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Help, tank yucked up.... urgh!
Hello everyone!
I have an 11-month old tank that was doing very well up through early August when I had to go off on a 90-day trip to the middle east. Well, I'm back now and my oldest son, who was feeding and cleaning the tank, "forgot" to empty the skimmer the whole time I was gone! So, this morning I came in to find a nice nasty skimmer covered in dried green goo that doesn't seem to be doing anything and a tank that's covered in 1/2" of solid growth on the walls and rock. Best I can tell I've lost all my corals, shrimp, most of my snails (I have three very large conch now), and have maybe 3-4 crabs left out of an original 20. I've lost both yellow tangs and my pseudochromis. The two clown fish seem to be doing well, although the anemonie is missing. There are also two crocea clams in the tank which (strangely) seem to be doing well as they're both large, open and reactive to light. I've cleaned the skimmer completely and it has produced two full cups of skimmate (very wet tea - I'll dial down the air supply later) so far today. I also scrapped the walls of the tank and then used a net to pull the floating debris out of the tank. I've cleaned the filters for the wave maker as well as the prefilter for the sump and swapped out the old chemi-pure bags in the sump for 2 new ones (after rinsing). Anything else I can do? Much of the growth on my 150# of live rock seems to be some kind of slime mold - maybe red slime algea? It's already everywhere in the tank, so is there a fast way to remove this? And the same growth is all over the sand as well. Any help or pointers would be appreciated... tia, mark h |
Help, tank yucked up.... urgh!
Sounds like Cyanobacteria - Blue/Green algae ?
Are there Bubbles trapped in the goo ? Remove with Turkey Baster...blow it off and slurp it up. A few Major water changes. How about dropping in some Mardel Sal****er Maracyn Increase flow, keep the skimmer going, reduced light schedule and Phosphate sponge. Your son was feeding the fish... how much food did you have left when you got back ? What R your water parameters ???? Chris "Mark Henry" wrote in message .. . Hello everyone! I have an 11-month old tank that was doing very well up through early August when I had to go off on a 90-day trip to the middle east. Well, I'm back now and my oldest son, who was feeding and cleaning the tank, "forgot" to empty the skimmer the whole time I was gone! So, this morning I came in to find a nice nasty skimmer covered in dried green goo that doesn't seem to be doing anything and a tank that's covered in 1/2" of solid growth on the walls and rock. Best I can tell I've lost all my corals, shrimp, most of my snails (I have three very large conch now), and have maybe 3-4 crabs left out of an original 20. I've lost both yellow tangs and my pseudochromis. The two clown fish seem to be doing well, although the anemonie is missing. There are also two crocea clams in the tank which (strangely) seem to be doing well as they're both large, open and reactive to light. I've cleaned the skimmer completely and it has produced two full cups of skimmate (very wet tea - I'll dial down the air supply later) so far today. I also scrapped the walls of the tank and then used a net to pull the floating debris out of the tank. I've cleaned the filters for the wave maker as well as the prefilter for the sump and swapped out the old chemi-pure bags in the sump for 2 new ones (after rinsing). Anything else I can do? Much of the growth on my 150# of live rock seems to be some kind of slime mold - maybe red slime algea? It's already everywhere in the tank, so is there a fast way to remove this? And the same growth is all over the sand as well. Any help or pointers would be appreciated... tia, mark h |
Help, tank yucked up.... urgh!
Sounds to me that it will take time and everything that you did to recover
from that crash seems great. I agree with The Rock, Water changes will do wonders and you have a lot of manual extractions to make, good luck. Last, is your oldest son still living with you? lol iy "Mark Henry" wrote in message .. . Hello everyone! I have an 11-month old tank that was doing very well up through early August when I had to go off on a 90-day trip to the middle east. Well, I'm back now and my oldest son, who was feeding and cleaning the tank, "forgot" to empty the skimmer the whole time I was gone! So, this morning I came in to find a nice nasty skimmer covered in dried green goo that doesn't seem to be doing anything and a tank that's covered in 1/2" of solid growth on the walls and rock. Best I can tell I've lost all my corals, shrimp, most of my snails (I have three very large conch now), and have maybe 3-4 crabs left out of an original 20. I've lost both yellow tangs and my pseudochromis. The two clown fish seem to be doing well, although the anemonie is missing. There are also two crocea clams in the tank which (strangely) seem to be doing well as they're both large, open and reactive to light. I've cleaned the skimmer completely and it has produced two full cups of skimmate (very wet tea - I'll dial down the air supply later) so far today. I also scrapped the walls of the tank and then used a net to pull the floating debris out of the tank. I've cleaned the filters for the wave maker as well as the prefilter for the sump and swapped out the old chemi-pure bags in the sump for 2 new ones (after rinsing). Anything else I can do? Much of the growth on my 150# of live rock seems to be some kind of slime mold - maybe red slime algea? It's already everywhere in the tank, so is there a fast way to remove this? And the same growth is all over the sand as well. Any help or pointers would be appreciated... tia, mark h |
Help, tank yucked up.... urgh!
|
Help, tank yucked up.... urgh!
Thanks for all the pointers. It's slow going, but the tank is coming
clean. I've blown all the buildup off the rock and suctioned that out of the tank, as well as scraped the sides down. I used a small fish net to sift the cyano off the top layer of sand. I did a 10g water change yesterday (it's a 65g tank) and will do another 10g today. Water parameters were whacked out yesterday morning, but are more inline today with the replacement of media bags, cleaning of detrius filters and addition of trace elements. Calcium is low, but I've added some kalkwasser and will test again tomorrow. All of the coral colonies are dead or nearly so. There's a couple button polyps still left and one lonely mushroom, but that's it - a loss of about $500. I hesitate to add any cleaup crew (shrimp or crabs) until the tank settles bak in. Thanks again for your help. mark h |
Help, tank yucked up.... urgh!
"Mark Henry" wrote in message ... Thanks for all the pointers. It's slow going, but the tank is coming clean. I've blown all the buildup off the rock and suctioned that out of the tank, as well as scraped the sides down. I used a small fish net to sift the cyano off the top layer of sand. I did a 10g water change yesterday (it's a 65g tank) and will do another 10g today. Water parameters were whacked out yesterday morning, but are more inline today with the replacement of media bags, cleaning of detrius filters and addition of trace elements. Calcium is low, but I've added some kalkwasser and will test again tomorrow. All of the coral colonies are dead or nearly so. There's a couple button polyps still left and one lonely mushroom, but that's it - a loss of about $500. I hesitate to add any cleaup crew (shrimp or crabs) until the tank settles bak in. Thanks again for your help. mark h Myself I would try for at least one pretty large change 50% or so It's not my clam But you really want to dilute this water pretty seriously It is going to be loaded with organics and depleted of traces |
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