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Products Used Light - https://glassboxdiaries.com/ChihirosAii Heater - https://glassboxdiaries.com/tserieshe... Tap Water Conditioner - https://glassboxdiaries.com/tapwaterc... Background Window Film - https://glassboxdiaries.com/privacyfilm (Affiliate Links - I Get A Commission From Qualifying Purchases) Tank Setup Playlist - • Building A Filterless Walstad Method Betta... PLANT LIST 🌿 Red Root Floaters 🌿 Limnophila Sessiliflora 🌿 Rotala Blood Red 🌿 Echinodorus Aquartica 🌿 Bolbitis Heudelotii 🌿 Schismatoglottis Prietoi 🌿 Bucephalandra Red 🌿 Cryptocoryne Beckettii Petchii 🌿 Monte Carlo ⚠️ MY RECOMMENDED BLOG POSTS ⚠️ 📚 Recommended Reading Pinned To Home Page - https://glassboxdiaries.com/ 🛒 List Of Recommended Aquarium Accessories (Regularly Updated) - https://glassboxdiaries.com/aquarium-... 📖 Most Recent Blog Posts - https://glassboxdiaries.com/category/... 🐠ECOSYSTEM AQUARIUMS 🐡 🌱 Walstad Vs Father Fish: Which Builds A Better Planted Aquarium? - https://glassboxdiaries.com/walstad-v... 🐟 Self-Cleaning Aquariums Made Easy - https://glassboxdiaries.com/self-clea... 🌿 Cycle An Aquarium With Plants - https://glassboxdiaries.com/how-to-cy... 💩 Fish Poop Fertilizer Method - https://glassboxdiaries.com/fish-poop... 🚰 Debunking Aquarium Water Changes Myths - https://glassboxdiaries.com/aquarium-... ☘️ Best Plants For Natural Water Filtration - https://glassboxdiaries.com/best-plan... Filterless Walstad Betta Tank Setup (No CO2, No Liquid Fert, No Filter) - Month 2 Update! This is my low-tech, filterless Walstad method betta tank, a 30-litre (8-gallon) setup designed to be as natural and budget-friendly as possible. It runs without a filter, relying on a layer of topsoil capped with fine gravel to feed the plants, which in turn provide all the biological filtration. The tank is home to one of my wild-type bettas, a horned nerite snail, and a colony of snowball neocaridina shrimp. In this second-month update, I’ll show how the setup has matured, what challenges I’ve faced, and how the livestock has settled in. At the start of month two, water lettuce exploded with growth, fueled by the nutrients released from the soil layer. The roots quickly became massive and blocked most of the view, so I removed it and switched to red root floaters instead. The lettuce didn’t go to waste—I repurposed it in my 40-gallon community tank, where it’s been helping absorb nitrates and phosphates that were fueling algae growth. This month I also introduced about 14 snowball shrimp. Their bright white color contrasts beautifully with the dark substrate, and they immediately went to work grazing on algae. While cherry shrimp are more common, snowballs are actually Neocaridina palmata, a different species from the popular Neocaridina davidi, though closely related. They can’t interbreed, but they behave very similarly in aquariums. Within days, they helped bring algae under control while my Limnophila sessiliflora continued to grow so quickly it needed regular trimming. Maintenance so far has been very simple. I trim back stems, thin the floating plants, and make sure shrimp aren’t caught during the process. Limnophila in particular recovers fast from trimming, often needing another cut within weeks. Occasionally I’ll do a partial water change after trims to help remove algae particles, but for the most part, the plants and shrimp do the heavy lifting. Seeing regular molts in the tank has been a great sign that the shrimp are thriving in the water conditions. This was also the month I added the betta. I had originally planned on adding a Betta imbellis but ended up with a Betta mahachaiensis instead. On arrival he looked weak, but after settling in his colors became incredible. He has a spade tail, which some people confuse with “alien bettas,” but experts have confirmed wild mahachaiensis can have this trait naturally. He also seems to have a slight mouth deformity, but it hasn’t stopped him from eating. His swimming is sometimes unusual, with occasional clamped fins, though he leaves the shrimp and snail completely alone. To improve the aquascape, I added an Anubias petite to cover up a glue mark on the lava rock and planted Monte Carlo in the foreground. The Monte Carlo unfortunately melted, and a later attempt at Bacopa Compact White failed too, since the betta kept uprooting it. Still, the tank reached a milestone when the betta built his first bubble nest, showing he’s settling in. #aquarium #fishtank #bettafish TIMESTAMPS 00:00 - Intro 00:26 - Month 2 01:52 - Maintenance 03:11 - Adding A Betta 05:17 - Plants 08:02 - Adding A Rare Plant 09:06 - Algae Problems 11:54 - Today