![]() |
Brown algae?
After finally getting of my problematic green murky water situation and now
enjoying a clear tank, I notice that the walls of the tank are getting a brown film. I used an algae "scrubber" to clean down the sides, but the brown returned quickly. Since switching to an Aqua Clear three way filter and only putting a capful of "Cycle" in the water, I don't want to start throwing all kinds of products in the water unless I have to. Any input greatly appreciated. Tispe |
Tispe wrote: After finally getting of my problematic green murky water situation and now enjoying a clear tank, I notice that the walls of the tank are getting a brown film. I used an algae "scrubber" to clean down the sides, but the brown returned quickly. Since switching to an Aqua Clear three way filter and only putting a capful of "Cycle" in the water, I don't want to start throwing all kinds of products in the water unless I have to. Any input greatly appreciated. Tispe Sounds like Diatoms. Monitor your nitrate and phosphate levels. Also replace the light bulb if its old - my old light caused massive diatom problems and replacing it with a broad spectrum fixed the issue. |
Thanks, another question......what is a normal range for nitrates and
phosphates? My light is flourescent.....should I still change it? Thanks for your input. Tispe "Geezer From The Freezer" wrote in message ... Tispe wrote: After finally getting of my problematic green murky water situation and now enjoying a clear tank, I notice that the walls of the tank are getting a brown film. I used an algae "scrubber" to clean down the sides, but the brown returned quickly. Since switching to an Aqua Clear three way filter and only putting a capful of "Cycle" in the water, I don't want to start throwing all kinds of products in the water unless I have to. Any input greatly appreciated. Tispe Sounds like Diatoms. Monitor your nitrate and phosphate levels. Also replace the light bulb if its old - my old light caused massive diatom problems and replacing it with a broad spectrum fixed the issue. |
Tispe wrote: Thanks, another question......what is a normal range for nitrates and phosphates? My light is flourescent.....should I still change it? Thanks for your input. For nitrates it's less than 40ppm, preferably less than 20 if possible. I can't recall from memory what Phosphates were. |
"Geezer From The Freezer" wrote in message ... Tispe wrote: Thanks, another question......what is a normal range for nitrates and phosphates? My light is flourescent.....should I still change it? Thanks for your input. For nitrates it's less than 40ppm, preferably less than 20 if possible. I can't recall from memory what Phosphates were. OK, just a dumb question, I have tested my water and all the readings are perfect, except for the nitrate's which are too high, so what do I change, or add to get them into the normal range? How can all the other numbers be OK and just this one way off? I have 3 ponds and one 50 gallon house tank, all treated the same way, and yet only have trouble in one pond. Help me understand what is going on. I have 2 fantail gold fish in the 50 gal. 7 ....4 inch comets in each of the 150 gal. and 7... 8 inch comets in the 300 gal. all 3 have pondmaster pump/filter systems that are 3 times the required size of the amount of water. If that info helps. KatAZ |
"Kathy" wrote in message news:apkne.188$Zt.16@okepread05... "Geezer From The Freezer" wrote in message ... Tispe wrote: Thanks, another question......what is a normal range for nitrates and phosphates? My light is flourescent.....should I still change it? Thanks for your input. For nitrates it's less than 40ppm, preferably less than 20 if possible. I can't recall from memory what Phosphates were. OK, just a dumb question, I have tested my water and all the readings are perfect, except for the nitrate's which are too high, so what do I change, or add to get them into the normal range? How can all the other numbers be OK and just this one way off? I have 3 ponds and one 50 gallon house tank, all treated the same way, and yet only have trouble in one pond. Help me understand what is going on. I have 2 fantail gold fish in the 50 gal. 7 ...4 inch comets in each of the 150 gal. and 7... 8 inch comets in the 300 gal. all 3 have pondmaster pump/filter systems that are 3 times the required size of the amount of water. If that info helps. KatAZ You didn't say which pond has the Nitrate problem. But I believe the recommended gallons per Goldfish for a pond is about 40 (So you seem OK here). It's higher than the normal 10 for a tank, as you don't normally do water changes in a pond. Does the problem pond have a proper biofilter? Is the pond cycled? The usual prescription to lower nitrates is water changes. You may also try feeding less, and adding more plants. I rarely feed my pond fish, unfortunately they have lots of string algae to eat. |
"Geezer From The Freezer" wrote in message ... Tispe wrote: Thanks, another question......what is a normal range for nitrates and phosphates? My light is flourescent.....should I still change it? Thanks for your input. For nitrates it's less than 40ppm, preferably less than 20 if possible. I can't recall from memory what Phosphates were. I believe between .5 PPM and 1 PPM of Phosphates is recommended. Although some people say the ratio of Nitrates to Phosphates is also important (about 10 N to 1 P). Since your Nitrates should be below 20, this gives you a P of 2 or less. |
Geezer From The Freezer wrote:
Tispe wrote: After finally getting of my problematic green murky water situation and now enjoying a clear tank, I notice that the walls of the tank are getting a brown film. I used an algae "scrubber" to clean down the sides, but the brown returned quickly. Since switching to an Aqua Clear three way filter and only putting a capful of "Cycle" in the water, I don't want to start throwing all kinds of products in the water unless I have to. Any input greatly appreciated. Tispe Sounds like Diatoms. Monitor your nitrate and phosphate levels. Also replace the light bulb if its old - my old light caused massive diatom problems and replacing it with a broad spectrum fixed the issue. Diatoms bloom when silicates are high. Often new tanks that are filled with tapwater have a diatom bloom. It should go away on its own. -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:13 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FishKeepingBanter.com