I’ve read the EI section, I’m not really sure how much and how often?
That is the real problem, sorting out <"the wheat from the chaff">, particularly when there are lots of <"magic bullet vendors">, who are just after your money.I’m very slowly getting a bit more clued up with how to do things!
Thanks @Zeus. I know you are "the man that can" in these situations
Hi all,
Thanks @Zeus. I know you are "the man that can" in these situations - <"TNC Complete Aquarium Plant Food & Nutrients 500ml">.
That is the real problem, sorting out <"the wheat from the chaff">, particularly when there are lots of <"magic bullet vendors">, who are just after your money.
See how you get on, just with the TNC, and if you start to see <"pale new growth"> (like below)? Add an iron chelate in.
cheers Darrel
No, not at the levels we use it at. Iron (Fe) availability is the difference between "some" and "none", but "some" can be a very small number (~ 0.2 ppm).This may be a silly question but the Chempack Iron you mention says it is harmful to aquatic life - I assume that’s not strictly true if I’m able to add it to my tank?
It is iron (ferrous) gluconate, so it really depends on how <"hard and alkaline your water is">, but normally it is a lot less effective. I guess Seachem like it because it is <"cheap to buy">.I have seen the Seachem Flourish Iron isn’t a chelate, is that no good?
You may also struggle with iron (Fe) availability using <"Seachem Iron">, it is <"ferrous (FeII) gluconate"> (C12H22FeO14) based. Seachem will <"spin you a line"> about this being "more plant available" but in <"hard, alkaline water"> the opposite is true.
Iron (Fe) is definitely a <"two-edged sword">, and you just need to have a <"Goldilocks zone"> amount. One issue is that, if you have a large excess of iron ions in solution <"you can start to precipitate out"> phosphate (PO4---) etc. This is the<" mode of action"> of Phosban etc.With iron, unless you actually have a deficiency more is not necessarily better. I had what I thought was perfectly good plant growth in both high-tech and low-tech set-ups including with floating plants in the low-tech - in my case Salvinia minima What is the “Duckweed Index” all about? -
The BBA observation is interesting. Definitely looks like, in this case, that "more isn't better".and just because I could I boosted up the levels of iron further with super-high-tech Fe-EDDHSA. I'm pretty sure that was rewarded with a lot of extra growth of black beard algae (BBA); the previously happy not-iron-deficient plants continued to be happy and still-not-iron-deficient upon the higher iron supplementation.