#crinum calamistratum
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Spider Onion (Crinum Calamistratum)
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My 75 gallon Central African tank!
Stocking and such below
Fish/Inverts
Senegal Bichir (Polypterus senegalus) x2
AKA Dinosaur Bichir. They get 9-12 inches, they're badass predators but the tankmates will be safe, too big to be aggressed upon. I've got one albino and one normal one. Their names are Bulk and Skull, like from Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers. They have true lungs and can breathe people-air! It's cool to watch them do it.
Leopard Bushfish (Ctenopoma acutirostre) x1
AKA Spotted Climbing Perch. Gets about 5-9 inches but is a slow grower, so considering moving him to a 20 long with one of my Krib pairs and my Synos when I eventually move them and he can return to the 75 when big. In the wild these guys drift along until they're close enough to nab some prey that thinks they're just a leaf. His name is Demi because of the famous Demi Moore photo.
Peters's Elephant Nose Fish (Gnathonemus petersii) x1
AKA Ubangi Mormyrid. By far my most interesting guy. He's an electric fish, and that silly proboscis is called a Schnauzenorgan, covered in electroreceptors, which he uses to snuffle around for worms. He has an organ in his ass that generates an electric field. No, really. They've also got the highest brain to body oxygen usage ratio of any vertebrate. He's super cute and full of personality! Wild caught, too, so this guy traveled across half the planet to get to me. In ancient Egypt these guys were believed to have eaten the penis of Osiris and were worshipped in the city of Oxyrhynchus.
Kribensis (Pelvicachromis pulcher) x4
AKA Rainbow Cichlid. An African cichlid that's not an asshole? Sign me up. Well, they're still assholes but only to each other. You probably could spot a full grown 4" male, a pair of 2" female and male, and a 1.5" female in the video if you look closely. Incredibly beautiful fish, very aggressive when they breed, so I plan to separate one pair of kribs into a 20g and leave the other in the 75. One of the rare instances where the females are the flashier ones!
Congo Tetra (Phenacogrammus interruptus) x6
One of the larger tetras kept in aquaria, they get about 4 inches or so too. Semi-aggressive, which here just means they steal everyone's food and get fat, so I have to distract them with flakes on one side of the tank so everyone else can eat. Beautiful, shiny blues and reds and clear fins. Love 'em. Way overpriced for tetras though, like 8 bucks per! Comparably sized South American tetras are still $2.50 at PetSmart.
African Butterfly Fish (Pantodon buchholzi) x1
You've probably seen them in nature documentaries. They're those guys that float at the waters surface looking like a butterfly or a leaf until they see some unsuspecting bug above the water and then BAM! They jump way up and snatch 'em. Relative of the Arowana. Beautiful little guy, goes bananas bonkers when I feed him crickets.
Upside-Down Catfish (Synodontis nigriventris) x3
AKA Blotched upside-down catfish. Adorable little guys with naturally tubby bellies. They're friendly and I love them, though they'll be moving to the 20 gallon long with kribs and Demi. They really do swim upside down!
FALSE Upside-Down Catfish (Synodontis nigrita) x2
Ohohoho, you fool, you fucker. You thought you bought upside down catfish, didn't you? Well, now I'm gonna get a foot long and poop a lot and suck the slime coat off your expensive fish and kill them and look so sillycute while doing it. AND I won't even swim upside down. Will be banished to local fish store rehoming tank to be sold under the correct name this time.
Snails (Various sp.) x999999999
I've got Malaysian Trumpet Snails (intentional), Nerites (intentional), Ramshorns (unwanted hitchhikers), and Bladder Snails (unwanted hitchhikers).
Plants
Jungle Val (Vallisneria americana)
AKA Eelgrass. Not technically African but it was cheaper than the African-native Corkscrew Val.
Narrow Crinum (Crinum calamistratum)
AKA African Onion Plant. Slow growing and small so far but looks cool fully grown.
African Water Fern (Bolbitus heudelotii)
AKA Congo Fern. Really sickly and shitty from PetSmart but should improve.
Cameroon Moss (Plagiochilaceae sp.)
Really pretty moss I attached to some driftwood in small bunches, should grow in soon enough.
Anubias (Anubias heterophylla, Anubias barteri)
Probably the most well-known African aquatic plant besides lucky bamboo, you'll find this in a TON of fish tanks.
Tiger Lotus (Nymphaea zenkeri)
Still just a wee baby, eventually this'll grow into some rockin' red lily pads.
Ammania (Ammannia gracilis)
Beautiful stem plant with red-tipped leaves. Lovely pop of color.
Duckweed (Lemna minor)
Fuck this guy kill this guy. Duckweed hell one million years forever!!!!!!!!!!
Tank Setup
75 Gallon (idk brand) I believe dimensions are 48x18x21
Fluval 407 Canister filter w/ spray bar
Secondary sponge filter with air pump rated for up to 100gal
Tertiary filter running water softener pillow and establishing spare biomedia
Substrate is pea gravel and Black Diamond Blasting Sand, coarse grit.
Wood is California driftwood/ghost wood iirc, got it at a reptile expo.
Light is Finnex Planted+ 24/7 (I just leave it on auto mode)
Heaters are 3 preset tetra 100W heaters. Nothing fancy.
There's caves made out of PVC piping covered with pond foam.
That bag you see is weighing the driftwood down since it's a little new, it still wants to float.
Leaf litter is mostly oak and live oak and a bit of catappa.
This shit all cost me way more than was reasonable at all jesus christ it was pricy but it's so worth it.
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So I got a new aquarium decoration 😋
(Ft. My crinum calamistratum onion, which is finally growing some new leaves!)
#stargate#stargate sg1#aquablr#planted tank#planted aquarium#fishblr#aquarium hobby#crinum calamistratum
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added some bolbitis heudelotii to the 29 the other day. felt like a crime doing an african biotope tank without including one of the coolest aquatic plants in the hobby
#fishblr#killifish#fundulopanchax gardneri#planted tank#biotope tank#current plant stocking is:#eleocharis acicularis#anubias nana petite#anubias barteri#nymphaea zenkeri#bolbitis heudelotii#crinum calamistratum#riccia fluitans
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me: oh, i should scape this dirt 30 gal with some amazon swords and limnophila indica and giant hairgrass and a carpet of sag
also me: 16 crinum calamistratum and nothing else
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general update
It’s been a big week for my water-dependents. This particular tank had a mass of vines and algae at the top that I finally dealt with and now it looks barren. Except for the approximately 5.2 million little seedlings or whatever that the vines release at the slightest movement once they reach a point of maturity. You can see them clogging the filter intake, which happens so fast and just gave up clearing it.
The Amazon sword plant that remained in this tank (heated), has done decently [lower left plant]. I’d love to get it to the point of propagating, but it’s not always easy, especially when you are brand new and not all that committed to the aquatic plants...oops lol.
I am very pleased with how the crinum calamistratum onion plant is growing its tentacles though. I couldn’t get the other bulbs to thrive in colder and then heated but smaller tanks. They’re finnicky and get this gross smelly red rot it seems, almost out of their own annoyance at the wannabe-cultivator (me :/ )
It’s odd to see so much light in the tank again, since there’s been such coverage at the top for a while until now.
My two bigger community setups for axolotls got a slight rearranging as well.
Midas is joining the big boy tank with Buddy and Linda
separate post to follow later. Needless to say, he’s adorable no matter what.
I also switched up the decor in Sadsolotl and Big Mel’s tank.
And they have been enjoying it. Axolotls do appreciate a change in scenery every so often, and get to exercise some curiosity when encountering new things. Ie., can I eat it? Answer: no, always no. Separate post also to follow for their shiny new-ish digs.
unexpected rant extolling the virtues of sponge filters, I guess for newbies? I don’t know.
It’s also odd to imagine there was a time I relied on charcoal filters and other potions to try to persuade the water to cooperate . If you’re new to keeping fish/aquatic critters, the dreaded CYCLE is real and it will be your best friend eventually. Cut the chemicals, save yourself months of struggle , stress, and money and take the initial time to get a good balanced cycle. I’ve read that axolotls actually need some of the minerals in the water that the carbon filter strips away in order to build a nice slime coat (hard water with minerals is preferred). You don’t want your axie naked without a coat do you??
Sponge filters are the way to go. Simple and cheap. Then you can always have backups going that aren’t obnoxious to maintain and can basically pop them in a brand new setup and their bacteria will do the rest. You can even just slice a piece of foam and pop an airstone into it for a quick and dirty custom mini filter.
If you can’t break free of the more traditional HOB or other filter mindset, just pack it with super porous bacteria-encouraging foam and ceramics instead of the premade filter bags BIG FISH (lol) pushes. Give it a light (and not hot) rinse monthly or sooner as needed and that’s all you need.
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Just finished cleaning my fish tank, so thought i would share, because I think it’s been quite a while since I have shared an update on it. And also talk about plans for the future. For reference, this is what it looked like shortly after setting up (and still with lots of tannins in the water) http://rayegunn.tumblr.com/post/131499725421/paludarium-update-photos-with-cat-for-scale-its Everything is largely the same, layout wise, but some plants didn’t make it, (Pogostomon just didn’t get enough light) others have done very well. If you read that, you will notice that the tank inhabitants are not what I had planned. I ran into disease problems with the frogs, and gave up on them since there seemed to be an issue at the distributor level with Chytrid fungus, Shrimp just don’t seem to do well for me for some reason, and I realized the gobies would be ill advised since they are brackish. Extensive rambling below the cut.
For those unfamiliar with it, it is a paludarium with a self watering planter, and contains approximately 10 gallons of water. occupants are 1 Betta named Jesse, 6 Harlequin Rasboras, 5 Pygmy Cories, 2 Ottocinclus, 2 Assassin Snails (which I have no idea what they are eating because the pond snails were eradicated like a year ago. I think they eat the Cories sinking shrimp tablets, maybe) I built the terrestrial part out of a flower pot cut in half then the two halves glued together to create a tower, covered in expanding foam and silicone covered in dirt. The terrestrial part used to contain several types of plant, but the African Violet choked out everything else, it’s huge and doing very well. There is also some moss growing on the submerged wood, and along the edges of the pot/stream area. Aquatic plants are mostly assorted Crypts, but also some Anubias (on the back of the driftwood, can’t see it from this angle), Spiky Moss, (which was redone about a week ago because it had overtaken the left side of the tank, so it’s looking a bit scraggly there) Crinum calamistratum (but I have had troubles with the leaves wanting to stick out of the water, because it is shallow, and they then dry out and die, so there are only 4 leaves on it at the moment), Rotala rotundifoia, (recently trimmed so you can’t see much of it) and I added some Pygmy Chain Sword in the front there recently, it hasn’t entirely filled in yet, but it seems to be catching on. Oh and some moss balls, which I see now are piled up in a corner there to get them out of the way, but they’re normally kinda scattered here and there.
I created it as an experiment, because I want to do something similar on a larger scale, but wanted to work out the kinks small scale. And there are definitely some things I will be doing differently, after having this tank for over a year, i guess? As a concept, it definitely works, but as you can see i have had to stick a heater outside the internal compartment because i needed one larger than would fit inside the hidden area. Kinda spoils the aesthetic, to be sure (though the betta likes resting on it, so whatever. I’ve placed a barrier so he doesn’t burn his fins) I also find the fluctuating water level frustrating. Between evaporation and the planter drawing off water, the water level can go down fairly rapidly, and I have to keep it topped off with a pitcher of water every other day or so. I also had problems with water surface movement leading to biofilm, so had to add a bubbler, leading to the water spatter on the back glass.
All these problems I think can be solved by the larger version using a hidden sump for filtration, with the nylon ropes for the planter dangling into the overflow. It will increase water volume, will skim the surface to take care of the biofilm, and will keep the surface level of the water completely unchanging. the prospect of drilling a tank is a little daunting, but I’ve watched a lot of tutorials on how to do it and I’m feeling pretty confident about it. And I may be able to find one that’s pre-drilled anyway. Then, I would cover up the overflow with rocks and etc. and have the flower pot with a matching fitted base, and it would just pop in the top, so you could lift it out if necessary. You’d be able to see the small holes the water flows into around the edges if you looked close, but shouldn’t be too bad, especially if there is a bit of an overhang at the surface of the water to create a shadow. I’d also be able to hide the heater inside the sump, to keep everything nice and uncluttered. I would also likely use grout or something to cover the sump, rather than potting soil as that has proved to be less than durable. Luckily the front isn’t too bad, but the soil has worn off almost completley in the back, looks horrible. I cover it with an almond leaf.
Should work just fine. As for the tanks, I think I will definitely go BIG. I want 75 gallons+ preferably more in the 125 area, I’ll have to scan the classified around here when the time comes and see what I can come up with, so i can keep it more on the affordable side, and I want TWO of them. Only one of which will have a planter up top.
One will be freshwater, and I want to stock it with Pearl Gouramis, German Blue Rams, and a school of maybe Black Skirt Tetras, I’ve always liked those. Also Bronze Cories, can’t go wrong with Cories. but if i go large enough with the tank, I may switch those out for some Clown Loaches. And the stars would be a Small Scale Archer fish and/or a school of Marbled Hatchet Fish. If you are going for a paludarium, you may as well stock it with fish that can utelize the open air/dry land if at all possible. Archers have a unique hunting behaviour, where they shoot jets of water at insects above the water, something they can only really do in a paludarium type setup. And Hatchetfish are flying fish, able to glide through the air on their specialize pectoral fins, and are able to catch small insects midair. Yes, this means i will have to begin keeping crickets and blackflies, but it will be cool. I want this tank to be fairly heavily planted, but as i discovered with the small one, since the light has to sit so high above the water, you kind of have to stick to low light plants, even with a strong light fixture. but that’s fine, there are plenty of beautiful low light plants. I already have lots of crypts i can take from the smaller tank, as well as some Rotala and Pygmy Chain Sword, but I’d likely fill it in with some Anubias and Java Fern.
And that brings us to the second tank, probably the one i am most excited about. It would be a brackish tank (kinda part way between fresh and ocean water) and would contain Mudskippers (most likely Indian Dwarf skippers), Fiddler Crabs, and a Dragon Goby. I’d also likely add some middle water fish, likely either mollies (natural type colouration) or orange chromide cichlids. Mudskippers actually walk on their petcoral fins, so they and the fiddler crabs would be climbing out of the water, and I would create little sandy flats that the water spills down, and try and create a mangrove look for the tank. After doing some research and narrowing down my inhabitants, it’s looking like i will be looking at a Specific Gravity (salinity) of between 1.005 and 1.010, which should allow me to maintain certain aquatic plants, like Java Fern and Anubias, so it should still have a bit of green, but this one will be mostly hardscape, with lots of ermerged wood and rocks for the fiddlers and skippers to climb on.
Archers actually come in several varieties, one of which, and probably the most commonly seen, the Banded Archer, is brackish, bu gets to be a foot long, so I think I will stick with the smaller (but still like 6 inches) variety, the Small Scale Archer, in the freshwater setup. But the Smallscale is a lot rarer, so I may have to jut make do with the Hatchets.
For both, i definitely want to make the switch to a sand substrate. (i use a very small gravel right now) the Brackish tank requires it, the mudskippers, crabs and Dragon Goby NEED sand, and I will need a lot of it, so am likely looking at pool filter sand if i want to avoid paying a fortune for it, but will have to ask around after a variety that is as dark a colour as possible, definitely don’t want white for these. I may mix in some darker coloured aquarium sand, depending on what I can get. But they rip you off for aquarium sand, for sure. The freshwater tank would have a potting soil base, just like the current one has. The brackish would be pure sand, since it would have no rooted plants, and some of the fish like to dig.
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Read more at teruyalab.com
Source: practicalfishkeeping.co.uk
Name: Adam Walding. Age: 27. Years keeping fish: Five. Favourite fish: Probably my Alestopetersius brichardi. Most paid for a fish: The Alestopetersius, at £20 each. Dream tank: If I had to choose one it’d be a lot like this but bigger and with more Alestiid species.
Adam Walding is an aquarist who has brought a chunk of deepest Africa into his home in Northants. A self confessed fan of the old continent, he’s put together a beast of a tank that goes beyond being just a big volume with big fish. Instead, he’s created a shoal-laden, natural-feeling layout with canopies and undergrowth. This is the forested side of Africa we see all too infrequently in UK circles.
Adam came to my attention after I mislabelled a fish in an earlier magazine. It turns out that while I was scrabbling around photo archives the world over, he had much of what I needed, all sat within an hour’s drive from my office. After I’d been suitably chastised, I asked if he’d be keen on letting me take a closer look at his project.
Flash forward a few weeks, and I’m stood in front of a 180cm/6ft window that takes me directly to the Congo. Adam’s Aqua One Aquience Classic 1800R, at 180 x 60 x 66cm, and holding 600 l/132 gal of water, is not the token small set-up I’d envisaged. Sagging under the weight of a wall of Bolbitis, and with region-correct fish streaking in and out of every crevice, I’m pleasantly surprised to see the alternative African scene is very alive, albeit on a small scale, in the British hobby.
PFK: Adam, for you, what’s the appeal of an African tank? AW: I wanted to do something different, something a little esoteric. I’d noticed a deficit of African fish in the trade, particularly tetras, and my interest grew from there. I can remember seeing in the tetra sections of fishkeeping books that the Congo tetra was the “exception”, and it got me thinking that it couldn’t have been the only one of its kind from Africa. PFK: How long has this set-up been running for? And what did you have before this? AW: This set-up has been running since October 25, 2013. Before that I had a Rio 125 with west African fish, a 15 l/3.3 gal shrimp tank and a Fluval Edge I’d converted to a marine tank, with a clip-on twin T5 light.
PFK: What hardware does it have running on it? What filter media are you using? AW: Hardware is just the standard for the Aquience, with eight T5 tubes producing a total of 260W of power (rather than four long tubes for whatever reasons), two Aquis 1250R external canister filters and 450W power of heating. I use 50/50 pink and white tubes. It’s not likely to be enough for demanding plants, I did once try Eleocharis parvula but that slowly died. PFK: What maintenance does the tank need, and how often? AW: I wring out or change filter floss once a week, clean the rest of the media every couple of months, staggering each filter a week apart so that any bacterial losses are minimised. After decor, the tank holds something closer to 500 l/111 gal so I change 125 l a week, normally 25 l or 50 l every day or other day. I find I can remove more detritus this way.
PFK: What spawning successes have you had so far? AW: Something did spawn in the aquarium a couple of nights ago, the eggs were minuscule and quickly eaten. I think it may have been the Alestopetersius nigropterus, as there was no sign of a bubble nest.
In terms of deliberate spawning, I have bred a pair of my Microctenopoma ansorgii in a separate 40 l tank that sits neatly in the cupboard of the main aquarium. PFK: What care did you need to give breeding fish? Did you condition them, or move them or anything? AW: When I wanted to breed the Microctenopoma I couldn’t find a lot of information online, but I did know it would be similar to Betta in that the male would build a bubble nest and that soft water was required. I introduced the largest female to the tank first, and conditioned her with a lot of frozen food for a week before adding the male, whom she promptly attacked.
Given that he was about three times the size of her, that quickly subsided and I noticed a small bubble nest three days later, and then a larger one with eggs in it five days later. I removed the female immediately and then I removed the male when the eggs started to hatch.
All of this took place in heavily stained acidic water — next time I will try it in slightly harder water. PFK: You say that pH is around the mid-six mark, with a KH of 2. How do you keep the water like this? Are you using RO for it? AW: Yes I am, and I use JBL’s Aquadur to remineralise it before changing some.
PFK: Are your fish all biotope specific? Do they originate from the same region, or is there a bit of creative license involved? AW: I like to be accurate where possible, but some of these fish only have a small geographical range compared to others. It’s easy with the Xenomystus nigri knifefish and Pantodon buchholzi butterflies because their natural range is huge, but it’s much smaller with the Garra congoensis and Alestopeterius nigropterus. Those two I could perhaps be taking some license with, but my A. nigropterus came from Lukeni river, when according to IUCN they are only found in Lac Mai N’dombe. They may not even be nigropterus! PFK: You made your own backing for this tank. What did you use to do that? How did it come together, and did it take long? AW: I made that with two-foot squares of egg crate and expanding foam originally intended for pond use. I added some rocks and wood to it before it all set, and then when it had set I applied a couple of coats of Gorilla Glue and paving sand. It took about a week, as I only had room to make one square at a time before fixing it in the aquarium and starting the next. PFK: What substrate have you used? AW: It’s the same paving sand I used for the background, thoroughly washed first, although it wasn’t too dusty. Lafarge was the brand.
PFK: What plant species have you used? How have some of these been fastened on to the decor? AW: I have various Anubias, I think all are varieties of A. barteri. There’s a lot of Bolbitis in there, some Nymphaea, a Crinum calamistratum and some Hygrophila polysperma — there’s that creative license!
Some of the Anubias were tied down where necessary but I just wedged the Bolbitis in crevices on the background, given there was nothing to really tie it to. That was nearly two years ago and the background is now almost completely hidden. PFK: What interplay between the fish species have you seen? Are any of them ever hostile towards each other? AW: The different species ignore each other, but the tetras are happy to shoal together. Sometimes there is some aggression from the knifefish toward the tetras but it’s far from the constant chasing and torn fins that we fishkeepers dread. I think it might be the shininess of the tetras that annoys it when half the lights are off — it never does it when both lights are either fully on or off, so I minimise that time. PFK: What foods are you using, and how often? Do you have a set routine? What’s the trickiest fish to feed, and why? AW: I use Tetra Pro colour and Pro algae, and generic bloodworm and brine shrimp, normally flakes in the afternoon or early evening, and frozen food later in the evening. It depends when I get home from work. When the tetras were smaller I used Hikari micro pellets (and still do for young Microctenopoma) but the larger they got the less interest they showed in them.
Some of the tetras are the fussiest fish, especially the newest ones. The Garra are definitely the greediest, even taking food from the surface. I give the knifefish half a prawn once or twice a week, being careful to drop it right in front of him before one of the Garra grabs it.
PFK: What has been the fastest growing of the fish you’ve added? AW: The Garra I think, which figures given the way they eat. PFK: What’s been the biggest surprise you’ve had in setting up this tank? AW: The Microctenopoma have not been anything like as shy as I was led to believe, even swimming up to a net and pecking it at. PFK: Are there any fish you want to add but can’t source? AW: Another Alestiid has caught my eye — Brachypetersius gabonensis. I’d also like to keep more fish from the Alestopetersius genus and to learn if my A. nigropterus really are what they claim to be. PFK: Are there any fish you regret adding? AW: I’ve six Synodontis nigriventris which stay completely hidden apart from feeding time, but they do make sure that any food that lands on the substrate isn’t wasted.
PFK: What should the new fishkeeper be aware of when setting up an African riverine tank? AW: I think a good grasp of the nitrogen cycle and some mature media would be a good idea. Touch wood I’ve had no pollution spikes in the tank since it was set up, but these wild caught fish are very delicate; I’ve had a few die in transport on a journey that was less than an hour. Quarantine is a good idea too, a cheap source of RO water and a willingness to travel if you want rare species. Facebook groups can be good for “I’ve seen such and such here”. PFK: If you could start again and change anything, what would it be? AW: I initially had an area of JBL’s Manado substrate for growing the Hygrophila, before realising it’d grow anywhere. There are Malaysian trumpet snails in the tank and for some reason I thought it’d stay put. It didn’t, and despite my efforts there is still some in there, sitting atop the sand mocking me.
Adam's set-up at a glance
The stock in Adam’s tank is made up of... 21 Alestopetersius nigropterus Nine Alestopetersius brichardi Nine Microctenopoma ansorgii Six Synodontis nigriventris Two Pantodon buchholzi Two Garra congoensis One Xenomystus nigri
#aquarium#fish tank#aquascape#freshwater#freshwater aquarium#nature aquarium#planted aquarium#planted tank#aquatic plants#ネイチャーアクアリウム
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My first order from Planted Aquarium Central came in today 😃 I ordered 2 orders (6) of Italian Val, 1 Crinum Calamistratum, and 1 Anubias Nana petite. So excited to see them grow in my 40 gallon.
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AQUABALL HERUNTERLADEN
Die Meisterschaft wurde zum ersten Mal ausgetragen und findet seitdem jährlich statt. Hierfür gibt es natürlich ein ausführlicheres Regelwerk. Es handelt sich hierbei um eine Turnierserie, die aus fünf Veranstaltungen besteht und bei der die Teams, die sich zu Beginn der Saison mit ihren Spielern anmelden müssen, je nach Platzierung Punkte bekommen. Durch den an die Düse angebrachten Schlauch kann Umgebungsluft mit eingeblasen werden. Aquaball ist keine Variante des Wasserballs, sondern eine eigenständige Sportart, deren Unterschiede zum Wasserball nicht nur im Reglement und Spielfeld liegen. Vorheriger Beitrag Crinum calamistratum Schmalblättrige Hakenlilie. Dezember von Dirk Brechmann.
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Das Nachlassen der Umwälzleistung des Filters liegt nach unseren Erfahrungen meist: Ihre Meinung ist uns wichtig. Am Leistungsregler bestimmen Sie Durchflussmenge. Eheim Innenfilter aquaball 60 mit Filterpatrone und Mediabox. Der Ball ist der Dreh. Schwankungen der Netzspannung haben keinen Einfluss auf die Drehzahl.
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Warum lässt die Umwälzleistung meines Innenfilters nach? Eheim Innenfilter aquaball mit 2x Filterpatrone und Mediabox.
Beide Mannschaften stürmen und verteidigen komplett, Torwart zum Beispiel kann jeder sein. Alle Hersteller haben die unterschiedlichsten Reaktoren im […].
Ihr wollt AQUABALL auch ausprobieren?
Gespielt wird mit einem Beachvolleyball. Eheim Innenfilter aquaball 60 mit Filterpatrone und Mediabox.
Dies ist sowohl in der Mediabox als aquavall in den Filterkörben möglich. Im Gegensatz zur konstanten Pumpenleistung, lässt die Umwälzleistung des Filters mit zunehmender Verschmutzung nach. Und über den Aqkaball dosieren Sie die Luftzufuhr. Diese kann jedoch einfach durch andere Medien ersetzt werden.
Aquaball – Wikipedia
Bei jeder Filterreinigung sollten auch die Ansaugöffnungen und der Auslassbereich gereinigt werden. Sie können ihren Kommentar in das unten stehende Feld eintragen und veröffentlichen. Die wichtigsten Merkmale im Überblick:.
Die Halterung hält sehr gut an der Scheibe und ist so gut wie nicht verschiebbar ohne sie zu lösen. Durch das Modulsystem können Sie das Filtervolumen individuell anpassen. Das Nachlassen der Umwälzleistung des Filters liegt nach unseren Erfahrungen meist: Aquaball ist eine Sportart, die es offiziell bereits seit gibt, die aber trotzdem noch weitgehend unbekannt ist, obwohl sie offiziell im Deutschen Schwimm-Verband DSV angesiedelt ist.
EHEIM aquaball 180 | Ein Testbericht
squaball Aquaball ist eine Freizeitsportartdie vom Deutschen Schwimmverband geschaffen wurde. Sonst ist auch nach der Filterreinigung kein normaler Wasserdurchfluss möglich. Über den mitgelieferten Power-Diffusor wird die Luftzufuhr und somit die Sauerstoffanreicherung im Aquarium geregelt.
Für aquabalp Filterung von besonders klarem Aquabapl kann zum Beispiel ein Kohlefilter eingesetzt werden, um lange Laufzeiten zu ermöglichen stehen Bio-Medien zur Verfügung.
AquaBall? » AquAHAUS – Das Kombibad mit Welle
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Zwei Mannschaften mit je vier Spielern versuchen einen Ball im gegnerischen Tor unterzubringen. Januar um Navigation Hauptseite Themenportale Zufälliger Artikel.
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So kann die Ausströmung des gereinigten Wassers in jede Richtung gelenkt werden. Ein Team besteht aus 4 festen plus 2 Ersatzspielern. Weiter existieren bisher nur in Bayern noch Meisterschaften auf Landesebene.
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Überprüfen Sie Ihren Filtermassenaufbau auf die von uns empfohlenen Filtermedien, siehe Bedienungsanleitung. Dieses Pumpensystem basiert auf dem Prinzip des Synchronmotors.
Rundum flexibel mit Kugelkopf
Jetzt kann jedes Aquaballl einzeln entnommen werden. Wir empfehlen deshalb, erst dann eine Filterreinigung vorzunehmen, wenn die Pumpenleistung merklich nachlässt. Feste Positionen wie Torwart oder Stürmer gibt es praktisch nicht.
The post AQUABALL HERUNTERLADEN appeared first on Mezitli.
source http://mezitli.info/aquaball-72/
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Crinum calamistratum Live Aquarium Plants
http://dlvr.it/Ql2zmg
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LONG BOI
Ever since I started dosing with CO2 my stellata lily has decided "welp, time to be LONG"
(Ft. My African crinum calamistratum onion plant in the background)
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the T5HO fixture for the 75 gal is assembled, the CO2 canister is filled, the regulator is installed, and the plants are ordered. 👀 i'm taking advantage of the 21" height and thin layer of substrate, so it's tall plant city. aponogeton crispus, crinum calamistratum, amazon and ozelot swords, a couple echinodorus angustifolia, rotala wallichii and rotundifolia, ammannia senegalensis and nesea, hygrophila difformis, and plenty of pogostemon stellatus.
(if that's all gibberish: wavy tall plant, weird curly octopus plant, green and spotted plants, weird corkscrew plants, fluffy pointy brownish reddish plants, bright orangey/copper/red/yellow plants, fancy green plant, and big fun wiggly plants.)
i'm still torn on what i want as a carpet, but it's probably going to be pogostemon helferi downoi? either that, or staurogyne repens or a type of marsilea. also putting some hygrophila pinnatifada and assorted buces on the existing driftwood arrangement. ohhhh babey. this is going to look so good and the eels will LOVE it
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it's gonna be another dirted tank with a brown flourite cap. plants are a mix of aponogetons, ozelot and amazon swords, giant hairgrass, african water ferns, crypts, hydrocotyle tripartita and leucocephala, glossostigma, pearl grass, and a few crinum calamistratum. stocking is gonna be 10 diamond tetras and 10 corydoras melanotaenia. oh yeah.
gettin another 75 gallon tomorrow 👀👀👀
#3 weeks later and i still don't know what i'm doing with the 125#meanwhile; i saw an ad on craigslist; then arranged to pick up the tank and ordered the plants and selected the stock in under an hour#fish tag#this was surprisingly cheap#55 for the tank and stand; then 150 for everything going in it...?#shifty eyes at the eel tub and other 75
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Crinum calamistratum Live Aquarium Plants
http://dlvr.it/PvSS6y
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