Lotus plant

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Getting some real good growth of my lotus plant. Last couple of days a different looking stem as shot up through the middle
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Am i right in thinking these stem will grow to the surface?
 
It will probably be at the surface by tomorrow.
I usually pinch these surface runners off or your surface could easily be completely covered within days. It also encourages the slower growing leaves to bush out
 
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It will turn into a massive pad (leaf) on the surface. Trimming these will prevent it from flowering but you can't usually see the flowers in an aquarium and they produce hundreds of seeds. No harm in letting it go up to see what happens, when you have had enough just pinch the runners off at the base. In may places it is regarded as an invasive species. Mine grew upwards but the regular leaves never got to the surface.

I have read (a long time ago) that the plants emit a poison to kill off competing plants nearby. I can't confirm it - as the only plants I had close to mine were vals and they were unaffected. Mine still hasn't really started growing even though it looks perfectly healthy. I should check if they are ok in soft water but I do know that they have periods of dormancy - so for now I will wait and see what ahppens.
 
Some info here. Just spotted the requirement for iron - they won't be getting any in my tank with the RO - maybe worth a try.
 
Some info here. Just spotted the requirement for iron - they won't be getting any in my tank with the RO - maybe worth a try.
Thanks for that info Sean :good: My tanks got two tiers and the lotus is on its own on the bottom tier the other end from some crypts so hopefully wont effect my other plants. Ill see how it goes

I quite like the idea of the leafs padding out on thr surface and creating some cover
 
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Some info here. Just spotted the requirement for iron - they won't be getting any in my tank with the RO - maybe worth a try.

This linked info is a bit misleading as it refers to the red cultivar and Russ has the green cultivar going from the photo. You do not want to be adding iron without bright light and CO2 as it will cause an imbalance and an excess of iron can be disastrous to plants [I made this mistake and killed my floating Ceratopteris while not benefiting the lotus plants]. This is my profile of this plant writen a few years back:

Nymphaea lotus

Family: Nymphaeaceae

Common Names: Tiger Lotus, Red Tiger Lotus, Green Tiger Lotus

Origin and Habitat: Tropical regions of Africa and Madagascar [see additional comments under Description]. The red and green cultivars are natural; the red cultivar is found in shallow, standing water such as temporary pools and small permanent lakes. The green cultivar has been found in flowing waters.

Position in aquarium:

The roots must be in the substrate, and leaves will form submersed and floating. Floating leaves can eventually be suppressed by continually removing the larger leaves. Flowers, which are very rare in aquaria, will only form after the plant has developed many floating leaves; flowers open only during the night. This plant greatly benefits from substrate fertilizer tabs.

Lighting requirements: Moderate to bright. The red variety requires slightly brighter light than the green cultivar.

Growth rate: Moderate

Minimum Tank Suggestion: 25 gallon. Best in tanks no less than 16-18 inches in depth.

Water parameters: Suitable for soft or hard water, it prefers soft, slightly acidic water. Optimum temperature 22-28C/71-82F.

Description

The tiger lotus has a green-leaf and a red-leaf form, known as the Green cultivar and Red cultivar respectively, and these are naturally occurring. Some sources give Nymphaea zenkeri as the name for the Green "species" but this is inaccurate.

Both the red and green cultivars have the same requirements in the aquarium, though the red will have brighter coloured leaves in stronger light.

This species grows well in a plain sand or fine gravel substrate. With an enriched substrate, the plant will produce more leaves and have stronger growth. Flowering may occur with good nutrition and brighter light, provided the floating leaves are allowed to form. These can easily cover the surface, shading the lower plants. The flowers only open at night (during darkness).

The Nymphaeaceae is a family of freshwater aquatic flowering plants commonly called "Water Lilies" and found in tropical and temperate regions throughout the world. There are eight genera with some 70 species; all are rooted in the substrate with leaves and flowers that float on the surface. The family was described by the British botanist Richard Anthony Salisbury (1761-1829). The name comes from the Greek for a "nymph" who was a goddess associated with waterfalls and springs. In spite of the common name, this family is not closely related to the true lilies, Liliaceae; the common name "lily" is applied to many variable plants.

The genus Nymphaea was established by Carl Linnaeus (1707-1758), the Swedish botanist, physician and zoologist whose monumental classification of all living organisms led directly to the binomial nomenclature system used today. There are about 50 species in the genus which is closely related to the Nuphar, another genus with aquarium species. Both are commonly referred to as "lotus" and in both the leaf is deeply notched at the base. The Nymphaea have a tuberous rhizome, though it is often absent in aquarium plants.

Nymphaea lotus was described in 1753 by Linnaeus. The species epithet is a Greek plant name. This species is widespread in tropical Africa and Madagascar, and was introduced to Europe. It is also now found wild in parts of North, Central and South America. Some sources also consider it native to SE Asia, but this is actually a distinct genus [Kasselmann, 2003]. This is a polymorphic species, meaning that there are external differences between some of the various geographical populations; further study may or may not determine distinct species.

References:

Kasselmann, Christel (2003), Aquarium Plants, English translation, Krieger Publishing company.
 
I don't seem to have particularly good photos of the Red Tiger Lotus, I had three plants (one original, and two developed from the tuber and grew full size) in my former 90g. Here's about the best photo. I wanted the floating leaves so encouraged those by not removing them. You can see all the stems leading up from the three plants along the rear wall.
 

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Thanks Byron, thats how i would like mine to grow. Seems to be going that way so far. not adding nothing (iron etc). Just got some root tabs in substrate and i dose small amounts of liquid fert once a week for plant feed.
 
I don't seem to have particularly good photos of the Red Tiger Lotus, I had three plants (one original, and two developed from the tuber and grew full size) in my former 90g. Here's about the best photo. I wanted the floating leaves so encouraged those by not removing them. You can see all the stems leading up from the three plants along the rear wall.
Hi Byron,

My lotus is still sending leaf pads to the surface, i have 5 now with 2 more on the way. Also my lower leaves are moving up towards the surface at a much slower growing rate. I gather the lower leaves will reach the surface at some point.

If i trimmed some of the bottom leaves off at the base of the stems, would they grow back like before. I like the look of both lower and floating leaves if that makes sense
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It will bush out more of you pinch off the stems of the floating pads. Leave 1 or 2 and clip the rest. Keep doing this and you will get more lower leaves and less pads.
 
Agree, but be careful. I have never done this, I just let my Red Lotus plants do what they want, but then I was more interested in floating leaves as I had crypts, moss and such on the substrate.

Plants use their energy to grow (leaves, flowers) and because the light is brighter at the surface plants like this one will naturally put most (if not all) their energy into surface leaves as it is for the plant the most beneficial. All the botanists I have read mention that removing the floating leaves will encourage the plant to only send out lower leaves, which seems paradoxical perhaps, but I suppose the plant "thinks" the removal of floating leaves is somehow harming it so lower leaves are encourageed.
 
Wow! That thing is sure on fast grower! @Byron and @seangee have this covered, I just am here to see where this thing goes! :)
 
lotus naturally send their leaves to the surface, they are similar to water lilies in that respect.

cutting the leaves off regularly stresses the plant and can lead to infections caused the plant to rot.
 

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