... which should be buried deep in the substrate, having capsules exposed in the water column may be a recipe for disaster (uncontrolled leeching of ferts).I also see what looks like an osmocote capsule.
... which should be buried deep in the substrate, having capsules exposed in the water column may be a recipe for disaster (uncontrolled leeching of ferts).I also see what looks like an osmocote capsule.
Neither of those are great to be honest. The plants can only make use of the liquid carbon in the "API CO2 booster" if none of the <"other nutrients are deficient">, the "CO2" bit is a misnomer, the compound added never becomes CO2, and it isn't entirely clear how the plant use the liquid carbon molecule.Planning to use flourish "potassium, Fe" and API CO2 booster
@LMuhlen and @Witcher are right the "Controlled Release Fertiliser" should be buried in the substrate, although I'm not sure this will have much effect on <"slowing the nutrient release rate">.I also see what looks like an osmocote capsule.
@PARAGUAY I put the plants in this tank more than a month ago. I think currently all the leaves of sword are old.How long have the swords been in they could be shedding old leaves from emmersed . The new growth at smaller leaves looks ok. Either way take off any old deficient leaves and the increase in fertiliser should help
Thanks 👍@FlukeworldMy 2c - I had plants melting from their stem when I had bad fertilizations and bad flow. Bad flow could be the cause of ferts not reaching the plants but first fix your fertilizers and regime. Then if the issues continues work on more costly parts as increasing the flow within the tank.
there is a quite interesting doc [ Aerobic and anaerobic metabolism of glutaraldehyde in a river water-sediment system ] but unfortunately I can't find the full version online anymore.it isn't entirely clear how the plant use the liquid carbon molecule.