Molch
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I was sorting all my pics and thought I'd share some pics of my soil-based planted tanks. I set up quite a few by now, and all are doing well.
5 - gallon tank. I set this one up simply to have a place to put my Val and Rotala clippings. I used sifted soil under the gravel and set it by the window and forgot about it. For the first 6 months, it had no newts or fish, no lights, no filter, no airstone, no water changes. Just topped off whatever evaporated. Plants grew spectacularly. It now houses a beta, 2 cory cats and a few tetras and sits in my office
my 20 ga tank, currently housing 4 chenggongensis. This pic taken after 1 year
15 gallon for 4 young cyanurus. This pic taken 2 months after setup
I feed blackworms in a petri dish, so the worms won't escape into the gravel. The newts quickly learn to go to the dish to feed.
one of the inhabitatnt in the 15 ga cyanurus tank
cyanurus in the 15 ga tank. That's Hydrocotyle and tiger lily
5 ga tank for larvae and juvenile aquatic newts. 1 month after setup. I love 5 ga tanks. While they are too small for adult newts, they are nice for raising small numbers of larvae, as quarantine or hospital tanks, and the best thing about them is that you can pick them up and carry them around without having to strip them down. Very practical if you ever want to move one or give one away as a gift, fully planted and established
29 ga on day of setup. I left the water level low so plants could grow to the surface where they get better CO2. I plant very densely right from the start.
29 ga one month after setup.
29 ga. The pennywort is beginning to grow emersed.
I usually let each tank run for 1-2 months without newts so that things can stabilize. Even so, I almost never have any measurable cycling in a soil-based tank. I believe this is because I use many plant clippings from my other established tanks, and the biological filter is basically coming with the clippings. No ammonia, or nitrite, and maybe just a bit of nitrate accumulating after a month or so. I have small amounts of algae here and there, but not so much that I have to intervene.
5 - gallon tank. I set this one up simply to have a place to put my Val and Rotala clippings. I used sifted soil under the gravel and set it by the window and forgot about it. For the first 6 months, it had no newts or fish, no lights, no filter, no airstone, no water changes. Just topped off whatever evaporated. Plants grew spectacularly. It now houses a beta, 2 cory cats and a few tetras and sits in my office

my 20 ga tank, currently housing 4 chenggongensis. This pic taken after 1 year

15 gallon for 4 young cyanurus. This pic taken 2 months after setup

I feed blackworms in a petri dish, so the worms won't escape into the gravel. The newts quickly learn to go to the dish to feed.

one of the inhabitatnt in the 15 ga cyanurus tank

cyanurus in the 15 ga tank. That's Hydrocotyle and tiger lily

5 ga tank for larvae and juvenile aquatic newts. 1 month after setup. I love 5 ga tanks. While they are too small for adult newts, they are nice for raising small numbers of larvae, as quarantine or hospital tanks, and the best thing about them is that you can pick them up and carry them around without having to strip them down. Very practical if you ever want to move one or give one away as a gift, fully planted and established

29 ga on day of setup. I left the water level low so plants could grow to the surface where they get better CO2. I plant very densely right from the start.

29 ga one month after setup.

29 ga. The pennywort is beginning to grow emersed.

I usually let each tank run for 1-2 months without newts so that things can stabilize. Even so, I almost never have any measurable cycling in a soil-based tank. I believe this is because I use many plant clippings from my other established tanks, and the biological filter is basically coming with the clippings. No ammonia, or nitrite, and maybe just a bit of nitrate accumulating after a month or so. I have small amounts of algae here and there, but not so much that I have to intervene.
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