Practical Fishkeeping

Why are my plants turning black?

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Please could you advise me on what I can do to stop the leaves of my plants going black? The fish are okay, and I do a water change every week of 25% using water conditione­r and plant food. The light is on for eight hours a day. My tank is a Juwel Vision 180. The temperatur­e is 25°C, 7.6pH all water parameters test fine. EDDIE KITTRIDGE, VIA EMAIL

NEALE SAYS: This is Rhodophyta algae, and there are several types that infest aquaria, including hair algae, brush algae, black beard algae, and black spot algae. These algae all tend to grow best in tanks where the growth of higher plants is

indifferen­t. This is often explained by supposing that 'something' has to use up the nutrients in the water, and if plants aren't growing quickly, algae will do the job instead.

Often the first step to addressing algae problems is to determine how quickly your aquarium plants are growing. If you're removing a handful of excess leaves every week or two, that indicates healthy plant growth.

If, on the other hand, your plants are not really doing much, and you can't remember the last time they needed pruning, then that can be informativ­e. Of course, some plants grow slowly anyway, notably things like Anubias and Java ferns and almost without exception these plants become 'algae magnets' if placed under direct light. They are much happier in tanks stocked with floating plants or some other overhead vegetation that reduces the amount of light that reaches them while also growing fast enough to remove nitrate and phosphate from the water.

Alternativ­ely, choose undemandin­g but fast-growing stem and rosette plants. This a good way to control algae, and once these are tall enough to shade the slower growing plants, you should find fewer black patches on their leaves. The Rio 180 is an excellent aquarium, and the LED lighting built into its hood is pretty good. While you may find the more demanding plants struggle without additional lighting or carbon dioxide fertilisat­ion, but the more adaptable species should do fine.

Another trick recommende­d by many fishkeeper­s is to split the lighting period into two 4-hour sections with a 1-2 hour 'siesta' between them. While this may not cure your algae problem by itself, it might help somewhat.

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