The leaves were transparent and looked like slime my gravel vac pulled them off, there is new shoots coming up middle of them.Leave them be until you see new growth.
The leaves were transparent and looked like slime my gravel vac pulled them off, there is new shoots coming up middle of them.
So for future reference leave alone unless they have new growth? The ones that were melting were the cryotocoryne Wendtii red And a bit of the parva I didn't touch.
Nope they are doing great as far as i can tell I see no transparent leaves on them and they have grown an inch I'll take some picsPeople always say crypts melt when moved, obviously this happened to you, for whatever reason I don't find they melt at all, nonetheless that is normal for crypts. Is your ludwigia melting at all?
Plants growing https://imgur.com/gallery/jUvvM
Ohno I got them from aquarium plants site where they are true aquaticLooks good, I only asked about the ludwigia because it looks like emmersed growth that's all.
Ohno I got them from aquarium plants site where they are true aquatic
I'm New to this so I called them to ask, if you get a pot of crypts it's 3.49 but if you get the aquatic crypts they are 5.49, even I asked the difference the pot isn't submerged where as the other ones were, yeah they could just say they are as were not there to see, but so far so good on the L. Repens, not so good on the Wendtii.I don’t think Z doubts that they are truly aquatic, rather, the question is whether they were grown emersed (above the water line) at the plant site. That seems to be a common practice since light and CO2 will not be limiting factors. When I ordered Pogostemon erectus, it melted about 90% before decent aquatic stems appeared.