








I have to graciously and humbly disagree a little tiny bit - Many Cichlids, Oscars among them, do not tolerate live plants in aquariums. Some of us leave lights on for predetermined, longer periods of time daily to promote algae growth to help with nitrate. I grow it on rocks and the back wall of the tank. I'm not saying that it's necessary, but a cool tool to help with nitrate.DanRad wrote:The lighting in most fish-only freshwater tanks is purely for your viewing pleasure. Oscars and most other big cichlids are just as happy in dim light. They tend to get jumpy if the lights come on while it's dark, so I have mine set on timers so that they come on in the afteroon before it gets dark, so that I can watch them at home without freaking them out by going from dark to light. Essentially, it's up to you...



The last line from my post is . . . . .DanRad wrote:No disagreement -- I do much the same. Necessary though? Hmmm
I'm not saying that it's necessary, but a cool tool to help with nitrate.







.There's the thought that sudden lightening or darkening of an aquarium frightens aquarium fish, increases stress, and shortens lifespans, especially high-strung types like Dempseys and species that respond more acutely to stress like Oscars. I agree. I read about it first in a book by Dick Mills, seemed to make a lot of sense. I always turn on the lights in the room, wait a few minutes, then turn on the aquarium lights. Then at night, I shut down the tank's lights 5 or 10 minutes before turning off the room lights.altaaffe wrote:It just builds the light bit by bit for them, less light coming on at once.







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