^ im an inbetweener... no matter what fish i keep, i try and keep it nicely aquascaped with a few plants at least...
Ludwigia, Rotala, Alternathera (I currently enjoy huge success with Alternathera reineckii 'rosaefolia' as a background bushy plant), Hygrophila corymbosa, Amazon swords and Echinodorus after three or so months develop sturdy roots and are practically impossible to uproot by moderate digging.I am trying to do the reverse of what you plan to do, to convert my cichlid rockscape tank to planted cichlid tank. I am inquiring what plants can survive in my cichlid tank, not what cichlid can co exist with plants.
I have kept fish, mostly cichlid, for decades, but when it comes to plants, I am novice. So I can offer my knowledge about cichlid, and you can tell me about plants.
Here are my questions: What plants are tough enough to withstand abuse by cichlid, and besides anubias, fern and moss, what else can be grown without substrate.
I feel the same way. I came into the hobby inspired by Takashi Amano and his nature aquarium masterpieces but I've found that extreme high tech tanks and vigorous scaping / trimming to be exhausting. I am more of a biotope fan but let's face it, a very realistic biotope would be an empty place of rocks, logs, roots and leaf litter. My style is medium tech "enhanced" biotope: aesthetically pleasing hardscape with dense patches of plants.^ im an inbetweener... no matter what fish i keep, i try and keep it nicely aquascaped with a few plants at least...
Well, my control freak days are over, once I decided that schools of cardinals and Amano shrimp just don't cut it for me. But most monster fish are just brutal! I really like Oscars for example, but there is no way I can keep plants with an Oscar, unless they are made of wire-reinforced plastic!I've been working around this somewhat in that (in my planted, scaped, co2 injected tanks) I'm allowing my diggers to excavate what they want, and then building around that.
It's not entirely in line with what the OP is looking for (he wants to be in control, as is common in high tech planted tanks) but it's a compromise I'm working with so far that lets me both keep the fish I like and do the planted aquascape business together.
Learn to use the damn spacebar. Bichirs are not super plant friendly since they can unintentionally knock about plantsFish that are interesting and get along with plants:eclipse catfish,Raphael catfish,African pike,African butterfly fish,bichir,walleye,European eel,most knifefish