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Old October 26th 03, 11:29 PM
Dave
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Default derbesia algae outbreak

Hi Marc;

That was the idea with the fine mesh bag I mentioned, but it seems to me I
read somewhere that unless an extremely fine filter was used, algae cells
will be put back into the water, in suspension, and the problem will get
worse. My impression was that something like ordinary filter floss/cotton
batting/etc. wouldn't be sufficient. Maybe this isn't correct ....

thanks;

- dave

"Marc Levenson" wrote in message
...
You can set up a bucket in front of the tank, and take a container with

holes in
the base. Fill it up with cotton batting, and use your pump method to

suck out
all you want. The batting will trap all the filth, and you can safely add

the
water back to your tank.

Marc


Dave wrote:

Hi folks;

I've had my marine tank set up for about six months. 55gal, Remora HOB
skimmer, 67 lbs live rock, 260w lighting (50/50 blue actinic/10000K),

two
MaxiJet 1200 powerheads, two inch aragonite reef sand layer. One

sailfin
tang, one maroon clownfish, one engineer goby, two bubbletip anemones

(was
one anemone until it split last week). Five turbo snails and a

red-legged
hermit crab. 5% water changes with RO/DI water (Spectrapure MPDI-25)

once a
week. Temp 76-79F, pH 7.9-8.2, s.g. 1.025. No detectable phosphates, 1

ppm
nitrate (Salifert kits). I've been using the Spectrapure unit for about

two
months; before that I was using an Aquarium Pharmaceuticals Tap Water
Filter.

Over the last month or so I've had real troubles with derbesia algae. I
suction as much as I can out with my water changes, but it just comes

back.
It's growing along the back glass and is covering at least 80% of the

live
rock surface. Now it appears to be growing in places on the sand.

My live rock is anchored down with PVC piping and ties, so I'd rather

not
take it out to scrub it by hand. What course of action should I follow

to
get rid of the derbesia?

I've been thinking about using a waterpump and suctioning the water

through
a fine mesh media bag and back into the tank, in order to trap the algae

in
the bag and remove it, but have been told that small amounts of the

algae
will get back into the tank in the form of smaller particles (?), making

the
situation worse.

I've also considered increasing the frequency of my water changes,
suctioning out the algae as I've doing during my weekly water changes,

but
am concerned about stressing the fish.

Any advice? Thanks in advance.


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