The red slim algae is the algae consumes nitrate very fast.
Algae is grown by ammonia in the water that is turned into nitrite/nitrate is food for algae to grow. It also needs a little light. To get rid of it you can put fast growing live plants in your aquarium to reduce the nitrite/nitrate in the water that algae feeds on. See Related links below
Zinc nitrate is very soluble in water.
Silver nitrate is a compound used for making silver salts, not for electroplating silver. In electroplating, a pure silver metal source is needed as the source of silver ions, not silver nitrate. This is because the ions in silver nitrate are not stable in solution for electroplating.
very very very very very fast fast fast
yes very
some fish eat algae. it just depends on what fish you are talking about. But yes fish do eat algae.
No, not all nitrate-containing compounds have low solubility in water. Some nitrate salts, such as potassium nitrate and sodium nitrate, are highly soluble in water. However, some metal nitrates, like lead(II) nitrate and silver nitrate, have low solubility in water.
If you burn Rubidium Nitrate, it will be violet-red. Strontium Nitrate will burn as a very bright, distinct red. Both of these chemicals are used in making fireworks these colors. Hope this helps!
Aluminum nitrate is soluble in water, but it is not very soluble. It has a solubility of about 68 g/100 mL of water at 20°C.
mushrooms, marine algae, freshwater algae, other botanicals
its very rare, and in consequence very expensive. 456$/g
Some snails have very interestingly designed shells and can add color and uniqueness to an aquarium. Also, snails are an algae consumer and help clean the aquarium. Some fish also require snails as part of their diet, such as some puffers.