Blanketweed The EVIL Weed
It is fair to say, that blanketweed is the scourge of the koi
pond.
Designed, constructed and maintained for their beauty, never
was a weed so out of place as in an ornamental pond - particularly
when stocked with koi. koi ponds have risen to become one of the koi
keeper's most common complaints.
The Evil Weed ... Blanket: "Heavy or dense covering". Weed: "A
herbaceous plant, not valued for use or beauty".
Blanketweed and Nishikigoi share two things in common: They both
have names that accurately describe their physical features. They
are rarely seen apart!
It is fair to say, that blanketweed is the scourge of the koi
pond. Designed, constructed and maintained for their beauty, never
was a weed so out of place as in an ornamental pond - particularly
when stocked with koi.
Where the presentation of living beauty is the prime objective,
anything that detracts from such a masterpiece is definitely a
misfit and blanketweed is the number 1 offender.
Nishikoi's "Goodbye Blanket weed"
Goodbye Blanket Weed
..
We don't resent blanket weed's grip on our ponds because it
poses a direct threat to the health of our koi, as in fact, it can
actually lead to improved water conditions. When there is a thin,
beardlike covering on areas of the pond, koi will browse and graze
on the soft, lush growth. However, koi find it less appealing when
the beard has grown into lengths of weed several feet in length
(hence its other names such as hair or thread algae). Blanketweed
will also provide an excellent nursery, both feeding and protecting
developing koi fry.

Blanc-Kit Excel is specially formulated to create a pond
environment resistant to blanket weed without the use of harsh
chemicals
Furthermore, blanketweed is beneficial to a pond in that it will
very actively take up minerals and nutrients from the pond water
(just like a vegetable filter), the only difference being that this
one is in the pond! So vigorous is the growth and uptake of
nutrients by blanketweed that should we find a way of confining it
to a vegetable filter, it would be our number one plant choice.
Unfortunately, like all other weeds, blanketweed does not know its
right place and freely enters any koi pond, doing so at its own
risk, as its presence is likely to be challenged.
Another redeeming feature is that blanketweed is a very effective
oxygenating plant. Its fine filament structure and submerged
position lend it to producing a ready supply of microscopic oxygen
bubbles. So intense may be its aerating effect that in strong
sunlight, rafts of blanketweed will rise up to the surface, buoyed
up by the mass of oxygen bubbles caught within its filaments.
So are we simply aesthetic snobs when it comes to disliking
blanketweed? Blanketweed can pose an indirect threat to koi health
through blockages in pipework or pump intakes caused by fragments of
blanketweed. This may merely reduce the pond turnover, or even lead
to blockages in a bottom drain. In extreme cases, I have known that
people have thought twice about going on holiday through fear of
what blanketweed may do to their pond in their absence.
Blanketweed - what is it?
Blanketweed is a collective term given to a number of very
similar algae that both look and behave identically. The most common
genera are Cladophora and Spirogyra. Cladophora means 'branched
plant' and when viewed under the microscope, it is possible to see
the regular-branding filaments, each of which is divided by cross
walls. Absorption of light and nutrients is very efficient in such
small structures and so growth can be incredibly rapid. They
reproduce both sexually (releasing gametes that unite and develop
into new plants), and asexually (releasing small motile spores or
simply smaller fragments that break off from the main body).
The 3 key factors that stimulate such rampant growth are:
Sunlight.
Ponds in full sunlight are most likely to be affected. Light is
required to fuel the process of photosynthesis, which allows these
algae to produce organic molecules for new tissue growth. Growth is
also particularly rampant in shallow areas where the water is
exposed to intense sunlight.
Nutrients.
Algae will readily absorb nitrates and phosphates to satisfy
their need for nitrogen and phosphorous as they grow. These are
readily available in tap water or indirectly through fish
metabolism. Wherever nutrients abound, so will this opportunistic
algae, being the first to capitalise on ideal growth conditions.
Warmth.
A high temperature will accelerate algae growth considerably and
blanketweed growth will be greatest in the shallower areas such as
cascades and waterfalls and along the pond perimeter.
Preventing Blanketweed from taking over
Blanketweed will find your pond. Many pond owners are fortunate
in that, blanketweed does not appear to proliferate in their ponds
(and they cannot explain why). However, the vast majority of us will
find that our ponds are very hospitable to blanketweed, forcing us
to look for ways of preventing it from causing problems.
The answer to controlling blanketweed lies in reducing one of
their 3 key requirements; sunlight, nutrients, and warmth. As we
want our ponds to be as warm as possible (to stimulate koi health
and growth), we must look at reducing sunlight and dissolved
nutrients.
- Sunlight. Sunlight penetration can be reduced in a number of
ways.
- Shading. Erecting shading on a pergola will reduce sunlight
straight away and reduce blanketweed photosynthesis. It can also
help against heron predation.
- Adding dyes. Several blanketweed and algae controls work by
adding dark vegetable dyes to the pond, filtering out the sun's
rays. This will give the water a tint, and will need to be
topped up when the natural dyes are broken down by the filter.
Compelling natural evidence that shading works is evident when a
pond suffers from green water. The microscopic single celled algae
that turn a pond into a 'pea soup' out compete and shade blanketweed
out of its valuable light. Blanketweed and green water have a
mutually exclusive relationship, where ponds tend to suffer from
either one or the other. Unfortunately, one of the side effects of
installing a UVc (which is a guaranteed method of clearing green
water), is that blanketweed will proliferate unhindered in the
crystal clear, nutrient rich pond water.
Nutrients. Several pond treatments are available that control
blanketweed growth by locking up or removing the vital nutrients
from the pond water, starving the growth of blanketweed. Upon adding
to the pond, they will bind up nitrates and phosphates. Other
additives will act indirectly, but achieve the same ends using
micro-organisms rather than chemicals.
Other methods of control.
Algicides.
While all other methods simply control algae growth, the addition
of algicides (chemicals that kill algae), work by interfering with
vital biological processes. These products are the only ones on the
market able to clearly state they kill algae - all others control or
reduce it.
Nishikoi's "Goodbye Blanket weed"
Goodbye Blanket Weed

Blanc-Kit Excel is specially formulated to create a pond
environment resistant to blanket weed without the use of harsh
chemicals
Barley Straw
Barley straw is a green method of controlling blanketweed and
green water. Upon its degradation, which can take several weeks, a
cocktail of humic acids are released which react to release hydrogen
peroxide, reducing algal growth. To speed this 'natural' process up,
barley straw extract is now available.
Electronic controllers.
This method is reported to work on most ponds that have a
suitable water chemistry by interfering with calcium ions. This
apparently upsets algae metabolism, reducing blanketweed growth.
Interesting facts about blanketweed:
- Under the most favourable conditions, particularly in strong
currents, blanket weed can grow over 2 metres a day.
- If treated correctly, blanketweed can be removed from a pond
and used as a substitute for moss in hanging baskets. It swells
and retains moisture, but must not be allowed to completely dry
out.
- In the Hokkaido district of Japan, each summer there is a
festival celebrating mythology about Cladophora balls, a form of
blanketweed growth in a local lake. The folk lore maintains that
a young man and a girl who both drowned in the lake had their
hearts turned into Cladophora balls - what a way to go!
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