Discussion:
Aeration plants
(too old to reply)
Steve
2006-04-03 06:47:57 UTC
Permalink
Hi,
Last summer (here in the UK), I built a pond and put in some fish and some
aeration plants. They were strands of green plants about 9 inches in
length. They used to just float on top of the water, but over the winter
they have sunk and somehow multiplied into what can only be described as a
cloud of green candy floss! The frogs seem to like it though as they've
laid quite a bit of frogspawn (and the fish don't seem too bothered (not
that I've seen them most of winter (I assume this is giving them somewhere
safe to hide from cats etc.)))

Is this cloud of green candy floss safe for the fish? If I get rid of some
of it, will it impact the fish and/or frogspawn? Also, we're a bit
concerned that our garden will be swamped (excuse the pun!) with frogs when
they hatch. We don't mind a few frogs, but we don't want millions of 'em!
Is it safe to leave the frog-spawn or get rid of some of it?

Thanks in advance,

Steve
d***@wi.rr.xx.com
2006-04-03 13:22:57 UTC
Permalink
that is hair algae, not aeration plants and right now it is also removing wastes from
the pond. I wouldnt remove it until the other plants and filters get going. frog
eggs and tads are good food for fish. or, you might want to drag some of the algae
and eggs out. Ingrid
Post by Steve
Hi,
Last summer (here in the UK), I built a pond and put in some fish and some
aeration plants. They were strands of green plants about 9 inches in
length. They used to just float on top of the water, but over the winter
they have sunk and somehow multiplied into what can only be described as a
cloud of green candy floss! The frogs seem to like it though as they've
laid quite a bit of frogspawn (and the fish don't seem too bothered (not
that I've seen them most of winter (I assume this is giving them somewhere
safe to hide from cats etc.)))
Is this cloud of green candy floss safe for the fish? If I get rid of some
of it, will it impact the fish and/or frogspawn? Also, we're a bit
concerned that our garden will be swamped (excuse the pun!) with frogs when
they hatch. We don't mind a few frogs, but we don't want millions of 'em!
Is it safe to leave the frog-spawn or get rid of some of it?
Thanks in advance,
Steve
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Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan
w***@yahoo.co.uk
2006-04-05 19:22:25 UTC
Permalink
Please be aware that only 2% of the frogs will survive to breed. They are
also very useful against slugs and snails, especially if you put little
piles of wood around the garden for them to hide in.
<dr-***@wi.rr.xx.com> wrote in message news:***@news-server.wi.rr.com...
| that is hair algae, not aeration plants and right now it is also removing
wastes from
| the pond. I wouldnt remove it until the other plants and filters get
going. frog
| eggs and tads are good food for fish. or, you might want to drag some of
the algae
| and eggs out. Ingrid
|
| "Steve" <***@guest.com> wrote:
|
| >Hi,
| >Last summer (here in the UK), I built a pond and put in some fish and
some
| >aeration plants. They were strands of green plants about 9 inches in
| >length. They used to just float on top of the water, but over the winter
| >they have sunk and somehow multiplied into what can only be described as
a
| >cloud of green candy floss! The frogs seem to like it though as they've
| >laid quite a bit of frogspawn (and the fish don't seem too bothered (not
| >that I've seen them most of winter (I assume this is giving them
somewhere
| >safe to hide from cats etc.)))
| >
| >Is this cloud of green candy floss safe for the fish? If I get rid of
some
| >of it, will it impact the fish and/or frogspawn? Also, we're a bit
| >concerned that our garden will be swamped (excuse the pun!) with frogs
when
| >they hatch. We don't mind a few frogs, but we don't want millions of
'em!
| >Is it safe to leave the frog-spawn or get rid of some of it?
| >
| >Thanks in advance,
| >
| >Steve
| >
|
|
|
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at
| http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/
| sign up:
http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?hl=en&q=puregold&qt_s=Group+lookup
| www.drsolo.com
| Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold
website.
| I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site.
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan
Steve
2006-04-07 17:46:51 UTC
Permalink
Many thanks everyone! Much appreciated.
Post by Steve
Hi,
Last summer (here in the UK), I built a pond and put in some fish and some
aeration plants. They were strands of green plants about 9 inches in
length. They used to just float on top of the water, but over the winter
they have sunk and somehow multiplied into what can only be described as a
cloud of green candy floss! The frogs seem to like it though as they've
laid quite a bit of frogspawn (and the fish don't seem too bothered (not
that I've seen them most of winter (I assume this is giving them somewhere
safe to hide from cats etc.)))
Is this cloud of green candy floss safe for the fish? If I get rid of some
of it, will it impact the fish and/or frogspawn? Also, we're a bit
concerned that our garden will be swamped (excuse the pun!) with frogs when
they hatch. We don't mind a few frogs, but we don't want millions of 'em!
Is it safe to leave the frog-spawn or get rid of some of it?
Thanks in advance,
Steve
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