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Cloudy Water
I had a bad case of carpet algae and the water started to get a green
tint and thought I had an algae bloom. I covered the tank completely for 3 days and did a water change - crystal clear for a day or so. Now the cloudiness has turned to more of a milky white (bacterial bloom???). 54 gallon corner tank 10-20 small-large Julidochromis marlieri 3 Clown Plecos Many caves of slate 30% planted Aquaclear 300 running 2 sponges Tank has been around for 7+ years 1) I did have to bleach my log to rid of carpet algae, but rinsed very well 2) Rinsed sponges and added a 3rd 3) Feeding sparingly 4-5 times/week 4) All water parameters are 0 - high ph and hardness (thus the reason for cichlids) 5) Recently removed 7 large leilupis 6) Added several new plants Suggestions? |
Cloudy Water
On Oct 13, 1:21*pm, ClownPleco wrote:
I had a bad case of carpet algae and the water started to get a green tint and thought I had an algae bloom. I covered the tank completely for 3 days and did a water change - crystal clear for a day or so. Now the cloudiness has turned to more of a milky white (bacterial bloom???). 54 gallon corner tank 10-20 small-large Julidochromis marlieri 3 Clown Plecos Many caves of slate 30% planted Aquaclear 300 running 2 sponges Tank has been around for 7+ years 1) I did have to bleach my log to rid of carpet algae, but rinsed very well 2) Rinsed sponges and added a 3rd 3) Feeding sparingly 4-5 times/week 4) All water parameters are 0 - high ph and hardness (thus the reason for cichlids) 5) Recently removed 7 large leilupis 6) Added several new plants Suggestions? I bet that old damed hippy dude has been sneaking in your house at night and wanking off in your aquarium. Anyone that likes to play with crotch crickets (crabs) can not be trusted and wanking is one of his major pastimes. Lock your windows and doors and I bet the problem goes away all by itself.. |
Cloudy Water
On Oct 14, 9:10*am, Tynk wrote:
On Oct 13, 1:21*pm, ClownPleco wrote: I had a bad case of carpet algae and the water started to get a green tint and thought I had an algae bloom. I covered the tank completely for 3 days and did a water change - crystal clear for a day or so. Now the cloudiness has turned to more of a milky white (bacterial bloom???). 54 gallon corner tank 10-20 small-large Julidochromis marlieri 3 Clown Plecos Many caves of slate 30% planted Aquaclear 300 running 2 sponges Tank has been around for 7+ years 1) I did have to bleach my log to rid of carpet algae, but rinsed very well 2) Rinsed sponges and added a 3rd 3) Feeding sparingly 4-5 times/week 4) All water parameters are 0 - high ph and hardness (thus the reason for cichlids) 5) Recently removed 7 large leilupis 6) Added several new plants Suggestions? Hi there. What you are calling "carpet algae" is actually Cyanobacteria (pronounced "SYE - uh- no *bacteria) ..aka "Blue green algae". It's a bacteria, not algae. You're trying to rid your tank of it by treating it as if it were a type of algae. You have 3 choices when it comes to cyano. Find the source that's feeding and remedy it....or Keep doing what you've been doing. Clean it off, and keep it under control with weekly water changes....or Kill it with erythromycin (brand name Maracyn 1 (not 2). Here's the thing. If you kill it with the antibiotic, you may be done. However, if there is a source coming into your tank it will be an ending battle. Our town has "city well" water. One of our wells has cyanobacteria in it. I have a constant source of it coming in from my tap. It's futile for me to try and kill *it with erythro, so my choice is to keep it under control. You would never know I have a constant battle with cyano from looking at my tanks though. With proper tank maintenance you don't end up with it taking over a tank. Instead of doing the normal algae cleaning, do it weekly. Yes, I said "algae". You clean it off the same as you would algae. A scrubby, paper towel and toothbrush work best. There aren't any algae eating fish that eat this slime from hell. Can you blame them. It's bacteria. Spah-tooey! * ; ) Also, when you mentioned you "rinsed" your sponges.....was that in tap water or a bucket of old tank water? If you rinsed them under the tap you most likely killed off too many nitrifying bacteria...hence your bacteria bloom later on (white cloudy).- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You tell him TYNK! Straighen out his act.......... |
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