Post
by Sue Tegland » Sat Nov 29, 2008 3:11 am
i have gone through many plants since setting up my tank 14 months ago, due to the loaches stripping, punching, pulling, and just plain eating them.
Water wisteria went in a few days, like three days, I remember. The java fern I have tied to driftwood: the loaches went after the young growth first. Whatever sprouts its tender and they have figured that out. My loaches range from 2" to 4 1/2". Anyway, with the java fern, I tied more leaves onto the wood, and these have sprouted their own plants. Hopefully the new plant growth there and other places will keep up with or surpass their appetite.
Anubias: also tied to the driftwood near the top (I wanted height in my 35 hex) and it's going great guns, has for about 8 months, despite the loaches and any other fish chewing on its roots. it's looking pretty lush, with the occasional rip and hole from guess who.
eleocharis (hair grass): will get chewed and uprooted, but is still alive. I have folded weights on them so if they get uprooted they won't go far.
crinum:( have the wavy kind-starts with c): they have uprooted, which doesn't seem to hurt it, so how I have larger rocks over the roots and it's stayed in place more than a month. They generally leave it alone as far as eating as it's a member of the onion family and doesn't taste too good.
That's my experience. Would love to get more plants in; maybe the straight crinum would work. Hope yours works out well.
I read somewhere that the loaches tend to attack anything directly in front of their 'door' to clear the way for them to see. my answer to this dynamic is to not plant in that area, and recently, I made their 'hole' area larger by leaning the driftwood over the original so they feel more secure in their hole, and they now seem to chew at the plants less.
my hope is that the loaches are laughing