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Ecology of the Planted Aquarium: A Practical Manual and Scientific Treatise for the Home Aquarist
by Diana Walstad
ISBN 13:978-0-9673773-1-5
Wow! Now here’s a book I’ll never understand. The subtitle kinda says it all. It is indeed a “Scientific Treatise”, and I’ll wager that only a biochemist can ever really understand the entire book. So was it of any value to me, a your average aquarist without a degree in biology or chemistry? Yes. But if you are a biochemist that has planted aquariums for a hobby, then this is the book to die for!
Just a listing of chapters can give you a good idea of the contents of the book:
- Introduction
- Plants as Water Purifiers
- Allelopathy
- Bacteria
- Sources of Plant Nutrients
- Carbon
- Plant Nutrition and Ecology
- Substrate
- The Aerial Advantage
- Algae Control
- Practical Aquarium Setup and Maintenance
To give you a better idea of the nature of this book, let’s just list the topics discussed in a sample chapter. I’ll use topics from the Substrate chapter, because as a planted tank hobbyist, it’s a subject I would hope to know a little about. The topics in the chapter are”
Components of Soils and Sediments
- Mineral Particles
- Organic Matter
- Precipitated Inorganic Matter
- Microorganisms
Characteristics of Soil and Sediments
- Nutrient Binding
- Anaerobic Nature of Substrates
- Oxidized Microzone Keeps Nutrients and Toxins in Sediments
- Stability of Sediments and Submerged Soils
Chaos in Freshly Submerged Terrestrial Soils
Terrestrial Soils and Sediments for Growing Aquatic Plants
Problems of Sediments and Submerged Soils
- Metal Toxicity
- Hydrogen Sulfide Toxicity
- Organic Matter
- Low Redox
- Acid Sulfate Soils
- Turbidity
Effect of Aquatic Plants on Substrates
Substrates in Aquariums
- Selecting Soils
- Setting Up Tanks with Soils
- Fertilization
- Gravel Additives
- Substrate Degradation over Time?
Hmmm… maybe I didn’t know as much about substrate as I though. Most of that is a bit more advanced than the typical “Is flourite really not as good as AGA Aquasoil?” conversations I have. It’s WAY deeper than that, and will be outstanding information for many people. And in fact, I could actually almost follow most of it. But it is non-trivial stuff. Planted Tanks for Dummies this book is not. But enough of the “Scientific Treatise”, what about the “Practical Manual” part? Well, it is that. But only within some clear boundaries.
The author limits practical discussion to tanks wiht low light, soil for substrate, densely planted, no CO2 injection, and lots of surface plants. I’ve never done a “low tech” tank myself. But if I ever do, this book will be indispensable. And even though I do prefer “high tech” tanks, there is still value here for me. The algae control discussion is very good and the aquarium setup and maintenance information would be beneficial to newbies.
Throughout the book the author spent a number of years as the Technical Adviser to the Aquatic Gardeners Association (AGA). She uses questions posed by hobbyist during that time, a long with her responses, as examples to demonstrate concepts explained in the text.
The book is all black and white, though later versions include 4 color photographs of the author’s tanks. Then again a lot of peer reviewed scientific publications don’t have a lot color either. They are just jam packed with great technical info. Same here. Thought it is richly illustrated with technical diagrams, charts and tables. In the 194 page book, I count 78 such technical illustrations. And the material is clearly very well researched. Each chapter has a truly extensive bibliography. And though the book was published first in 1999, it does not suffer much from obsolescence. While there is some different new thinking around some of her material, I believe most of the basic biochemistry she references is still unchanged.
I wish I was qualified to review the technical discussions in this book, but I’m not. But some very well covered subjects should be fascinating to those more academically advanced than I - allelopathic competition between plants and algae, bicarbonate uptake in alkaline water, the economies of CO2 use for aerial growth, the persistance of biofilms, and much, much more.
For me this book left me with a very deep respect for the extraordinary complexity of the chemistry and biology that drives the ecosystems in our planted aquariums. It’s a good thing that Mother Nature does such a good job of taking care of herself, because ‘cuz most of it is clearly too complicated for me. Though after reading this book, and getting a glimpse of just how much more complex things are than they appear, I’m feeling absolultely a lot less the idiot for having troble with algae in my tank.
I cannot easily recommend this book to someone without a biochemistry inclination, if not a formal background. Though I believe it is a MUST BUY for any hobbyists that does have that understanding. It should provide enough info about the complex processes that keep our planted aquariums humming along. Or not. Your increased understanding will help you discern the difference, with the added benefit knowing why.
To the best of my knowledge, Diana Walstad has produced one of the few truely technical, English language, works available to the advanced planted aquarist. And we all owe her a dept of thanks for doing so. Even if you have to go onto a forum and ask someone to explain it to you. Really.
In my last journal post I said that I’d keep my hands out of the tank until the end of the month, when I passed the one-year mark for the tank. Well, those intentions were great… but I could not help myself.
Most of the stem plants were at the water’s surface, and I don’t want them to get too “leggy”. I’m not a good aquascaper, but if I have to hang on to stem plants to keep this tank healthy, I’d at least like them to be bushy and thick. So they were getting a bit too tall and I cut them.
Because I’ve been fighting excessive Green Dust Algae (GDA) on the tank walls for a number of months, and because it has been MUCH better in the last month or so, I’m worried about pulling too much plant mass out of the tank. So I took metal weights and wrapped them around the tops of the stems I trimmed, and sunk them back into the tank. So hopefully they’ll keep growing and plant mass will not be too adversely impacted by the trimming.
In the pic you can see that the Ludwigia repens to the left is not doing well at all. When I let it grow to the surface it is thrilled. But even nine inches lower than the surface and it starts to really suffer. Now, where I have it growing is not directly under the metal halides. This plant needs high light to thrive. But I’m hard pressed to believe that being 18″ from a 150 watt HQI lamp is not enough light to thrive. I just don’t buy it. Instead I think that when it gets really, really close to the light that the photosynthetic rate that results somehow gets beyond what ever else is holding it back.
I can’t be sure, but I suspect the problem is temperature. My temps fluctuate from about 81.5 to 83.5 during the day. And Ludwidgia - a native of North America - is a cool water plant. But supposedly it can tolerate warmer water. This is kind of my test.
Anyway… the some of the other stem plants I inserted to help with the GDA - Wisteria (Hygrophila difformis) and Green Temple (Hygrophilia corymbosa) - seem to be dealing with heat just fine. Since I’m personally fond of Ludwigia’s, I’d be really tickled if this gets healthy too.
This is a shot of my tank from yesterday. I’m approaching the 1 year mark for having this tank up. By that I mean plants and fish in the tank. That day was May 27th, 2007. I keep really detail records on my tanks (something I heartily recommend to everyone), so I know that is the correct date. Yet I am frustrated by the fact that I STILL don’t have an aquascape that I’m happy with. But I’m going to have to just chill on that, because I’ve stated on some forums that if I haven’t gotten control of the algae I’m battling by the one year mark, then I’m scrapping the aquascape and starting over.
Well, as it turns out, the algae is reasonable right now. But it’s only been “OK” for a few weeks - apparently due to a radical change in my fertilization regimen. So while I’d love to rearrange plants so that I could say that I crossed the 1-year mark having achieved a satisfactory aquascape, I’m going keep my hands out of the tank for the next couple of weeks. If the algae remains under control as it is now, I won’t scrape the tank, but will merely rearrange it to a more esthetically pleasing arrangement.
If you saw my AGA 2007 post, you will see that I started this tank with anubias all over the driftwood. Those anubias got (and continue to get) green spot algae (GSA) on old leaves like nobody’s business. So I ripped those out and tried to replace them with other plants - primarily crypts of various forms. You will also note that I removed all the lovely lotus plants I was growing. Those were sending roots into the sand and causing what seemed (to me) to be unhealthy conditions in the sand. So I ripped them out. I never intended to have plants rooted in sand. All the plants you see right now are either not rooted in the sand, or they are in shallow pots of ADA Aquasoil covered with sand.
From the primarily anubias and lotus arrangement I moved to a (shallow potted) ’scape of various rosette plants. Those all suffered from the intensity of the 2 150w halogens. The algae it created on their leaves caused constant trimming until the plants were just dim shadows of the huge plants they started out as.
And next I filled the tank with stem plants as an algae fighting measure. The tank you see today is a reflection of that.
There are a number of urgent aquascape changes that need to be made to this tank . But I’m gonna let it cross the 1 year mark before I mess with it in a major way.
IMO a planted discus tank does not do well with hard tinkering or rapid changes. If it is balanced, leave well enough alone. Or tinker very slowly. So keep posted. A better tank is coming. I hope. But it will take a month or so.
The home built Big Clear Kahuna tank - with the 2006 discus aquascape - met an untimely end. It had a massive failure of a seam. Can you say “75 gallons of water gushing onto my wooden floor!” ? My wife can.
I’ll post later on how I built that tank, and how you can avoid the mistake that I made on that one. It’s easy. But for now I’d like to share my submission to the Aquatic Gardeners Association (AGA) 2007 Aquascaping Contest. I got a new tank - this time a 180 gallon - and named it Son of Kahuna, after the dear departed.
These pics are pretty early in the tank’s life. It did not remain this way. The lights were just too bright for the anubias, and they had to be replaced. The green spot alage (GSA) they kept getting on their leaves was driving me nuts. But this is what the tank looked like in the fall of last year at photo submission time.
Technical Info
Plants
Amazon Sword (Echinodorus bleheri), Anubias Barteri Round Leaf (Anubias barteri v. Round Leaf), Anubias Nana (Anubias barteri v. Nana), Anubias Petite Nana (Anubias Pygmy Nana), Bronze Crypt Wendtii (Cryptocoryne wendtii v. Tropica), Red Rubin Sword (Echinodorus v. Rubin), Red Tiger Lotus (Nymphaea zenkeri), Tawain Moss (Taxiphyllum alternans)
Fish/Animals
100 Ghost (Glass) Shrimp (Paleomonetes sp.), 25 Amano Shrimp (Caridina japonica), 5 Singapore Flower Shrimp (Atyopsis moluccensis), 5 Swartz’s Cory Cats (Corydoras schwartzi), 5 Zebra Loachs (Botia striata), 15 Oto Cats (Otocinclus sp.), 50 Green Neon Tetras (Paracheirodon simulans), 9 Discus (Cobalt and Leopards) (Symphysodon spp.). And if you look hard, you may see a single miscellaneous white tetra. It’s not consistent with the aquascape, but it came to my family, desperately needing a home.
Decorative Materials
25 ft. driftwood, secured with ADA Woodtight, 1″ ADA Bright Sand. Sword plants and crypts are planted in shallow pots of ADA Aquasoil over ADA Powersand.
Background
black acrylic sheet
Lighting
2 x 150 watt HQI MH, 10,000K
Filtration
Ocean Clear 340, Eheim Pro II 2026, Lifegard 25 watt UV. System flow rate set to 2.8x tank turnover / hour.
Additional Info
This tank and aquascape were designed to provide a visually pleasing planted environment for discus, while still requiring relatively low maintenance. The plants, fish, crustaceans, and systems supporting the tank, all work together to keep tank maintenance requirements low - currently one weekly 45-60 minute maintenance session. Multiple, small, automated water changes each night yield an equivalent of 50% water change every 3 days. Three tank outflows are plumbed thru the bottom of the tank, with two returns over the top. Pre-filters on outflows and return nozzles are obscured by plants. No equipment was removed for photos. CO2 in-line injection with Mazzei venturi. CO2 kept at 45 ppm by pH controller. Daily micro fertilization with 9 ml ADA Green Brighty Step 2. Potassium dosed to keep tank at 25 ppm at the beginning of each day (prior to uptake). Nitrogen and Phosphate are found in the tap water used in water changes, keeping the tank at 8 and 0.9 ppm respectively. Neither is dosed.
I went kinda “all out” on the technical aspects of this tank. I’m sure someone’s got a more technical setup somewhere, but I’ve not seen it. It certainly makes keeping a planted discus tank this size visually appealing (no equipment in the tank), and easy to maintain. I’ll post more details on that later.
If you read my post on the AGA 2005 Big Clear Kahuna, it’s worth noting that that tank never really took off. Plants would do OK for a few months, and then begin to die. This repeated multiple times. And the poor plant health (and all the silicates from the sand) prompted a nasty thread algae outbreak. Ultimately I tore the tank down out of frustration and found the source of all of my ills. A silver plated coaster! I had used one to prop up some cardboard keeping the sand separate from the soil as I was setting up the tank the first day. And I forgot to remove it. That coaster began to dissolve and leach into the soil. And silver is devastating to plant roots. Look it up. So there’s one stupid mistake to never repeat.
Anyway, after I tore the Big Clear Kahuna, I named my next tank Kahuna’s Revenge. And by that time I had decided that I had learned enough to try to keep some discus. It has a reputation of being hard - keeping discus in a planted tank. And it’s not easy. But I wouldn’t call it hard. There’s just a little extra attention to detail required. For example, many discus keepers regularly use medications that will kill plants. And may plant people use fertilization dosing levels that would make discus sick or unhappy. Like I say, it’s just paying attention to the details. But it’s not really hard.
These are the pics I submitted to the Aquatic Gardeners Association (AGA) 2006 Aquascaping Contest.
Technical Info
Plants
Anubias barteri, Anubias barteri var. nana, Anubias barteri var. nana petite, Crinum calamistratum, Cryptocoryne crispatula var. Balansae, Marsilea minuta, Vesicularia fasciculata
Fish/Animals
40 Otocinclus vittatus 50 Caridina japonica 70 Paracheirodon simulans 8 Symphysodon spp.
Decorative Materials
ADA Aquasoil substrate on top of ADA Powersand special with borders of ADA Bright Sand. Moss and Anubias planted on over 20″ of driftwood scaffolding.
Background
none
Lighting
54w T5 HO 10,000K and 54w T5 HO 6,700K
Filtration
Eheim 2026 (950 l/h)
Additional Info
Daily dosing: 12 drops ADA ECA, 1.3 ml ADA Green Brighty, 25ml solution of K2SO4 (equivilent to 2.5 ppm K). Pressurized CO2 injection to 35 ppm. 20% daily water change.
You’ll note that I’m not adding dosing any nitrogen or phosphates. With my city water - which has about 7 and 0.7 ppm respectively - it’s not necessary. Plus with the discus and their copious amounts of food, they add a good bit of nitrates to the water. In fact, without that 20% daily water change it would have been tougher. And that 20% water change sounds like a lot of work. But I’ve got it completely automated. I don’t have to lift a finger.
I’ll post more info on that, should you be inclined to try it yourself. It sure eliminates the biggest time consuming chore in this hobby.




























