peat
peat
want to try peat as a substrate for my sterbai breeding tank because i have had no luck yet. what peat do i use?
have not found any aquarium peat for sale on net or in any of my 4 local fish shops.any idea where to get some? thanks!
have not found any aquarium peat for sale on net or in any of my 4 local fish shops.any idea where to get some? thanks!
- drpleco
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I've talked to discus breeders who bought their peat at home improvement stores in the garden center. They used it as filter media and not substrate, however. I imagine that you could find a way to sterilize it (oven, boiling?) before adding it to your tank. I haven't done this personally, however.
Why use it at substrate and not in the filter? I assume you're looking to soften your water?
Why use it at substrate and not in the filter? I assume you're looking to soften your water?
- eupterus
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I have used peat as a substarte once when about 15 years ago. I used for breeding small characins. I used the pure peat from the garden center, the hard part was preparing it for the aquarium which took about two months. If used in a filter it doesnt matter whether it sinks or floats as you are putting it in a bag. All I did was take a pair of stockings and filled them full of peat, tied them up and put them in a bucket ( deep ) i weighed it down with a large peice of slate and waited. Change the water everyday, to remove the tannins which initially turn the water black, you will always get a brown tinge which is what you want but initially this is black. Once a week I removed the slate, if the peat floated i put it all back and continued. If it sank then i took what I needed and set up the tank. It worked perfectly.
I hope this helps, I dont know if i did it the right way but it was successful for me.
I hope this helps, I dont know if i did it the right way but it was successful for me.
Eupterus.
C. hastatus - habrosus - pygmaeus - aeneus - duplicareus - axelrodi - panda - trilineatus - napoensis - delphax - melini - paleatus - barbatus - concolor - robinae -seussi - reynoldsi - septentrionalis - arcuatus - C57 "nordestini" - guapore - aeneus "black" - C131
C. hastatus - habrosus - pygmaeus - aeneus - duplicareus - axelrodi - panda - trilineatus - napoensis - delphax - melini - paleatus - barbatus - concolor - robinae -seussi - reynoldsi - septentrionalis - arcuatus - C57 "nordestini" - guapore - aeneus "black" - C131
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I set up a small peat-bottom tank for breeding blackwater tetras a while back. While this particular set-up probably isn't suitable for cories (except possibly of the pygmaeus group), you might still find it interesting.
http://mikes-machine.mine.nu/blackwater ... g_tank.htm
The aquarium was running for a bit over a year, and at the end the "mat" of peat was still holding together quite well, although the top centimeter or so had dissolved, and the smell when I removed the peat "mat" left no doubt swamp gas and hydrogen sulphide had been produced under it.
The water in the aquarium got so black it was more like coffee than tea. I basically could never see the fish in there. The effect on pH was initially *very* strong, with pH dipping under 5, but tapered off over time.
In short: it worked, but there's room for improvement.
http://mikes-machine.mine.nu/blackwater ... g_tank.htm
The aquarium was running for a bit over a year, and at the end the "mat" of peat was still holding together quite well, although the top centimeter or so had dissolved, and the smell when I removed the peat "mat" left no doubt swamp gas and hydrogen sulphide had been produced under it.
The water in the aquarium got so black it was more like coffee than tea. I basically could never see the fish in there. The effect on pH was initially *very* strong, with pH dipping under 5, but tapered off over time.
In short: it worked, but there's room for improvement.
- Coryman
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- MatsP
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