October 01, 2024 2 min read
Above: Rotala 'Singapore' or Rotala 'SG' under different conditions.
A: Rising nitrate levels turn the newest shoots green/ yellow.
B: Medium nitrate levels- slight orange/ green new shoots.
C: Steep sustained nitrate limitation turn leaves dark red.
Similar to other members of the Rotala family ('colorata', H'ra', 'Ceylon' etc.), follow these steps for richer reds:
Above: side view of Rotala SG (left-most bush). The same plant in the same tank exhibits different coloration as the tank matures (even when fertilisation- APT3 in this case-is kept constant).
In a newly planted tank, new tips are often orange/green as the plant is shorter (it receives less light) and nitrates are higher (lower overall plant mass).
As the tank matures and plant mass increases, nitrate levels drop naturally (from increased plant absorption) and in 'Summer' the plant is often deep red.
What NO3 measurement should I aim for?
So low nitrates is always good?
Nitrogen is actually a key growth factor for plants, in the same way that we need, say, proteins or carbohydrates. So less is not always beneficial, and the form it takes its important. For species that show better coloration with nitrate limitation, an easy path to success is APT 1 + APT Jazz.
Above: A lovely aquascape courtesy of a user. Rotala H'ra shows green tips when transiting to APT3 from a leaner fertilisation regime. This means nitrate levels are rising.
While this is temporary (plants will adapt to improved nutrition and residual nitrate levels will drop naturally as plant mass increases), we can also do the following:
How to transit to APT?