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#1
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rotting moneywort
I have a few moneyworts in my 20 gal planted tank. After a while they
all seem to rot in the section of the stem closest to the gravel. Other than that one spot, they all seem healthy; solid green stems and leave, white roots growing from the stem (are they roots? if not what are they?) I have a 6700K 65 watt flourescent light so I don't think lighting is a problem and I haven't had any problems with any other plants. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! |
#2
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rotting moneywort
Xref: 127.0.0.1 rec.aquaria.freshwater.plants:78169
Dacaprice wrote in message m... I have a few moneyworts in my 20 gal planted tank. After a while they all seem to rot in the section of the stem closest to the gravel. Other than that one spot, they all seem healthy; solid green stems and leave, white roots growing from the stem (are they roots? if not what are they?) I have a 6700K 65 watt flourescent light so I don't think lighting is a problem and I haven't had any problems with any other plants. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! There are several plants commonly called 'moneywort,' at least one of which isn't a true aquatic. One used to grow in my backyard in New England. You might try identifying yours in a plant manual (or online at a vendor site) and posting it's latin name. Many aquatic plants have quite fragile stems since they're not weight bearing. If your substrate is gravel, particularly a large, heavy grain, you may be damaging the stem when you plant in your cuttings. Or you may be pinching them too tightly when you insert them, thereby crushing the stem. When I plant a cutting, I hold it gently between my thumb and first three fingers. I then insert my FINGERS into the substrate and, while gradually releasing the plant, madly backfill with my little finger. Or something like that. I guess it's hard to describe. The exact opposite may be true: you may have a fine substrate and, when you plant cuttings, you don't remove the bottom leaves which are buried and which then decay causing damaging to the lower part of the plant. Many people (myself included) with a coarse substrate will leave the lower leaves or a portion of them attached to anchor the cutting. This isn't a problem with gravel because the decaying material can circulate out but a fine material can trap the gasses. If you have cichlids, corys or botias, or anything else which is particularly active at crown level, your citizens may be implicated, I suppose. I'd start by identifying the Latin name for the plant. kush |
#3
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rotting moneywort
Xref: 127.0.0.1 rec.aquaria.freshwater.plants:78169
Dacaprice wrote in message m... I have a few moneyworts in my 20 gal planted tank. After a while they all seem to rot in the section of the stem closest to the gravel. Other than that one spot, they all seem healthy; solid green stems and leave, white roots growing from the stem (are they roots? if not what are they?) I have a 6700K 65 watt flourescent light so I don't think lighting is a problem and I haven't had any problems with any other plants. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! There are several plants commonly called 'moneywort,' at least one of which isn't a true aquatic. One used to grow in my backyard in New England. You might try identifying yours in a plant manual (or online at a vendor site) and posting it's latin name. Many aquatic plants have quite fragile stems since they're not weight bearing. If your substrate is gravel, particularly a large, heavy grain, you may be damaging the stem when you plant in your cuttings. Or you may be pinching them too tightly when you insert them, thereby crushing the stem. When I plant a cutting, I hold it gently between my thumb and first three fingers. I then insert my FINGERS into the substrate and, while gradually releasing the plant, madly backfill with my little finger. Or something like that. I guess it's hard to describe. The exact opposite may be true: you may have a fine substrate and, when you plant cuttings, you don't remove the bottom leaves which are buried and which then decay causing damaging to the lower part of the plant. Many people (myself included) with a coarse substrate will leave the lower leaves or a portion of them attached to anchor the cutting. This isn't a problem with gravel because the decaying material can circulate out but a fine material can trap the gasses. If you have cichlids, corys or botias, or anything else which is particularly active at crown level, your citizens may be implicated, I suppose. I'd start by identifying the Latin name for the plant. kush |
#4
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rotting moneywort
"Dunter Powries" fech.redcap@spedlin wrote in message ... Dacaprice wrote in message m... I have a few moneyworts in my 20 gal planted tank. After a while they all seem to rot in the section of the stem closest to the gravel. Other than that one spot, they all seem healthy; solid green stems and leave, white roots growing from the stem (are they roots? if not what are they?) I have a 6700K 65 watt flourescent light so I don't think lighting is a problem and I haven't had any problems with any other plants. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! There are several plants commonly called 'moneywort,' at least one of which isn't a true aquatic. One used to grow in my backyard in New England. You might try identifying yours in a plant manual (or online at a vendor site) and posting it's latin name. Many aquatic plants have quite fragile stems since they're not weight bearing. If your substrate is gravel, particularly a large, heavy grain, you may be damaging the stem when you plant in your cuttings. Or you may be pinching them too tightly when you insert them, thereby crushing the stem. When I plant a cutting, I hold it gently between my thumb and first three fingers. I then insert my FINGERS into the substrate and, while gradually releasing the plant, madly backfill with my little finger. Or something like that. I guess it's hard to describe. The exact opposite may be true: you may have a fine substrate and, when you plant cuttings, you don't remove the bottom leaves which are buried and which then decay causing damaging to the lower part of the plant. Many people (myself included) with a coarse substrate will leave the lower leaves or a portion of them attached to anchor the cutting. This isn't a problem with gravel because the decaying material can circulate out but a fine material can trap the gasses. If you have cichlids, corys or botias, or anything else which is particularly active at crown level, your citizens may be implicated, I suppose. I'd start by identifying the Latin name for the plant. The moneywort I have is Bacopa monnieri, and it floats unless I anchor it with lead weights. Perhaps the OP is doing the same, hence crushing the base of the stem and then it rots. I suggest the OP type Bacopa monnieri into google and confirm with a picture. He could also try using some foam to cushion the stem against the lead. Marcus |
#5
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rotting moneywort
"Dunter Powries" fech.redcap@spedlin wrote in message ... Dacaprice wrote in message m... I have a few moneyworts in my 20 gal planted tank. After a while they all seem to rot in the section of the stem closest to the gravel. Other than that one spot, they all seem healthy; solid green stems and leave, white roots growing from the stem (are they roots? if not what are they?) I have a 6700K 65 watt flourescent light so I don't think lighting is a problem and I haven't had any problems with any other plants. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! There are several plants commonly called 'moneywort,' at least one of which isn't a true aquatic. One used to grow in my backyard in New England. You might try identifying yours in a plant manual (or online at a vendor site) and posting it's latin name. Many aquatic plants have quite fragile stems since they're not weight bearing. If your substrate is gravel, particularly a large, heavy grain, you may be damaging the stem when you plant in your cuttings. Or you may be pinching them too tightly when you insert them, thereby crushing the stem. When I plant a cutting, I hold it gently between my thumb and first three fingers. I then insert my FINGERS into the substrate and, while gradually releasing the plant, madly backfill with my little finger. Or something like that. I guess it's hard to describe. The exact opposite may be true: you may have a fine substrate and, when you plant cuttings, you don't remove the bottom leaves which are buried and which then decay causing damaging to the lower part of the plant. Many people (myself included) with a coarse substrate will leave the lower leaves or a portion of them attached to anchor the cutting. This isn't a problem with gravel because the decaying material can circulate out but a fine material can trap the gasses. If you have cichlids, corys or botias, or anything else which is particularly active at crown level, your citizens may be implicated, I suppose. I'd start by identifying the Latin name for the plant. The moneywort I have is Bacopa monnieri, and it floats unless I anchor it with lead weights. Perhaps the OP is doing the same, hence crushing the base of the stem and then it rots. I suggest the OP type Bacopa monnieri into google and confirm with a picture. He could also try using some foam to cushion the stem against the lead. Marcus |
#6
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rotting moneywort
"Dunter Powries" fech.redcap@spedlin wrote in message ... Dacaprice wrote in message m... I have a few moneyworts in my 20 gal planted tank. After a while they all seem to rot in the section of the stem closest to the gravel. Other than that one spot, they all seem healthy; solid green stems and leave, white roots growing from the stem (are they roots? if not what are they?) I have a 6700K 65 watt flourescent light so I don't think lighting is a problem and I haven't had any problems with any other plants. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! There are several plants commonly called 'moneywort,' at least one of which isn't a true aquatic. One used to grow in my backyard in New England. You might try identifying yours in a plant manual (or online at a vendor site) and posting it's latin name. Many aquatic plants have quite fragile stems since they're not weight bearing. If your substrate is gravel, particularly a large, heavy grain, you may be damaging the stem when you plant in your cuttings. Or you may be pinching them too tightly when you insert them, thereby crushing the stem. When I plant a cutting, I hold it gently between my thumb and first three fingers. I then insert my FINGERS into the substrate and, while gradually releasing the plant, madly backfill with my little finger. Or something like that. I guess it's hard to describe. The exact opposite may be true: you may have a fine substrate and, when you plant cuttings, you don't remove the bottom leaves which are buried and which then decay causing damaging to the lower part of the plant. Many people (myself included) with a coarse substrate will leave the lower leaves or a portion of them attached to anchor the cutting. This isn't a problem with gravel because the decaying material can circulate out but a fine material can trap the gasses. If you have cichlids, corys or botias, or anything else which is particularly active at crown level, your citizens may be implicated, I suppose. I'd start by identifying the Latin name for the plant. The moneywort I have is Bacopa monnieri, and it floats unless I anchor it with lead weights. Perhaps the OP is doing the same, hence crushing the base of the stem and then it rots. I suggest the OP type Bacopa monnieri into google and confirm with a picture. He could also try using some foam to cushion the stem against the lead. Marcus |
#7
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rotting moneywort
"Dunter Powries" fech.redcap@spedlin wrote in message ... Dacaprice wrote in message m... I have a few moneyworts in my 20 gal planted tank. After a while they all seem to rot in the section of the stem closest to the gravel. Other than that one spot, they all seem healthy; solid green stems and leave, white roots growing from the stem (are they roots? if not what are they?) I have a 6700K 65 watt flourescent light so I don't think lighting is a problem and I haven't had any problems with any other plants. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! There are several plants commonly called 'moneywort,' at least one of which isn't a true aquatic. One used to grow in my backyard in New England. You might try identifying yours in a plant manual (or online at a vendor site) and posting it's latin name. Many aquatic plants have quite fragile stems since they're not weight bearing. If your substrate is gravel, particularly a large, heavy grain, you may be damaging the stem when you plant in your cuttings. Or you may be pinching them too tightly when you insert them, thereby crushing the stem. When I plant a cutting, I hold it gently between my thumb and first three fingers. I then insert my FINGERS into the substrate and, while gradually releasing the plant, madly backfill with my little finger. Or something like that. I guess it's hard to describe. The exact opposite may be true: you may have a fine substrate and, when you plant cuttings, you don't remove the bottom leaves which are buried and which then decay causing damaging to the lower part of the plant. Many people (myself included) with a coarse substrate will leave the lower leaves or a portion of them attached to anchor the cutting. This isn't a problem with gravel because the decaying material can circulate out but a fine material can trap the gasses. If you have cichlids, corys or botias, or anything else which is particularly active at crown level, your citizens may be implicated, I suppose. I'd start by identifying the Latin name for the plant. The moneywort I have is Bacopa monnieri, and it floats unless I anchor it with lead weights. Perhaps the OP is doing the same, hence crushing the base of the stem and then it rots. I suggest the OP type Bacopa monnieri into google and confirm with a picture. He could also try using some foam to cushion the stem against the lead. Marcus |
#8
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rotting moneywort
"Dunter Powries" fech.redcap@spedlin wrote in message ... Dacaprice wrote in message m... I have a few moneyworts in my 20 gal planted tank. After a while they all seem to rot in the section of the stem closest to the gravel. Other than that one spot, they all seem healthy; solid green stems and leave, white roots growing from the stem (are they roots? if not what are they?) I have a 6700K 65 watt flourescent light so I don't think lighting is a problem and I haven't had any problems with any other plants. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! There are several plants commonly called 'moneywort,' at least one of which isn't a true aquatic. One used to grow in my backyard in New England. You might try identifying yours in a plant manual (or online at a vendor site) and posting it's latin name. Many aquatic plants have quite fragile stems since they're not weight bearing. If your substrate is gravel, particularly a large, heavy grain, you may be damaging the stem when you plant in your cuttings. Or you may be pinching them too tightly when you insert them, thereby crushing the stem. When I plant a cutting, I hold it gently between my thumb and first three fingers. I then insert my FINGERS into the substrate and, while gradually releasing the plant, madly backfill with my little finger. Or something like that. I guess it's hard to describe. The exact opposite may be true: you may have a fine substrate and, when you plant cuttings, you don't remove the bottom leaves which are buried and which then decay causing damaging to the lower part of the plant. Many people (myself included) with a coarse substrate will leave the lower leaves or a portion of them attached to anchor the cutting. This isn't a problem with gravel because the decaying material can circulate out but a fine material can trap the gasses. If you have cichlids, corys or botias, or anything else which is particularly active at crown level, your citizens may be implicated, I suppose. I'd start by identifying the Latin name for the plant. The moneywort I have is Bacopa monnieri, and it floats unless I anchor it with lead weights. Perhaps the OP is doing the same, hence crushing the base of the stem and then it rots. I suggest the OP type Bacopa monnieri into google and confirm with a picture. He could also try using some foam to cushion the stem against the lead. Marcus |
#9
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rotting moneywort
Hi,
Are these plants relatively new to your tank? I have noticed that some plants exhibit a type of shock where they seem to rot brom the bottom. Eventually, given good light, water conditions and supplements, they will recover. In the meantime, remove any of the rotted stems and replant them at the nearest root node. I hope this helps. Lowcoaster "Dacaprice" wrote in message m... I have a few moneyworts in my 20 gal planted tank. After a while they all seem to rot in the section of the stem closest to the gravel. Other than that one spot, they all seem healthy; solid green stems and leave, white roots growing from the stem (are they roots? if not what are they?) I have a 6700K 65 watt flourescent light so I don't think lighting is a problem and I haven't had any problems with any other plants. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! |
#10
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rotting moneywort
Hi,
Are these plants relatively new to your tank? I have noticed that some plants exhibit a type of shock where they seem to rot brom the bottom. Eventually, given good light, water conditions and supplements, they will recover. In the meantime, remove any of the rotted stems and replant them at the nearest root node. I hope this helps. Lowcoaster "Dacaprice" wrote in message m... I have a few moneyworts in my 20 gal planted tank. After a while they all seem to rot in the section of the stem closest to the gravel. Other than that one spot, they all seem healthy; solid green stems and leave, white roots growing from the stem (are they roots? if not what are they?) I have a 6700K 65 watt flourescent light so I don't think lighting is a problem and I haven't had any problems with any other plants. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! |
#11
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rotting moneywort
There are several plants commonly called 'moneywort,' at least one of which
isn't a true aquatic. One used to grow in my backyard in New England. You might try identifying yours in a plant manual (or online at a vendor site) and posting it's latin name. The moneywort in my tank are Bacopa monnieri, if that changes anything you've said. Thanks for the info! Chris |
#12
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rotting moneywort
Dacaprice wrote in message m... There are several plants commonly called 'moneywort,' at least one of which isn't a true aquatic. One used to grow in my backyard in New England. You might try identifying yours in a plant manual (or online at a vendor site) and posting it's latin name. The moneywort in my tank are Bacopa monnieri, if that changes anything you've said. Thanks for the info! B. monnieri is a true aquatic, but it has an exceptionally fragile stem. I'd guess that you're crushing it when you're placing your cuttings. Sound right? Most aquatic plants which are propagated by cuttings will do best if each stem is planted individually, allowing for greater light penetration and water circulation. B. monnieri is an exception and looks best planted as a group. So, if you plant it as a group of, say, eight to twelve cuttings, they may help to support each other. But be GENTLE. kush |
#13
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rotting moneywort
I know what your referring to, I have the same problem, I don,t think its
rough handling,, The plant seems to establish itself, new growth, wether there planted in clumps or single stems,, Then after a while they go brown at the base and simply rot of, and float to the surface, where they grow, more roots, if you replant them in the gravel, the cycle begins again.. The fish in the tank are Angles and a few small Tetra's, and a small Bristle Nose.. Nothing that would attack the plant growth, bassett "Dunter Powries" fech.redcap@spedlin wrote in message ... Dacaprice wrote in message m... There are several plants commonly called 'moneywort,' at least one of which isn't a true aquatic. One used to grow in my backyard in New England. You might try identifying yours in a plant manual (or online at a vendor site) and posting it's latin name. The moneywort in my tank are Bacopa monnieri, if that changes anything you've said. Thanks for the info! B. monnieri is a true aquatic, but it has an exceptionally fragile stem. I'd guess that you're crushing it when you're placing your cuttings. Sound right? Most aquatic plants which are propagated by cuttings will do best if each stem is planted individually, allowing for greater light penetration and water circulation. B. monnieri is an exception and looks best planted as a group. So, if you plant it as a group of, say, eight to twelve cuttings, they may help to support each other. But be GENTLE. kush |
#14
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rotting moneywort
I know what your referring to, I have the same problem, I don,t think its
rough handling,, The plant seems to establish itself, new growth, wether there planted in clumps or single stems,, Then after a while they go brown at the base and simply rot of, and float to the surface, where they grow, more roots, if you replant them in the gravel, the cycle begins again.. The fish in the tank are Angles and a few small Tetra's, and a small Bristle Nose.. Nothing that would attack the plant growth, bassett "Dunter Powries" fech.redcap@spedlin wrote in message ... Dacaprice wrote in message m... There are several plants commonly called 'moneywort,' at least one of which isn't a true aquatic. One used to grow in my backyard in New England. You might try identifying yours in a plant manual (or online at a vendor site) and posting it's latin name. The moneywort in my tank are Bacopa monnieri, if that changes anything you've said. Thanks for the info! B. monnieri is a true aquatic, but it has an exceptionally fragile stem. I'd guess that you're crushing it when you're placing your cuttings. Sound right? Most aquatic plants which are propagated by cuttings will do best if each stem is planted individually, allowing for greater light penetration and water circulation. B. monnieri is an exception and looks best planted as a group. So, if you plant it as a group of, say, eight to twelve cuttings, they may help to support each other. But be GENTLE. kush |
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