awestruck
New member
I hope no one here becomes angry about this question because it is in reference to a freshwater planted tank. This is the best chemistry forum I know of so I thought maybe someone here could answer this.
A freshwater planted tank seems to flourish if the nitrate
hosphate ratio is about 10:1 (at least this is what I've been told by several people). By flourish I mean that the plants are growing nicely and are not getting any algae on them.
Because I have a higher light output I am dosing carbon daily. The photoperiod is only 7-8 hours which is recommended for FW planted tanks. And, there is a slow flow which creates a gentle flowing of the plants, but not enough surface turbulence to drive down the co2.
Ok, so back to the NO4
O4 ratio. Can anyone even hazard a guess as to why this seems to be the range that encourages healthy plant growth yet discourages algae growth?
A freshwater planted tank seems to flourish if the nitrate

Because I have a higher light output I am dosing carbon daily. The photoperiod is only 7-8 hours which is recommended for FW planted tanks. And, there is a slow flow which creates a gentle flowing of the plants, but not enough surface turbulence to drive down the co2.
Ok, so back to the NO4
