Echinodorus (Amazon swords) is the rosette plant genus from South America. E. bleheri is the standard Amazon sword, reaching 20+ inches in established tanks. E. ozelot (red/black ozelot, green ozelot) features distinctive spotted leaves. E. tenellus (now Helanthium tenellum) is the chain sword carpet variant.

Swords are heavy root feeders - root tabs in the substrate matter more than water-column dosing. Moderate light (50-100 PAR) and eventual large size (40-100+ gallon tanks accommodate adults).

All Echinodorus species (5)

Amazon Sword
Echinodorus bleheri
beginner 20g+
Chain Sword
Echinodorus tenellus
intermediate 10g+
Ozelot Sword
Echinodorus ozelot
beginner 20g+
Red Flame Sword
Echinodorus red flame
intermediate 20g+
Rubin Sword
Echinodorus rubin
intermediate 30g+
Have a photo of Echinodorus?
Approved photos go live in 24 hours, with credit (or anonymous - your call).

What is Echinodorus?

Echinodorus is a genus of aquarium species commonly kept in home aquariums. The genus includes multiple species, each with overlapping care requirements but distinct color, growth pattern, or behavior. Aquarists choose Echinodorus for its combination of visual appeal, wide availability, and well-documented husbandry - unlike fringe species that require specialist care, Echinodorus sits in the sweet spot of mainstream aquarium keeping.

Wild populations of Echinodorus originate from tropical aquarium environment. The species in this genus have been kept in aquariums for decades, and most are now available as captive-bred or aquacultured specimens. Captive-bred Echinodorus ship healthier than wild-caught and acclimate to closed-system parameters within 7-14 days, vs. the 30-60 day acclimation typical of wild imports.

Echinodorus care - tank size, light, flow, parameters

Echinodorus is rated intermediate care difficulty across the genus, though specific species can vary. The dominant care requirements are:

For reef tanks (where most Echinodorus belong if it is coral or marine), maintain stable parameters: alkalinity 8-9 dKH, calcium 420-450 ppm, magnesium 1300-1400 ppm, nitrate 5-10 ppm, phosphate 0.03-0.05 ppm. Daily alkalinity swing should not exceed 0.5 dKH/24h. For freshwater Echinodorus, target stable temperature (within 2°F daily swing), pH appropriate to native habitat, and weekly 25-30% water changes.

How to choose a healthy Echinodorus specimen

Visual inspection at point of purchase prevents 70%+ of post-purchase losses. For Echinodorus, evaluate:

Reputable Fast Aquatics vendors disclose collection origin on every Echinodorus listing. Browse current availability with carrier-tracked Buyer Protection on every order, and a 4-hour DOA guarantee starting at carrier-reported delivery.

Acclimating Echinodorus to a new tank

The first 60-90 minutes after delivery determine whether Echinodorus thrives or limps for weeks. Drip acclimation is the safest universal protocol:

  1. Float the sealed shipping bag in the display or quarantine tank for 15 minutes to equalize temperature within ±1°F.
  2. Open the bag and gently transfer Echinodorus with shipping water into a clean container at the side of the tank.
  3. Run air-line tubing from the display, knot or use a drip valve to slow flow to 2-3 drops per second.
  4. Drip until the original shipping water volume has tripled (saltwater) or doubled (freshwater). Takes 60-90 minutes.
  5. Verify acclimation water salinity (saltwater) or hardness (freshwater) matches display before transfer.
  6. Net the specimen into the display - never pour shipping water into the tank.
  7. Lights low or off for the first 4-8 hours. No feeding for 24 hours.

Echinodorus tankmates and compatibility

Most Echinodorus species are compatible with peaceful community tankmates that share their water-chemistry needs and adult-size range. The general compatibility rules:

For specific tankmate compatibility, browse the linked Echinodorus species pages below - each individual species page has a tankmate-compatibility table cross-checked against the Fast Aquatics husbandry database.

Common Echinodorus diseases and treatment

Most Echinodorus diseases come from skipped quarantine, parameter swings, or stress. The most common conditions to watch for:

Quarantine all new Echinodorus for 21-30 days minimum (saltwater) or 14-21 days (freshwater) in a separate tank with prophylactic treatment. The single highest-impact husbandry practice for any aquarist.

Echinodorus - Frequently asked questions

What is Echinodorus coral or fish?

Echinodorus is a genus of aquarium species commonly kept in home aquariums. Includes multiple species.

How do you care for Echinodorus?

Echinodorus requires intermediate care difficulty: standard light, moderate flow, varied diet. Stable parameters are critical - daily alkalinity swings under 0.5 dKH (reef) or stable temperature within 2°F (freshwater).

What are the most popular Echinodorus species?

Popular species: multiple species. Each has slight care variations - check individual species pages for specifics.

How much does Echinodorus cost?

Echinodorus pricing varies by tier: budget specimens $5-50, mid-tier $25-200, premium grade $100-2,000+. Captive-bred or aquacultured specimens command a premium but ship healthier.

Where can I buy Echinodorus?

Fast Aquatics connects to vetted vendors of Echinodorus across all 50 US states with overnight FedEx shipping, climate-aware hold logic, and 4-hour DOA guarantee.

Is Echinodorus reef-safe?

Echinodorus reef-safety varies by species. Most are considered reef-safe with caution; verify on individual species pages.

What color morphs of Echinodorus are available?

Common morphs: multiple natural color morphs.