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Curated catalog
Aegagropila linnaei
Aegagropila linnaei
Aegagropila linnaei: aquatic plant of the family Pithophoraceae. Light: Low to high.
- Family
- Pithophoraceae
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
4 °C - 28 °C
6 - 8.5
Freshwater
Low to high
5-40 mg/L
Description
Geographical Origin & Habitat:
Aegagropila linnaei is native to a highly restricted number of cold, deep freshwater lakes scattered across the Northern Hemisphere, most famously Lake Akan in Hokkaido, Japan, and Lake Mývatn in Iceland. In these pristine environments, it exists at the bottom of the lake bed in extremely cold, mineral-rich water. The unique geographical feature required for their spherical formation is the gentle, continuous wave action of the lake; these subtle underwater currents constantly roll the algae across the sandy bottom, preventing it from attaching to rocks and ensuring it receives sunlight on all sides, maintaining its perfect spherical shape.
Taxonomy & Genetics:
Universally sold and adored worldwide under the colloquial name "Marimo Moss Ball," it is completely and profoundly misnamed: it is not a moss at all. Taxonomically, it is a highly specialized species of filamentous green algae belonging to the Pithophoraceae family. While algae is typically considered a pest in aquariums, this specific genetic lineage has evolved a unique growth pattern where its filaments intertwine and grow radially outward from a central point, forming dense, hollow spheres rather than chaotic slimy mats.
Physical Structure:
The physical structure is an absolute anomaly in the planted tank hobby. It completely lacks roots, stems, rhizomes, or leaves. It is literally a free-floating, densely packed ball of millions of microscopic green algae filaments. In an aquarium setting, they are typically sold at sizes ranging from ping-pong balls to tennis balls, but in the wild, ancient Marimos can grow as large as basketballs over the course of centuries, as they only grow about 5mm per year.
Color & Texture:
The coloration is a deep, rich, completely opaque dark emerald green, often appearing almost black in low light. The texture is famously unique and gives the plant its immense charm: it is incredibly soft, velvety, and sponge-like to the touch. Because it is essentially a porous sponge made of algae, it is capable of absorbing and holding massive amounts of water and microscopic detritus within its core.
Care and observations
Lighting & CO2:
It absolutely despises high light. Because it evolved at the bottom of deep, dark lakes in Iceland and Japan, it is biologically programmed for extreme shade. Blasting it with intense RGB LEDs will cause it to burn, turn yellow, or become completely smothered in parasitic brown algae. CO2 injection is completely unnecessary. It thrives in standard ambient room light or heavily shaded areas of the aquarium beneath larger plants.
Nutrition & Substrate:
It pulls trace nutrients directly from the water column like a sponge. It requires absolutely no substrate and no root tabs. In fact, dosing excessive liquid fertilizers into the water column will not speed up its glacial growth; it will only encourage other, far more aggressive nuisance algae to grow on its velvety surface, ruining its appearance. It survives perfectly fine on the ambient waste produced by fish and shrimp.
Water Chemistry:
The Marimo is strictly a cold-water species, a fact often ignored in the hobby. It strongly prefers water temperatures below 24°C (75°F). Prolonged, continuous exposure to standard tropical aquarium heat (28°C+) will severely stress the plant, causing the sphere to slowly break apart, turn brown, and rot from the inside out. It is highly tolerant of pH swings and can even survive in slightly brackish water setups.
Space Management & Placement:
You can literally drop it anywhere. It is completely unattached to anything. You can leave it resting freely on the substrate, wedge it gently between two rocks, or even carefully cut the ball open and glue the resulting algae mat flat against a piece of driftwood to create a carpet of velvet algae. If left on the substrate, you must manually turn it occasionally to ensure all sides receive light.
Pruning:
No traditional pruning exists for this species, as it has no stems or leaves to cut. To maintain its perfect spherical shape and health, you must remove the ball from the aquarium once a month, gently squeeze it under cold, running tap water to wash out the trapped fish waste and detritus from its core, and then roll it gently between your palms to reshape it before dropping it back in.
Risks & Diseases:
Its biggest threats are detritus accumulation and extreme heat. If debris is allowed to rot inside the hollow core, the entire ball will collapse and die. Additionally, certain fish species like large Plecos, aggressive Cichlids, and Goldfish may decide to aggressively graze on the ball, tearing the delicate filaments to shreds and destroying the spherical shape entirely.
Plant profile
- Placement
- Centro vasca, Primo piano a gruppo
- Botanical form
- algae
- Light
- Low to high
- CO2
- 5-40 mg/L
- Growth
- Molto lenta
- Expected height
- 10 cm
- Expected width
- 10 cm
- Column fertilization
- Fertilizzazione in colonna stabile, regolata su crescita e alghe
- Root fertilization
- Utile soprattutto per forme radicate; non prioritaria per epifite
- Trimming
- Rimuovere foglie deteriorate e potare senza destabilizzare il gruppo.
- Propagation
- Divisione, Separazione piantine figlie
- Nutrients
- I range di durezza, CO2 e nutrienti sono conservati nelle note di cura quando riportati dalla fonte.
- Sensitivity
- Evitare cambi bruschi di luce, CO2 o fertilizzazione.
- Layout role
- Centro vasca, Primo piano a gruppo
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Aquarium/live image selected from Wikimedia Commons. Matched to Aegagropila linnaei.
Aquarium/live image selected from Wikimedia Commons. Matched to Aegagropila linnaei.
Aquarium/live image selected from Wikimedia Commons. Matched to Aegagropila linnaei.