Haha yes I noticed that and tidied it up . I think the two tone was caused by a shadow. I have more plants on the way to try and cover up a few eye sores. I’ve also put more water in and cleaned the glass. Going to put a few Pygmy corys in the tank in a few weeksSmall thing, but the wire at the back could do with being hidden. Told you it was small!
Also, why is there a two tone thing going on in the background, is it the light?
Haha yes I noticed that and tidied it up . I think the two tone was caused by a shadow. I have more plants on the way to try and cover up a few eye sores. I’ve also put more water in and cleaned the glass. Going to put a few Pygmy corys in the tank in a few weeks
Floating plants are always a good idea, and mosses are great plants for long term scapes.Sure ok. I’ll order some more. I was going to have some floating plants and mosses. Happy to receive recommendations on types of plants you think would suit this environment
I’m a bit worried about over stocking. I’m currently waiting for the tank to be more established for the less hardy species. I currently have 5 zebra danios in my 80cm long shallow tank. 60 litres in total. What other fish do you reckon I could get away with? As suggested I’m adding another bunch of plants including floaters. Not switching my lights on until I feel there are enough plants in there to avoid algaeThey are nice little fish. If you haven't already, give some thought to introducing a clean up crew as well; otos and Amanos 😉
Righto. Lesson learnedMost folk with planted tanks tend to under stock. It keeps organics relatively low which helps prevent algae. And because algae issues are usually foremost on our minds the clean up/algae crew is usually first on the list.
You need to switch your lights on, otherwise your plants will die and release organics and you will definitely get algae. Establish a regular photoperiod of around 5-6 hrs a day to start with, just be cautious regarding intensity. Every light is different but I usually set intensity to around 60%, maybe less over a low-energy tank, until the scape becomes biologically mature. A dimmer is a must, especially with a low-energy tank.
I’m sorry I can’t remember where I read it. It was a few days ago now. Could have even been YouTubeAmanos are pretty much bullet proof...the internet can be a minefield of misinformation...do you have the ref or link for that info ?
That should be fine, so long as you maintain good tank husbandry etc...Can you advise on this? If I have 8 zebra dorios, 5 Pygmy corys, 5 otos is that overstocked do you reckon?
Do you have the lights on at all?Not switching my lights on until I feel there are enough plants in there to avoid algae