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Old 04-06-2004, 09:05 PM
Philippe Lemaire \(remove oldies\)
 
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Default Crimpled E. Stellata

This time even the lower level tops got crimpled...

What can it be ?

Too little K (finally lowering at 35 mg/l) ?
Too much NO3 (about 30 mg/l) ?

Regards,

Philippe


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Old 09-06-2004, 03:22 PM
Giancarlo Podio
 
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Default Crimpled E. Stellata

Have you excluded the possibility that the plant is simply branching
out? E. Stellata has an odd way of branching out, the main central
stem stops growing, shrivels up a bit to form a "knot" so to speak,
then 4-5 new shoots grow from this "knot". Just a possibility....
Can't say I've noticed this occur in older/lower leaves though, they
usually just suffer a little from being shaded by the tops. Not sure
about the K and N levels, can't say I ever noticed any problems when
playing with higher levels myself.

Let us know what happens
Giancarlo Podio

"Philippe Lemaire \(remove oldies\)" wrote in message ...
This time even the lower level tops got crimpled...

What can it be ?

Too little K (finally lowering at 35 mg/l) ?
Too much NO3 (about 30 mg/l) ?

Regards,

Philippe

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Old 09-06-2004, 08:16 PM
Philippe Lemaire \(remove oldies\)
 
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Default Crimpled E. Stellata

Should I have said crimped ?
Or did my ISP loose the answers ?

Philippe


"Philippe Lemaire (remove oldies)" wrote in message
...
This time even the lower level tops got crimpled...

What can it be ?

Too little K (finally lowering at 35 mg/l) ?
Too much NO3 (about 30 mg/l) ?

Regards,

Philippe




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Old 10-06-2004, 12:12 AM
 
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Default Crimpled E. Stellata

"Philippe Lemaire \(remove oldies\)" wrote in message ...
This time even the lower level tops got crimpled...

What can it be ?

Too little K (finally lowering at 35 mg/l) ?
Too much NO3 (about 30 mg/l) ?

Regards,

Philippe



No, it's not too little K.
Some tanks have had high NO3 as well.
Consistency maybe part of the problem. Good CO2, NO3, K, PO4, GH,
traces will help most all plants grow well. IME, Eustralis loves NO3.
I would make sure to question the test kit. Do large water changes
andf dose KNO3. Find out what the NO3 level is in you tap, consider
the amount N coming in from you fish load also.
If it does not add up to the test kit numbers, you have a problem.

I think NO3 going too low causes issues for many people, especially at
higher light. Same for CO2.

Regards,
Tom Barr
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