So I was given some free duckweed today and I had really no idea what it was. I like the idea of floating plants in the tank, but apparently duckweed can become a nuisance. Anyone have tips or experience with it? Good or bad idea?
I'm about to set up my Fluval Ebi with Cabomba, Windelov, Marimos and some Java Fern...maybe duckweed?
I regretted it and now I can't get rid of it. It cuts down the amount of light that getts to the other plants but is a good nitrates sponge, this also may take all the nutrients away from your other plants.
the duckweed can and will grow fast. if you decide you dont' want them in the future, it will be a bit of a hassle to completely rid it. depending on the type of filtration you're using, it may clog up the filter. you may but not limited to considering water lettuce or some other type of floating plant that are available. i just personally find the small duckweed a nuisance.
the Cabomba is a nitrate soaker as well. if you have duckweed and cabomba, then the duckweed will more likely survive and the cabomba turn into mush like hornwort.
I am concerned about the Cabomba as well. From my previous experience in another tank it needed a lot of light. The bottoms turned yellow and made a huge mess. Perhaps I'll start off with just a few stems.
I'll let you know how it goes. I haven't done it yet
the duckweed can and will grow fast. if you decide you dont' want them in the future, it will be a bit of a hassle to completely rid it. depending on the type of filtration you're using, it may clog up the filter. you may but not limited to considering water lettuce or some other type of floating plant that are available. i just personally find the small duckweed a nuisance.
the Cabomba is a nitrate soaker as well. if you have duckweed and cabomba, then the duckweed will more likely survive and the cabomba turn into mush like hornwort.
that's a good idea to try out the tank without the duckweed. see how the cabomba does. lots of floating plant choices and floating plants with cool and neat hanging roots
wish i had some water lettuce to give to you.
I have lots of duckweed, so feel free to come around and look at it.
I recommend water lettuce as a floating plant, rather than duckweed. Shrimp love the trailing roots that water lettuce has, and it is a floating plant with larger leaves that doesn't multiply.
My duckweed multiplies very rapidly. I gave someone some water lettuce from one of my tanks and within a week, the entire tank was taken over by duckweed. The entire surface was covered. After a month, the duckweed can easily be an inch or more thick, a floating mat of little bits. Once it's in your tank, it's hard to get rid of.
That said, I like duckweed even though I have to scoop it out with every water change. It's pretty and I think that fish appreciate the shade. Endler fry like to swim in it.
I found that adding water lettuce and duckweed to my Ebi cast quite a lot of shadow, and I ended up doubling the light and removing some of the floating plants. There's not a lot of surface area in the Ebi and if you add duckweed, it will be covered quite quickly. Somehow, it spreads from tank to tank even when you try to keep it in only one tank.
It really depends on your setup and what you want out of it.
If you are running any type of hob filter where it 'drops" water into the tank, froget it. The duckweed will get pushed down into the tank and make a huge mess, clogging all the filters.
If you have a lot of small fish that like to swim up top, don't do it, becaues it is very hard to scoop out the duckweed without taking out small fish at the same time. (i'm thinking endlers here).
Duckweed is a excellent nitrate sponge. I have it in my 100 gal tank to control the nitrates and to feed my rainbow tank (beside it). It works great.
Now, duckweed WILL cover the water surface cutting down on the lighting availiable to the plants at the bottom of the tank, this may or maynot be a good thing. It is really easy to control in the sense you just take a net and "scoop" out most of it every few days.... almost impossible to completely get rid of tho since even a few leaves of it (which are tiny) will reproduce in a couple days.
I got duckweed for free once before I actually knew about it.... I didn't really care but it ended up dying in my tank... odd eh? It just all started slowly turning white then boom dead... and I have weak lights so it couldn't of been from to much lighting.
The only thing I dreaded about it was when you stick your arm in the tank, reach to the bottom and pull your arm out your covered!
this is what happens to riccia (completely lost under the duckweed in the 1st photo) and pennywort with duckweed in the tank.
If you have no other floating plants, it's easy to manage and has many benefits. If you do have other floaters, you will spend the rest of your days fighting it.
this is what happens to riccia (completely lost under the duckweed in the 1st photo) and pennywort with duckweed in the tank.
If you have no other floating plants, it's easy to manage and has many benefits. If you do have other floaters, you will spend the rest of your days fighting it.
i just threw a goldfish in my tank (i have a tank i put feeder fish in until they're big enough to survive in the pond) and it ate every last little bit of duckweed
No need to Google it. Stuart's got some for sale by it's Latin name in his post, "Bucket of plants, $25". In the last pic, it's floating on the top of the bucket.
I had it in my 55g and I HATED how it blocked out the light from the other plants and totally covered your arms when you put them in the tank. It took a long time to get rid of it but it might be easier in a small tank? It did look nice but I won't be putting it in again.
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