Rescue Pathway · Plants Melting
Why Are My Aquarium Plants Melting?
Watching plant leaves turn translucent and dissolve is discouraging — but it’s often recoverable, and sometimes completely normal. Here’s how to tell the difference and save your plants.
Don’t rip everything out yet. New plants often “melt” as they adapt, then regrow. Trim the worst, keep your water stable, and give them time. Here’s the calm plan.
Step by step
Your Calm Rescue Plan
Work through these in order. The goal is to stabilise the tank, not to flood it with products.
Recently added plants often melt and then regrow from the roots. That is normal.
Remove fully melted or mushy leaves so they don’t foul the water.
Too little stunts plants; too much fuels algae. Aim for a consistent 6–8 hours on a timer.
Many plants need a basic fertiliser; demanding plants need CO2. Match plants to your setup.
Big swings in temperature or pH stress plants. Steady is better.
Healthy roots usually push out new, adapted growth within a few weeks.
Diagnose
What To Check First
Get to the root
Common Causes & Fixes
- New-tank transition melt
Plants adapting to your water and growing submersed leaves.
Fix: trim, wait, and keep things stable. This is normal. - Too little light
Leaves thin out and decay.
Fix: increase duration or quality modestly. - Nutrient deficiency
Holes, yellowing, slow growth.
Fix: add a balanced fertiliser. - No CO2 for demanding plants
High-light species struggle without it.
Fix: choose low-tech plants or add CO2. - Not actually aquatic
A houseplant sold as aquatic rots underwater.
Fix: identify and remove it. - Parameter swings
Unstable temperature or pH.
Fix: stabilise your water.
Diagnose, don’t guess
Water Testing Basics
A liquid test kit turns guesswork into a clear diagnosis. These are the five numbers that matter.
| Test | Safe target | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Ammonia (NH₃) | 0 ppm | The #1 killer in new tanks. Any reading is harmful. |
| Nitrite (NO₂) | 0 ppm | Stops fish carrying oxygen in their blood. |
| Nitrate (NO₃) | < 20–40 ppm | Stresses fish and feeds algae when high. |
| pH | stable | Stability matters more than a “perfect” number. |
| Temperature | 24–27°C / 75–80°F | Verify with a thermometer — heaters drift. |
Avoid these
What NOT To Do
- Don’t dose lots of fertiliser at once hoping to “feed them better” — it can fuel algae.
- Don’t add CO2 chemicals blindly — match it to your plants and livestock.
- Don’t pull out plants with healthy roots — they often regrow even after the leaves melt.
- Don’t crank the light to maximum — that grows algae, not plants.
- Don’t ignore a rotting plant — decaying matter raises ammonia.
Be ready
Recommended Rescue Tools
Root Tabs / Fertiliser
Feeds plants the nutrients they need to recover.
See our pickLiquid Water Test Kit
Helps you keep parameters stable for plants and fish.
See our pickReliable Thermometer
Stable temperature reduces plant stress.
See our pickWater Dechlorinator
For safe, plant-friendly water changes.
See our pick
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Watch & learn
Watch It Done
Get the Free Aquarium Survival Checklist
25 things to check before your fish die — a calm, printable checklist that walks you through every common cause in order.
Good questions
FAQ
Is plant melting normal?
Often, yes. Newly added plants commonly melt as they convert to underwater (submersed) growth, then regrow from the roots. Ongoing melt in established plants points to light, nutrient, or CO2 issues.
Should I remove melting leaves?
Yes — trim fully melted or mushy leaves so they don’t decay and foul the water. Leave healthy roots and stems in place.
Can melting plants harm my fish?
Only indirectly: large amounts of decaying plant matter add ammonia. Remove the worst and keep up water changes.
My plant melted completely — is it dead?
Not necessarily. If the roots are firm and healthy, many plants regrow new submersed leaves within a few weeks.
Do I need CO2 for aquarium plants?
Not for easy, low-tech plants. Demanding species need added CO2 — match your plant choices to your setup to avoid constant melt.
This guide is general educational information, not veterinary advice, and makes no guarantees. When in doubt, consult a qualified aquatic vet or trusted local fish store.
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