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Banana Lilies (Piece Plant)

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Banana Lilies (Piece Plant)

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Please note: Live Plants cannot be shipped to Western Australia or Tasmania, due to quarantine restrictions. All other states are OK.

Banana lily gets its name from its cluster of thick banana-shaped roots, located close to the leaves near the surface of the water. Banana lily has rounded leaves that have a notch at the base: they resemble small water lily leaves. Banana lily leaves are green above and dull purple below. It has small white five-petalled flowers that arise from below the leaf.

The Banana Lily is an unusual plant to add to your aquarium. You can just drop this in your tank or bury the "bananas" up to 1/4 of their length. This plant will thrive in moderate to strong, bright light. Beginners to experts can grow this plant.

This is a particularly easy plant to grow. It looks great and grows fast. The plants in the picture below are only 10 days from planting in the aquarium. When you purchase the plant it will have little or no foliage. Once the plant has been placed in the aquarium sand it will begin to produce beautiful lily pads in a cluster, as seen in these pictures.

Note in the pictures how to correctly plant banana lilies. The so called "bunch of bananas" should be only partially buried in the sand leaving most of the "bunch" exposed.

Eventually the plant will begin to send long stems to the surface where new surface leaves will form. Removing these stems will extend the life of the foliage at the base of the plant.

The parent plant produces the root formation under the mature lily pads which float at the surface. The stems of the mature pad rot away then the pad with the new plant attached drifts off to find a new home.

What do you need to grow plants?

Successful plant growth requires a balance of light, nutrients, trace elements, and carbon dioxide (CO2). The light should be provided in a spectrum the plants can absorb, must be of great enough intensity to keep the plant alive, and should be consistently on 10-14 hours a day. Most nutrients are supplied by fish waste. Some trace elements might be supplied by your tap water, but are more consistently obtained using commercial trace element mixtures. CO2 is supplied partly from the air and partly by your fish. If your plants have a deficiency of even one of these factors, their growth will be limited. (Don't panic about this; most of us don't need optimal plant growth.) Overabundance of one factor over another may cause problems, such as plant malnourishment, undue algae growth or toxic buildup.

What should I put in my substrate?

Gravel or sand is a good start! Size is an issue; with small grains the roots might not be able to get a good hold and the sand tends to compact, while larger gravel has a tendency to collect pockets of rotting detritus. Most believe the ideal size is 2-3mm gravel, while a few others like 1-2mm coarse sand (though it may be harder to find). The bottom 1/3 of the gravel can be supplemented with a fertilizer, of which popular choices are peat (softens water), laterite (a clay containing iron, usually used with undergravel heating systems), and soil. One word of warning: if you use an undergravel filter, it may suck your fertilizer back into the tank instead of keeping it with the bottom of the gravel.


How deep a substrate?

In general, it's good to match the substrate with the types of plant (or types of roots). For instance big Amazon Sword plants like deep gravel of 10cm, but Lilaeopsis grass can do fine with an inch or less. This can be helped by terracing the back of your tank to be deeper and planting your deep-rooted plants there. You also can't go wrong with a uniform 7cm of gravel all-around.


What kind of plants can I keep with fish X?
What kind of fish can I keep with plant X?


These are essentially the same question, though asking the second one shows you are a serious plant person. You need to match the habits of the fish with the plant. Big cichlids that like to dig should not be kept in a tank with rooted plants, though floating (or ephiphytic) plants are fine. Vegetarian fish should not be kept in a tank with plants they like to eat, unless the plants grow faster than they destroy them! Some algae-eating fish also turn out to be plant-eaters too. In general, try and learn the habits of your fish before you buy them and your plants, and be prepared to find out what works by several trials.

Some fish that can be kept with virtually any plants: small tetras, danios, rasboras, gouramis, discus, bettas, angelfish (Pterophylum), rainbowfish, Corydorus catfish, livebearers, killifish, dwarf cichlids, and in general most small fish.


Can you grow plants with an undergravel filter (UGF)?

Yes! Make sure you have enough gravel for the plants to be happily rooted. It should also work best with a very slow flow rate. Pluses of UGF may be an increased circulation to the roots. However, you will probably get roots growing in the plates, it will be harder to vacuum everything, and will be a major pain to pull and replant.


What temperature do I keep a planted tank?

This varies from plant-to-plant, but you can keep most aquatic plants from 22-27C.

Customer Reviews

  1. Lovely lilies! Review by Marissa
    Customer Rating

    These are thriving! Bought three, one arrived without any leaves but now has plenty, the other two had leaves and now have lily pads at the surface of the tank. Love them! We have decent lighting and dose with Flourish regularly. (Posted on 15/10/11)

  2. Grows quickly Review by Elise
    Customer Rating

    I received 2 of these 3 days ago. Both arrived with no leaves :( but today both of them have 3 new shoots each! (Posted on 27/08/11)

  3. good Review by Ian
    Customer Rating

    Purchased two of these, they were in very good condition but within 3 weeks one has died and gone mouldy. The other one is growing strongly. (Posted on 6/06/11)

  4. great value Review by Jenny
    Customer Rating

    Received my 2 banana lillies today, they are very hardy, are in great condition, both with a couple of leaves.. I cant wait for them to grow in my planted aquarium.. I use great substrate, have good lighting and use flourish excel every couple of days.
    (Posted on 10/02/11)

  5. interesting Review by chris
    Customer Rating

    The ones that I got from livefish did not actually have bananas but thinner, spikier looking things. They quickly grow leaves when they have rooted and then send masses of stalks to the surface to form lilly pads. Once the pads are of a decent size cut the stalk, leave the pad and at the end of the stalk a new banana plant will develop if the lighting and other parameter are to the plants liking. During this whole process the pads block out a lot of light and the mother plant turns ugly very quickly and dies. You can prolong the agony by cutting off the stalks before they reach the surface but this means cutting them off on a daily basis which can become cumbersome. (Posted on 6/02/11)

  6. very nice plant Review by sean
    Customer Rating

    my banana lily has about 8 leave on the surface and is growing rapidly
    in my tank i just use iron rich fertleiser and nutrent pelets (Posted on 25/01/11)

  7. That's a plant and a half Review by Lisa
    Customer Rating

    I have two of these in a 6.6 gal. Last week I started adding a small daily dose of liquid CO2 (Flourish Excel). Before they were surviving. Now one of them has two shoots with leave on the surface, with a third growing. The remaining leaves look lovely at the base of the plant. So hardy and so fast-growing. (Posted on 8/01/11)

  8. Nice looking, easy plant Review by timmeh
    Customer Rating

    Really nice looking plant, after a week or so (in a high tech tank with fertilisation and CO2) it's gone from just the tubers(?) to having 5 leaves one of which is rapidly heading for the surface.

    What I really love about this one is the unusual nature, everyone always asks about the 'bananas'. (Posted on 24/12/10)

  9. very hardy Review by Duncan
    Customer Rating

    a very hardy tank plant, once in ideal conditions grows really well (Posted on 26/10/10)

  10. good Review by Hugo
    Customer Rating

    came very small with 1 leaf, but grew very quickly and is now large with many leaves. sinks to the bottom and doesn't need to be buried in my tank, the fish push it around. absolutely great for the small price (Posted on 26/10/10)

  11. banana lilles Review by Anthony
    Customer Rating

    got 2 of them one came with some foliage and was very green and the other was mainly roots with 1 leaf just emerging they settle in very quickly (Posted on 28/08/10)


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