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Re: [APD] on that nitrate..



At 10 ppm, you won't see much impact at all. In an established aquarium, you can probably get around 3-5 ppm without adding CO2 at all. While going up to 10 ppm might be a 100% or more increase, that's on a very small base. You might try runing two yeast fermentation bottles with one starting halfway through the other's cycle -- that could give you a more even output.
 
sh
 
* * * * * * * * * * * 
The Northeast Council of Aquarium Societies (NEC) celebrates its 50th year of service at its 31st annual convention, April 7-9, 2006 -- including *An Evening with Aquarium Legends*.
 
Read the speaker list, then download the registration form, and get set to join the fun at what promises to be the year's biggest tropical fish convention.
 
http://northeastcouncil.org/html/
 
And while you're there, attend the AGA's annual meeting Friday afternoon (2-4pm). This year's speaker is Claus Christensen, Tropica's Managing Director. 


----- Original Message ----
From: Eli Moss <mossy173 at gmail_com>
To: aquatic plants digest <aquatic-plants at actwin_com>
Sent: Thursday, March 9, 2006 10:51:08 PM
Subject: Re: [APD] on that nitrate..


oh, between 10 and 25 ppm usually

On 3/9/06, Jerry Baker <jerry at bakerweb_biz> wrote:
>
> You didn't say what level of CO2 you have in the tank.
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