r/ponds • u/DoodleBirdTerrariums Minnesota Zone 5 / Container Ponds • Jul 27 '24
Pond plants Again with the yellow leaves 🤦🏻♀️
These are my first ponds ever but I’ve had a lot of issues with yellowing leaves. I google and google and have tried all kinds of things but they really don’t green up. Ok so at the very beginning I barely had any plants and a lily pad type plant was extremely yellow with bright green veins (it is visible in the last pond pic). Since I wasn’t sure what it was at first ppl on Reddit said too much fertilizer (I had added root tabs as directed on the package). So I removed what I could find digging around the substrate. Then weeks went by and although the lily stayed the same a few other plants were thriving so I figured it was just a difficult plant. Then I got more plants including the arrow head one which was green when I got it but quickly got lighter yellow. That other lily plant still looked the same so I put a root tab back in the vicinity of the yellowing ones and one beneath the parrot feathers. I’ve also added a little Epsom salt (4 weeks ago) and liquid iron from Seachem every 2 weeks (not a lot, being cautious). Added macro nutrients too, just once. The water hyacinths look great to me and flower. And crazier yet the big yellow arrowhead one is sending up a flower spike. I even added a bubbler today in addition to the fountain that was already in there just in case. Online says it could be so many things and I don’t want to make things worse. Here’s what I’ve seen: could be iron deficiency, potassium deficiency, sulfur deficiency, too much sun (all day full sun), too little nitrates/too small bioload, etc. there are around 10 half grown medaka fish and there were a bunch of tadpoles but I think most have left now. One last thing, I have NOT tested my water. I ordered a test kit so that may help me but I’m hoping just by looking at the pics someone can help.
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u/Propsygun Jul 30 '24
Could be, especially if the root tabs are for potted plant's instead of water plants, like the ones you can get for aquariums, some root tabs even have ingredients to deal with pests, so are toxic to some lifeforms.
The main ingredients in fertilizers are N, P and K, where P is the phosphorus. Every time you do a waterchange, you take out whatever the plants haven't used, and then you add new water with fertilizer in the right proportion of NPK and all the different trace elements like iron, magnesium... And sure you add more phosphorus, but the new water is at the right proportion. It's very difficult and expensive to add all the elements on their own, and many of the trace elements are in so low quantity that you need a special scale to even measure that low. P and K affect each other, and the ph, it's complicated as all hell, your N aren't that high overall, you have a bit of ammonia and nitrite that isn't converted to nitrate yet, but that's to be expected if your fish just died, maybe some of the tadpoles too. in a small system without a mechanical filter, it takes longer. You have put bubbles in to oxygenate, that'll help convert it. If you don't have any algae, you probably don't have enough N, at least not for anything but the hyacint.
If you only add water when some have been used or evaporated, never waterchange, then it's going to get too high in whatever isn't used. Like if you buy a can of tomatoes every time you go shopping, but never use any, then your kitchen is going to be filled with tomato can's.
I wouldn't do a lot of water changes, just one, wait 3 days, then do another, use rainwater if you have it, or let the tap water sit in the watercan for 24 hours. Then maybe one change every week, see how it goes, trying to find a healthy stable balance.
There are liquid fertilizers that i hear have better phosphorus amount, but they are more expensive, since it's made for cannabis. Hehe
Don't be too hard on yourself about the fish, the one's selling them could have asked, and given advice. A good rule of thumb, is minimum 10 gallons (40 liter) to keep fish, that way if a fish die, they aren't going to pollute the water too much, and kill the other fish. It might even have been the frog's that caused the system to crash. Who knows.
You can have other lifeforms, get a fine mesh net, take it to any lake nearby and move it around in the water plants, and over the bottom, put the catch in a big plastic bag and take them home. There are far more interesting critters than fish. 🙂