Below: All natural tank with no filter or heater stocked with a paradise fish couple, only runs 40watts power. This photo is from the first week, in a month the tank will be filled like a jungle with 6 different species of plant life and paradise fish baby's. This is at our home office and we plan on adding a polypterus dragon fish to eat the fry and keep the babies from mucking up the tank while keeping the parents to scared to defend them even thou he's a peaceful fish who just likes babies. Besides we already have 40 paradise baby's thriving in our home co2 tank.
PAPA'S BUBBLE NEST
Below: CO2 TANK FOR GROWING PLANTS FAST!! for harvest not for show. No filter with Crystal clear water (we need a better camera to capture it, its like hi definition tv honestly.) It's occupied with 2 paradise fish who recently had allot of babies! and 4 swords which also just had babies. Both of these species can handle the ph level of 7.8, this is important because the co2 raises the ph in the tank, we also added salt to help make the water more natural for the fish. We use boiled sugar water and yeast in five half filled distilled bottles behind the tank to create the co2 which is transferred into the tank via air tubes. The fishes are needed to poop and feed the plants creating a natural recycling process within the tank. . .
You put food into the tank to feed the fish, the fish poop dirtying up the water, bacteria eats (cleans) all the poop and makes plant food within the water, the plants feast on the co2 and bacterias, nitrates, and heavy sunlight cycling the fishes water in the process creating healthy crystal clear H2O for the fish, then the process starts over the next morning at feeding time. . . .
You put food into the tank to feed the fish, the fish poop dirtying up the water, bacteria eats (cleans) all the poop and makes plant food within the water, the plants feast on the co2 and bacterias, nitrates, and heavy sunlight cycling the fishes water in the process creating healthy crystal clear H2O for the fish, then the process starts over the next morning at feeding time. . . .