Here's the quote:
Complete soluble, stable source of supplemental trace metals and vitamins.
So they tell you it's a trace.........
Principally formulated for commercial aquaculture to enhance growth and color of large (macro) freshwater and saltwater plants and algae. This formula has been used in Florida Aqua Farmââ"šÂ¬Ã¢"žÂ¢s plant division for over 17 years. Primary nutrients, nitrate and phosphate, are not present in Plant Fuel .
That pretty much says what I said.
It lacks NO3/PO4.
Formulated for use in aquaria and ponds that have established populations of fish and/or invertebrates that are being fed. Metabolism of waste products and excess food normally provide suitable levels of nitrate and phosphate.
So if you do not have enough NO3 in your present bioload, then you need to add more.
Fish food does not have enough N or P in decent ratios, most are N heavy, P light.
The goal for this product is to reduce the NO3/PO4.
Whjat happens and folks have issues with is running their NO3/PO4 down to zero, that favors cyanos and microalgae, not plants and macro algae. The larger plants just sit there, stop growing or melt and produce gametes and end up being great substrates for the smaller epiphytes.
It's like mice and elephants, both eat plants, but one needs far less and can reproduce much faster, the other needs far more and reproduces slowly but grows much larger and faster relatively.
If you intend to grow only plants we suggest our full strength formula Plant Fuel Too. Both Plant Fuelââ"šÂ¬Ã¢"žÂ¢s are enriched with chelated iron, iodide and other essential aquatic trace metals and vitamins including B12, biotin thiamin and others.
Here they state the obvious again, if you have high plant density, you will need more nutrients.
But what they do not tell you...............you also will be limited as far as macro nutrients, N and P.
You add everything else except N and P and they will bottom out in the tank.
Some feel they can simply add more fish/fish food /critters etc.
Well, that works up to a point.
Youy over load any tank with fish waste and you will get algae no matter how you fertilize. This is due to higher levels of NH4, not NO3.
You can add both and see the result.
I can add 5ppm of NO3 and then see the response then try 0.5ppm of NH4 and bam!, microalgae everywhere.
There are many studies on the size of algae and the nutional needs and competition. The uptake rates for tiny algae are extreemely good at very very low nutrient levels while the larger macro algae need more concentration.
That's why tiny algae are found out in the low nutrients regions and the macros like kelps and seagrasses are found in nutrient rich areas close to shore.
We do not find many plants in Lake Tahoe (yet), but we find lots in the Sac River delta. We also high production in the rich waters off CA and very low production in nutrient poor regions such as central gyres of the ocean.
Regards,
Tom Barr