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  2. Live rock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_rock

    Live rock is harvested for use in the aquarium from reefs, either from natural or human breakage. It may also be "seeded" from small coralline rocks by an aquaculturalist in warm ocean water, to be harvested later. Live rock can also be seeded by adding base rock to an active reef aquarium that already has live rock.

  3. Aquascaping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquascaping

    Aquascaping is the craft of arranging aquatic plants, as well as rocks, stones, cavework, or driftwood, in an aesthetically pleasing manner within an aquarium—in effect, gardening under water. Aquascape designs include a number of distinct styles, including the garden-like Dutch style and the Japanese-inspired nature style. [1]

  4. Airstone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airstone

    A spherical airstone at the Osaka Aquarium alongside a trio of red stingray pups, Hemitrygon akajei. An airstone, also called an aquarium bubbler, is a piece of aquarium furniture, traditionally a piece of limewood or porous stone, whose purpose is to gradually diffuse air into the tank, eliminating the noise and large bubbles of conventional air filtration systems, and providing other ...

  5. Noturus flavus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noturus_flavus

    Clutches are guarded by males under large, flat rocks in pools or crests of riffles. Rocks used as spawning cover averaged 200 square inches and were found in water depths averaging 34 inches. The eggs are amber-yellow and are very large, ranging between 3.5 and 4 mm in diameter, with the whole egg mass enveloped by a gelatinous material.

  6. Lucky stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucky_stone

    The J stones come from the right side of the fish and the L stones come from the left side of the freshwater drum. [1] Magnified view of freshwater drum otolith showing growth bands. University of Minnesota Biologist George R. Spangler gives a technical explanation of the "letters" which appear on the lucky stone.

  7. Live sand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_sand

    Live sand, a term used in aquarism, is natural reef coral sand populated with millions of beneficial bacteria and organisms which aid in the dissolving of organic wastes like ammonia, nitrites and nitrates produced by larger organisms in saltwater aquariums.

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