Generated via Deepmind Antigravity AI
Curated catalog
Amblystegium serpens
Amblystegium serpens
Amblystegium serpens: aquatic plant of the family Amblystegiaceae. Light: Low to high.
- Family
- Amblystegiaceae
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
4 °C - 26 °C
5 - 7
Freshwater
Low to high
10-40 mg/L
Description
Geographical Origin & Habitat:
Amblystegium serpens is a highly cosmopolitan moss found globally across temperate and cool climates in the Northern Hemisphere, including North America, Europe, and parts of Asia. It thrives in perpetually damp, shaded woodlands, creeping aggressively over decaying hardwood logs, wet limestone rocks, and the muddy, saturated banks of slow-moving streams. It is an amphibious species, perfectly capable of growing terrestrially in high-humidity environments or completely submerged underwater, adapting its growth structure to the water current.
Taxonomy & Genetics:
This is a true aquatic moss belonging to the Amblystegiaceae family. In the aquarium trade, it is commonly sold under the commercial name "Nano Creeping Moss" or "Creeping Moss." It is frequently confused with miniature forms of Java Moss, but it is biologically and genetically distinct. Unlike Java Moss, which tends to shoot wildly in all directions, A. serpens is genetically programmed to grow with a creeping, strictly prostrate habit, hugging tightly to the surfaces it colonizes.
Physical Structure:
The physical structure of this moss is microscopic and wildly chaotic. Like all true mosses, it possesses no actual roots, instead anchoring itself aggressively to porous surfaces using microscopic hairs called rhizoids. The plant consists of hair-thin, creeping primary stems that branch heavily. These microscopic stems are densely covered in tiny, overlapping, sharply pointed leaves that are almost invisible to the naked eye individually.
Color & Texture:
The coloration is a vibrant, highly translucent emerald or bright lime-green, depending on the intensity of the light. Due to its incredibly microscopic scale and dense branching, a healthy patch of this moss looks exactly like a plush, chaotic green carpet or a thick layer of fine green wool covering a piece of hardscape. The texture is extremely soft and delicate, swaying gently with the slightest water movement.
Care and observations
Lighting & CO2:
It is an extremely adaptable moss that can survive in absolute shade, though it will grow very slowly and appear darker. However, to force it to create the dense, plush, intensely lime-green carpet it is famous for, moderate lighting and pressurized CO2 are highly recommended. Under high energy, the moss accelerates its growth and branches far more aggressively, creating a much thicker and more attractive aesthetic.
Nutrition & Substrate:
As a rootless epiphyte, it completely ignores the substrate. It absorbs all of its required macro and micro nutrients directly from the water column through its microscopic leaves. Small, frequent doses of a comprehensive liquid fertilizer are all that is required to keep it thriving. It relies heavily on good water circulation to deliver these nutrients into the dense core of the moss clump.
Water Chemistry:
Because it is naturally a temperate moss, it absolutely despises hot water. It thrives in unheated aquariums or cool-water setups (15-24°C). Temperatures consistently above 28°C (82°F) will severely stress the plant, causing the delicate, microscopic fronds to wither, turn brown, and eventually rot away into mush. It prefers slightly soft to moderately hard water.
Space Management & Placement:
This is strictly an epiphyte used for elite hardscape detailing. It must be tied down with cotton thread or glued with cyanoacrylate superglue directly to the tips of driftwood branches or across the faces of porous stones. Because its fronds are so incredibly small, it is the absolute perfect tool for creating the illusion of ancient, moss-covered miniature "trees" in nano aquascapes, where regular Java moss would look ridiculously oversized.
Pruning:
It requires aggressive and frequent pruning. If left alone, the moss will grow so thick that the bottom layers attached to the rock will be completely starved of light. These bottom layers will die and rot, causing the entire clump to detach and float away into the filter. You must brutally trim it down close to the hardscape using curved spring scissors every few weeks.
Risks & Diseases:
Its greatest enemy is Hair Algae and detritus accumulation. Because the structure is so microscopic and incredibly dense, it acts as an absolute magnet for floating debris and uneaten fish food. If not kept perfectly clean, the moss will suffocate. An army of Amano Shrimp or Neocaridina shrimp is absolutely mandatory to constantly pick through the moss and keep it clean.
Plant profile
- Placement
- Epifita (decorazione hardscape), Nano-acquario, Primo piano a gruppo
- Botanical form
- moss / liverwort or fern prothallium
- Light
- Low to high
- CO2
- 10-40 mg/L
- Growth
- Lenta
- Expected height
- 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
- Epifita (decorazione hardscape), Nano-acquario, Primo piano a gruppo
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Licensed live observation photo for Amblystegium serpens. Matched to Amblystegium serpens.
Licensed live observation photo for Amblystegium serpens. Matched to Amblystegium serpens.
Licensed live observation photo for Amblystegium serpens. Matched to Amblystegium serpens.