Looking for a new biotope to model? How about a floating litter bank habitat?
I've finally set up the 4-foot 33 gallon long aquarium which I bought back in 2019 with a waterfall overhanging the tank at one end and an intentionally-formed kinon at the other.bekateen wrote: ↑18 Apr 2020, 23:51 Carvalho, Lucélia Nobre, Fidelis, Luana, Arruda, Rafael, Galuch, André, & Zuanon, Jansen. (2013). Second floor, please: the fish fauna of floating litter banks in Amazonian streams and rivers. Neotropical Ichthyology, 11(1), 85-94. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1679-62252013000100010
ABSTRACT
Floating litter banks are an ephemeral habitat consisting of branches, twigs, flowers, seeds, and fruits that are trapped on the stream water surface by a variety of retention mechanisms. These heterogeneous materials form a deep layer of dead plant matter that is colonized by a variety of organisms, including fish that forage on the aquatic macroinvertebrates found in this unique habitat.
Features of the tank include
- Unidirectional water current from the waterfall at one end to a Matten filter hiding a return pump (850 gallons/hour) at the opposite end.
- The waterfall sits outside the tank on a shelf. The outflow tray of the waterfall overhangs the tank edge by about 1-2". The waterfall bin is filled with aquaponic clay balls covered by some gravel. I've planted green onion cuttings in the bin and will try various other fast- growing plants, preferably herbs that will be edible for me and my family.
- The return pump sends filtered water back to the waterfall via a 1" diameter hose suspended by hooks outside and behind the tank.
- The tank back is painted black, in part to hide the return hose but mainly because this tank sits beside a window (to promote plant growth) and I wanted to limit algae growth. This is the first tank I've ever painted.
- The kinon is a mat along the water surface, currently covering about 8" of the aquarium surface and about 3" deep, positioned just before the Matten filter. The kinon is formed using a block of foam which spans the tank from front to back. Into the foam I stuck about 5-6 Manzanita twigs in a crisscrossing fashion to form a horizontal scaffold. Then I added dry oak leaves and small clumps of Java moss, Pothos and Cryptocoryne. I'll add more plants, probably Anubias and rooted twigs of Hibiscus. The plants are emergent so the leaves will grow in air while the roots hopefully entangle the Manzanita to provide complexity to the kinon.
- Unfortunately, at this moment the only proper-size foam block I have for the kinon is bright blue... before too long, I want to swap that out and replace it with black foam so that it's not so conspicuous.
- I've placed a false floor of egg crate and knitting canvas at the Matten end of the tank, just beneath the kinon. The false floor covers an area of 11"x11".
- The waterfall end and middle of the tank are covered by a thin layer of pool filter sand.
- Other tank decor includes medium and large cobblestones, large Manzanita branches, bricks I collected in Santorini, Greece, bamboo pipe segments and some pleco caves.
- Obviously, with the waterfall and the emergent plants (and a rather larger emergent Manzanita branch) I can't fully cover the tank, but I do plan to cut glass lids to cover the other areas of the tank top, to reduce evaporation and the risk of fish jumping out.
Hopefully the kinon matures nicely and the decaying organic matter doesn't overcome the filtration and plants.
Cheers,
Eric