Salvinia
Salvinia minima
Also known as: Salvinia minima, common salvinia, water spangles
Quick facts
- Max height
- 3 cm
- Growth rate
- fast
- Difficulty
- beginner
- Placement
- floating
- Propagation
- fragmentation
Water parameters
- Temperature
- 20–30°C
- pH
- 6.0 to 8.0
- Hardness
- 1 to 20 dGH
Light and nutrients
- Lighting
- medium
- CO2
- not needed
- Substrate
- epiphyte
- Feeding
- feeds from the water column (use liquid fertilizer)
Substrate
What this plant roots into (or attaches to). The substrate affects both plant nutrition and water chemistry; see each linked page for full effects.
| Substrate | pH effect | Nutrient load |
|---|---|---|
| Wood and rock mounts (Hardscape mount) | varies by source | none |
| Inert sand (Pool filter sand) | neutral / inert | none |
| Inert gravel (Aquarium gravel) | neutral / inert | none |
| Bare bottom (no substrate) (Bare bottom) | not applicable | none |
| Aquasoil (ADA Amazonia) | lowers pH | very high |
| Mineralized clay substrate (Seachem Fluorite) | neutral / inert | moderate |
This plant feeds primarily from the water column, so substrate choice matters more for its fish-tank compatibility than for plant nutrition.
With fish
- Plant-eating fish
- will be eaten by mollies, silver dollars, large goldfish, and other plant-grazers
- Diggers (corydoras, loaches)
- fine - root system or attachment style handles it
- Root-disturbing fish
- sensitive to root disturbance, plant where roots stay undisturbed
Habitat
Native to tropical and subtropical regions of the Americas. The genus Salvinia includes several species used in aquariums; the most common is S. minima (water spangles). Salvinia is a floating fern with small, oval, bright green leaves (5–15 mm) arranged in pairs along a branching stem, with a modified third leaf that hangs below the surface as a root-like structure. The upper leaf surface has fine, water-repellent hairs that trap air bubbles, giving the leaves a velvety appearance. Salvinia spreads by fragmentation and budding, forming floating mats on still water surfaces. Several species are invasive in tropical and subtropical waterways worldwide; S. molesta (giant salvinia) is one of the world's worst aquatic weeds. In aquariums, S. minima is the most commonly kept species because of its manageable size (leaves 5–15 mm). Larger species like S. auriculata and the infamous S. molesta produce leaves several centimeters across and are too large for most tanks. S. molesta is one of the world's worst invasive aquatic plants, capable of covering entire lakes and river systems. Do not release any Salvinia species into natural waterways.
Outdoor pond use
This species transitions to outdoor ponds well, not just indoor aquariums.
- Outdoor pond zones (USDA)
- 8 to 13 (winter low around -12°C or warmer)
Below the minimum zone, the plant won't overwinter outdoors but can still be grown seasonally and overwintered indoors. Several pond-friendly species (water hyacinth, water lettuce, parrot's feather) are regulated as noxious in some jurisdictions; check the legality data on the profile before releasing anything to an outdoor body of water.
Care notes
Easy floating plant. Grows under low to high light in any water chemistry (pH 5.5-8.5, GH 2-20+), temperature 15–30°C. Growth rate is fast; a small amount doubles in coverage every 1-2 weeks under good conditions. Thin regularly to prevent complete surface coverage. The tiny leaves and trailing structures provide shelter and grazing surface for fry and shrimp. Salvinia absorbs nutrients from the water column through its hanging root-like leaf, helping reduce nitrate and phosphate. Like all floaters, it needs calm water surface; strong current from filter outlets pushes it around and can damage the delicate leaves. Leave a gap in the tank lid to prevent condensation from dripping onto the leaves (which causes rot). Propagation is automatic through fragmentation and daughter plants. In aquaponics, salvinia is less useful than duckweed for nutrient export because it grows slower, but it's more visually attractive. Compatible with all fish. Available from pet stores, aquatic plant retailers, and hobbyist trades at low cost.
Verified against: tropica, aquarium-co-op. Last reviewed 2026-05-15.