WIO | Wood - Black Tree Trunk
WIO | Wood - Black Tree Trunk
A unique wood with a deep blackish-purple color tree-trunk shape with roots, providing contrast and impact to your design. Use this unique wood to create exquisite layouts with mysterious and captivating styles in your aquarium, paludarium, or terrarium.
Description
Black Tree Trunk Wood is a striking hardscape material with a deep blackish-purple color and a tree-trunk shape with roots, making it an excellent choice for creating contrast and impact in your aquatic or terrestrial habitat. This unique wood allows you to create exquisite layouts with mysterious and captivating styles, transforming your habitat into an engaging and intriguing environment.
Each piece of Black Tree Trunk Wood is unique and different in form and color, ensuring that your habitat remains one-of-a-kind. Note that this wood may release tannins during the initial setup, which can tint the water a brownish color. This effect can be minimized by soaking or boiling the wood before use or using activated carbon in your filtration system.
Black Tree Trunk Wood is available in sizes ranging from 15-40 cm, making it suitable for a wide range of habitat setups.
Key Points
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Deep blackish-purple color
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Tree-trunk shape with roots
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Provides contrast and impact to your design
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Ideal for creating exquisite layouts with mysterious and captivating styles
Characteristics
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Type: Natural wood
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Color: Blackish-purple
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Texture: Tree-trunk shape with roots
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Wood Size: 15-40 cm
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Water Tannins: Does release water tannins.
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Packaging: Sold by piece. Available in Small, Medium, and Large sizes.
Usage
- Rinse the wood with water before use to remove any dust or debris.
- Most woods are buoyant and need to be soaked for approximately one month to become waterlogged and sink. During the initial setup, use rocks, anchors, wood tight, or other methods to temporarily submerge the wood until it becomes fully waterlogged.
- Woods may release tannins during the initial setup, giving the water a cognac-like appearance, similar to natural rivers like the Amazon. Tannins are not harmful to aquarium inhabitants but can be controlled through frequent water changes.
- To minimize tannins during the initial phase, you can boil the wood for a few hours or submerge it in water for one month before adding it to your aquarium.
- Saprolegnia, a white fungus-like growth, may appear on the wood during the initial stage. If it occurs, scrape and suction it out with a small tube frequently. It should naturally disappear within a month after the initial setup.
- Woods may cause a decrease in the pH level of the water. It is recommended to maintain a minimum kH of 3 to create a buffer effect and regularly monitor the pH level.