Aquarium
Plants
Aquarium plants are very important to aquarium as water is
to fish. It add more life to aquarium and make it to looks
beautiful while completing aquarium community structure. The
main object to bear in mind when planting is to form an
attractive background, leaving ample space in from where the
fishes can swim undisturbed and be seen. The tall, grassy type
is best planted at intervals in rows, while the feathery ones
look better when they are bunched into small clumps, which
makes them to appear like branching bushes.
When planting rooted plants, hold the tips of the bunch of
roots between the thumb and second finger and rest them on the
sand. Now with the first finger push the upper part of the
roots (where they join the stem) about 2cm into the sand.
Without moving this finger scrape with the thumb and second
finger some sand over any uncovered portion of the root.
When putting in rootless plants in bunches, the method
explained above is repeated, but this time the lower ends of
the stems are placed together and treated exactly as if they
were roots.
It is important that the water surface should be right up to
the lower edge of the top angle iron of the tank, so that
looking from the front the water surface can not be seen and
the viewer gets the impression that there is no water in the
aquarium. If the level is allowed to fall below the top angle
iron the tank looks like a container holding water.
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