Pond plants for water features
| Oxygenator Plants .. part of Peter J May's article OXYGENATORS .... THE ESSENTIAL INGREDIENT A pool or a pond in a natural wild state is a self-sustaining little world. As in our bigger world, the inhabitants need oxygen to survive. This can be provided by plants growing in that world. If you want to have a naturally balanced pool that requires the minimum of fuss and maintenance, without having to oxygenate the water mechanically, then plants that release oxygen into the water (i.e. oxygenators) are the essential ingredient. BIT OF BIOLOGY All plants, apart from parasitic ones, from single celled algae to Baobab trees, produce oxygen during a process called photosynthesis. This is a reaction in the leaves (if it has them) by the green chloroplasts of the plant cells, that uses sunlight or ultra violet light and carbon to create carbohydrates and sugars used as the building blocks of the plant. The carbon used is from carbon dioxide, which is taken from the immediate environment. One of the by-products given off in the process is the oxygen from bond of CO2. This two-way exchange of gases is called transpiration. The oxygen is lapped up by the
animal inhabitants great and small of that environment. But in a pool or pond,
it is just as gratefully received by the (aerobic) bacteria in the bottom of the
pond, or perhaps in your case a filtration system, to aid them in the process of
breaking down organic matter to its constituent chemical parts. It is important
to consider some of the compounds (like nitrates) produced by the bacterial
action, will be used by the plants in the pond environment to boost the growth
activated by the photosynthesis. And if there
In the latter circumstance, unless you want to give your fish a good feed,
keep them well apart. In certain Koi pools in the past I have found it
convenient to have a planting of oxygenators in the header pool to a stream,
which seemed very effective. They work like
Two plants that have made this a real speciality and thrive in streams are Water Crowfoot, the true Water Buttercup (Ranunculus aquatalis) and Curly Pond Weed (Potamageton crispus).
Water Milfoil, (Myriophyllum spicatum), loves limey pools with high pH and does well where Elodea crispa fails. You get the bonus of little flowers in some years that looks magical in certain lights.
Mares tail (Hippurus vulgaris), often sold as a marginal. This plant has been around since time began, so it is not without a trick or two up its stem!
|




