Bucephalandra Red
Bucephalandra sp. 'Red'
A buce with deep red-purple leaves, slow but stunning on hardscape.
| Care Difficulty | Intermediate |
| Lighting | Medium |
| CO2 Requirement | Optional |
| Growth Rate | Slow |
| Placement | Foreground/Midground |
Overview
Bucephalandra Red (Bucephalandra sp. 'Red') is a buce with deep red-purple leaves, slow but stunning on hardscape. It is a intermediate plant to grow, and rewards a bit of experience and good light with a lovely display.
This guide explains, in plain language, how to grow Bucephalandra Red well: what it looks like, how much light it wants, whether it needs CO2, how to plant and place it, how to make more of it for free, and the simple mistakes to avoid.
Appearance & Growth
A buce with deep red-purple leaves, slow but stunning on hardscape.
It is a slow grower and is normally used in the foreground/midground of the aquarium. Because it grows slowly, it stays tidy and needs little trimming, though slow leaves can gather algae if the light is very strong.
Lighting
Bucephalandra Red does best under medium light. It wants bright, even light reaching its leaves, so use a good planted-tank LED.
Keep the lights on a timer for about 6 to 8 hours a day. Leaving lights on longer usually grows more algae, not more plant, so add light time slowly and watch for any green film.
CO2 & Fertilising
CO2: Optional. CO2 is optional - it speeds things up but is not essential.
Feed it with an all-in-one liquid fertiliser (such as API Leaf Zone) each week. If leaves turn yellow, get holes, or stop growing, that is almost always a lack of nutrients, not a disease.
Planting & Placement
Do not plant Bucephalandra Red in the substrate. Tie it with cotton thread or glue it with a dab of super glue gel onto driftwood or rock, leaving the rhizome exposed. It will grow its roots onto the hardscape over time.
How to Propagate (Make More)
It grows from a rhizome (a thick horizontal stem). To make more, split the rhizome into pieces that each keep a few leaves and roots, then tie or glue them to wood or rock. Never bury the rhizome - it will rot.
Swapping cuttings is one of the best parts of the hobby - over time a single healthy plant can fill your tank and stock a few more.
Common Problems & How to Fix Them
The most common problem is algae growing on the leaves. This usually means too much light, not enough nutrients, or weak water flow - not a problem with the plant. Lower the light a little, add fertiliser, and improve flow.
Some leaf loss right after planting is normal while the plant gets used to living underwater - keep your light, CO2 and fertiliser steady and new growth will follow. Always remove dead or rotting leaves quickly to keep the plant and water healthy.
Is Bucephalandra Red Right for Your Tank?
Bucephalandra Red is a beautiful plant for keepers who can give it good light, well worth the small extra effort. Pair it with our other plant and aquascaping guides to build a lush, healthy planted tank.