plantbrain
Member
- Joined
- 2 Aug 2007
- Messages
- 1,938
I've got a mass of L acurata right now in the 120 Gallon:
Sounds like it might be more the KH, rather than anything directly with K+.
Some aquatic plants may have evolved to grow in low KH systems, but I think that, not the K+, is what is at play there.
KH and pH really affects the transport systems in plant cells, mos spe3cies seem to be able to handle wide ranges, but this may not be the case for a few species.
Still, if all you have are 2-3 species, that's not much to generalize and most plant species clearly do not have such issues.
If you remove the KH down to say 3........then will you still see this? I doubt it.
So even there, you have dependency on other things than K+.
If you are going to limit something/apply Liebig...... PO4 would be the wisest nutrient.
Plants are far more tolerant of limiting P than any other nutrients.
L acurata does VERY well at high K+ and KH. I lived in Santa Barbara when I did this tank:
KH= 11 in this tank and GH = 24
Sounds like it might be more the KH, rather than anything directly with K+.
Some aquatic plants may have evolved to grow in low KH systems, but I think that, not the K+, is what is at play there.
KH and pH really affects the transport systems in plant cells, mos spe3cies seem to be able to handle wide ranges, but this may not be the case for a few species.
Still, if all you have are 2-3 species, that's not much to generalize and most plant species clearly do not have such issues.
If you remove the KH down to say 3........then will you still see this? I doubt it.
So even there, you have dependency on other things than K+.
If you are going to limit something/apply Liebig...... PO4 would be the wisest nutrient.
Plants are far more tolerant of limiting P than any other nutrients.
L acurata does VERY well at high K+ and KH. I lived in Santa Barbara when I did this tank:
KH= 11 in this tank and GH = 24