exist in nature.
- badflash
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At the surface, no, but deeper down it can get quite strong depending on how much rain water we get. The salt actually forms a wedge and the lower down you go the closer to sea water it gets.Yeah, but up where you are the salinity won't go up to 1.018 SG.
I'm seeing new growth on the anacharis and there is no yellowing yet. You are batting 1000 with the other issues, but I like to check for myself anyway.
That's a good attitude.badflash wrote: I'm seeing new growth on the anacharis and there is no yellowing yet. You are batting 1000 with the other issues, but I like to check for myself anyway.

never thought of trying macro algae for reef tanks, might give it a try. been using java fern in mine (more for aesthetics) and it neither grows nor dies (been months now). my salinity is lower though at 1.010-012 (shrimp are breeding and surviving) and the only algae is the standard brown coating that grows on the glass (shrimp eat it so i leave 3 sides covered in it) and a fuzzy one that looks like little velvet pincusions, this one comes in either a light lime green or a dark emerald green and grows all over the rock exposed to the light. never merges so they stay in little bushes (for lack of a better description).