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[Aroid-l] Re: An Opinion on CO2 Injection
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From: "Ken Mosher" ken at spatulacity.com> on 2004.12.30 at 19:45:57(12518)
Ted,
I love getting emails from people who can actually think critically. I wish
I had information to give you, but all I can say is that I applaud your
experiments. I wonder if burning the candle was a good way
to increase co2? The byproduct of burning candle wax would be co2, water
and a bunch of other stuff like sulphur compounds, etc. I wonder if any of those
other chemicals released into your enclosed environment were detrimental to your
plants...
If my Dad weren't retired from Pfizer I'd ask him to bring home chunks of
dry ice for me, surely the best way to introduce pure co2 into a small volume -
of course I couldn't do the calculations to determine just how much I'd be
adding!
-Ken Mosher
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----- Original Message -----
From:
Ted.Held@hstna.com
To: Discussion of aroids
Sent: Thursday, December 30, 2004 9:20
AM
Subject: [Aroid-l] An Opinion on CO2
Injection
This is in reply to the recent
suggestion of CO2 injection to boost aroid growth. This technique has been
touted by some in the aquarium plant hobby as the perfect remedy for weak
plants. There is an impulse here from the manufacturers of these systems,
which are fairly expensive, and the hobby literature contains many anecdotes
endorsing the idea. I have never installed one in my setup, so I cannot attest
to the efficacy of such equipment. But since I do specialize in aquatic plants, I have been interested in
these reports. The problem I have is that CO2 is not actually very soluble in
water. A few parts per million is a lot for water at the typical pH 5 to 8
that is recommended for water plants. The lower the pH, the less soluble CO2
will be. At pH 5, the solubility of CO2 will be essentially nil. What happens,
therefore, is that the excess gas "spills" to the atmosphere as bubbles. There
are those in the hobby that interpret the Pepsi Cola-like effervescence and
numerous attached subsurface bubbles as the huge amount of oxygen generated by
all the enhanced photosynthesis taking place. This is humbug. The bubbles are
just wasted CO2. Since I grow many
of my water plants "emersed" (i.e. the roots are submerged, but the leaves
extend up into the air), I thought I could test this elevated CO2 idea by
pumping the airspace above the plants with CO2. It turns out that this is a
much more effective way of applying CO2 than in the dissolved form since one
can basically create a 5% CO2 concentration in the atmosphere and the amount
of exposure there is many times higher than what can be forced with dissolved
CO2. My technique was to simply burn a candle in the closed space above the
water. When the oxygen concentration goes from the normal 20% to 15% because
of combustion, the candle is extinguished. I found that my oxygen level
returned to approximately normal after 24 hours, at which point the candle
would be lit anew. The short version of the story is that I observed no
increase in plant growth or flowering in the 10 weeks that this regimen was in
place. In fact, I e nded the experiment when several of the plants exhibited
evidence of reduced growth. I concluded that the effect of increased CO2 is
not nearly so giddy as the injection people have maintained.
One possible explanation for the results
reported by partisans of injection is that water (and air, for emersed plants)
circulation is a definite help in the growth of water plants (as, for example,
Cryptocoryne, an aroid genus of the Asian tropics). Perhaps the addition of
injection resulted in better circulation where a particular grower previously
had none. On the other hand, maybe the exuberant reports are simply hype.
Maybe I will be attacked here for suggesting this dangerous, contrary
opinion. My larger point is to
enquire to this list about any scientific studies on the effect of elevated
CO2 (as in a greenhouse) on the growth of aroids. I am pretty sure that such
studies have taken place for various food crops (tomatoes) and the effect has
been investigated recently in connection with the Global Warming business. My
understanding is that some plants will grow more rapidly with extra CO2 while
others will not benefit. Does anyone know of any studies, one way or another,
with CO2 and aroids?
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