![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ok my tank is over a month old and I have had a light coating of brown
algae on the bottom for about three weeks now. I was told that it is not harmful to my tank so I have not worried about it. On monday while doing my regular tanks maintenance I noticed some green algae on the sand and I am wondering if this is also ok for my tank? If not how do I keep it under control without adding chemicals to the tank. In all my years of fresh water tanks I have never had any noticeable algae problems so this is new to me. I have read that green algae is a good food source for many animals but I don't have anything in there now that would eat it. I keep a few damsels and I know that there are compatibility problems with adding new fish and since I like them, don't want to get rid of them if I don't have too. Any suggestions would be helpful. Thank you in advance. Vicki |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I've been battling green hair algae for several months. My tank is 5 months
old & I started growing algae in month 3. The problem is diminishing. So far, I've: -Limited light from 10 hours to 6. -Removed phosphate (using Phosguard). -added snails and hermit crabs. -added more water circulation (recently). I have live rock (about 45lbs in a 75 gal tank). Nitrates are not a problem. I'm using a wet/dry filter, and the mechanical filter part continues to fill with algae; enough that I have to clean it every other day. The hermit crabs seem more interested in eating the snails than the algae. I also added a Mexican Fighting Conch, but so far, he just buries himself in the crushed coral. I'm not using sand, but now wish I had. The tank has 4 small fish (percula, purple dottyback, 7 line wrasse, yellow gobie) and a peppermint shrimp. I also run a Diatom filter and do 10 gallon water changes 1-2 times per month. Temp is a pretty constant 80. I'm resisting pouring a chemical into the water to make it go away, but the tank looked so good when I first set it up; I'd really like to rid the tank of the algae. I keep reading this group and everyone says "patience." I'll try to keep listening.... -Tom |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Tom, have you read this article yet?
http://www.melevsreef.com/gha.html Marc TomW wrote: I've been battling green hair algae for several months. My tank is 5 months old & I started growing algae in month 3. The problem is diminishing. So far, I've: -Limited light from 10 hours to 6. -Removed phosphate (using Phosguard). -added snails and hermit crabs. -added more water circulation (recently). I have live rock (about 45lbs in a 75 gal tank). Nitrates are not a problem. I'm using a wet/dry filter, and the mechanical filter part continues to fill with algae; enough that I have to clean it every other day. The hermit crabs seem more interested in eating the snails than the algae. I also added a Mexican Fighting Conch, but so far, he just buries himself in the crushed coral. I'm not using sand, but now wish I had. The tank has 4 small fish (percula, purple dottyback, 7 line wrasse, yellow gobie) and a peppermint shrimp. I also run a Diatom filter and do 10 gallon water changes 1-2 times per month. Temp is a pretty constant 80. I'm resisting pouring a chemical into the water to make it go away, but the tank looked so good when I first set it up; I'd really like to rid the tank of the algae. I keep reading this group and everyone says "patience." I'll try to keep listening.... -Tom -- Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I battled hair algae for almost a year! Terrible hair algae, I've never
seen a tank as bad as mine was! It is now algae free except for some valonia I can't get cleaned up. RO/DI water helped. Manual removal - every single day by the QUART- helped. Lessening light didn't seem to have any affect. Snails, hermits (red, blue, scarlet), conchs, emeral crabs and urchins would not touch the stuff. More water circulation made the algae wave beautifully in the high current but didn't seem to have any other effect. (high water flow directly on my zoo colonies is what finally got the hair algae out of the zoos - so it does help for some things) Creating a DSB helped noticable for about a month, then everything came back. What finally fixed the problem was removal of the pre-filters in my overflow box. I would clean them about every other day of the huge amount of algae they would collect. Once I got rid of the prefilters the algae began to go away almost immediately. I beleive the foam was acting like a wet dry and manufacturing nitrates out the wazoo. I clean my overflow bulkhead fittings about once a month now. I also had to clean my glass daily with a razor just to see my fish. I now can use a magnet scrubber about once a week and that is just to clean up a light "dust" on the glass. I had zeros for NO2, NO3, NH3, and PO4 the entire time I was battleing hair algae. I also had a UV and a skimmer running this entire time. 125G tank, 150# live rock, scopas tank, lawnmower blemmy. So, what I am saying is get rid of the wet dry filter material! Your nitrates and phosphates are reading zero because green hair algae is so good at absorbing it, not because you aren't providing lots of it. Your wet dry is making fertilizer. Nothing in your filter system should be wet and aerobic. I don't know of any chemical you can put into your sal****er tank that won't kill everything else in your tank. Jim... (like everything else - with sal****er - your mileage may vary) P.S. Once you get the hair algae on the run, set up a reefugium. The reefugium will help suck any excess nutrients out of your system in the future. Oh yeah, for hermits get red leg (not scarlet) hermits, they won't eat the snails and they won't crawl all over your coral flesh. "TomW" wrote in message ... I've been battling green hair algae for several months. My tank is 5 months old & I started growing algae in month 3. The problem is diminishing. So far, I've: -Limited light from 10 hours to 6. -Removed phosphate (using Phosguard). -added snails and hermit crabs. -added more water circulation (recently). I have live rock (about 45lbs in a 75 gal tank). Nitrates are not a problem. I'm using a wet/dry filter, and the mechanical filter part continues to fill with algae; enough that I have to clean it every other day. The hermit crabs seem more interested in eating the snails than the algae. I also added a Mexican Fighting Conch, but so far, he just buries himself in the crushed coral. I'm not using sand, but now wish I had. The tank has 4 small fish (percula, purple dottyback, 7 line wrasse, yellow gobie) and a peppermint shrimp. I also run a Diatom filter and do 10 gallon water changes 1-2 times per month. Temp is a pretty constant 80. I'm resisting pouring a chemical into the water to make it go away, but the tank looked so good when I first set it up; I'd really like to rid the tank of the algae. I keep reading this group and everyone says "patience." I'll try to keep listening.... -Tom |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks Richard,
My tank is 20g and all parameters are normal. The algae is not the blue-green slimy bacteria stuff but an almost powdery green furry (short) stuff. I had some of it on a piece of live rock but my turbo snail ate it. I guess he didn't get it all tho. I guess a better question would have been "What fish can I buy that would eat it as a supplement to its diet?" If this were a fresh water tank I would not have a problem picking a fish, but I just don't know enough about salt water varieties yet. Vicki |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Marc-
Yes, I read the article a while back and have employed the "manual harvesting" method you described. It works well, but my back can only take so much of that. My tank is an "in-wall" type of setup. I have to lean in from the back of the tank. I was thinking of scrubbing the rock with a toothbrush. What do you think of that idea? -Tom "Marc Levenson" wrote in message ... Tom, have you read this article yet? http://www.melevsreef.com/gha.html Marc ... |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
My buddy had the same alae I suppose.
They are not as green when compared to real green-hair algae but rather "dirty-green", with tint of yellowish-brownish... Of course this subtle color difference is visible only when you have other green algae close to compare. Silitary they look green too. He was fighting with them doing mechanical cleaning. They are soft and they do come off when you brush the rock with a clean (new) toothbrush in some bucket of water. You need to clean all rocks at once, to help your cleaning crew keep up with the rest of algae in crevices, you could not get it from. I got infested from him one day when I got some polyps from him. The rock with polyps bloomed with this algae and I did not see anything eating them quickly enough. I took out the rock, clean it and put it back. When done, I noticed I left one fuzz on the rock edge. I planned to take the rock again to clean it, but it got eaten overnight, so I have a clean rock now. If you let them grow freely you will have a lot of brushing work... to do not let it happen. Of course, do not brush in the tank because it will only make things worse. "~Vicki ~" wrote in message ... Thanks Richard, My tank is 20g and all parameters are normal. The algae is not the blue-green slimy bacteria stuff but an almost powdery green furry (short) stuff. I had some of it on a piece of live rock but my turbo snail ate it. I guess he didn't get it all tho. I guess a better question would have been "What fish can I buy that would eat it as a supplement to its diet?" If this were a fresh water tank I would not have a problem picking a fish, but I just don't know enough about salt water varieties yet. Vicki |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "TomW" wrote in message ... I was thinking of scrubbing the rock with a toothbrush. What do you think of that idea? -Tom IME/IMO scrubbing with a toothbrush will only dislodge the algae and cause it to spread further around the tank, if your going to scrub it, it needs to be taken out of the tank and then brushed off in a bucket of sal****er then rinsed well in a bucket of clean sal****er. HTH kc |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
richard screaming !!!
aaaahhhhh /richard screming!!! Thanks Richard, My tank is 20g and all parameters are normal. The algae is not the blue-green slimy bacteria stuff but an almost powdery green furry (short) stuff. I had some of it on a piece of live rock but my turbo snail ate it. I guess he didn't get it all tho. post your params, normal means nothing to me, normal could mean a lot of things and I cant tell what they mean to you, and if they were all ideal you wouldnt have bad algae growth unless you dont like the looks of coraline ![]() temp salinity nitrate phosphate ammonia nitrite I guess a better question would have been "What fish can I buy that would eat it as a supplement to its diet?" If this were a fresh water tank I would not have a problem picking a fish, but I just don't know enough about salt water varieties yet. furry green short stuff sounds to me like nitrates are high, post them first, do you have a skimmer, which one, how much gunk does it pull out, another fish isnt going to be in the solution of this algae problem, yet. Vicki -- Richard Reynolds |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Redish Algae Developing | N9mxt1 | General | 2 | March 17th 04 04:46 AM |
Curious why algae died off in my tank | Paul Vincent Craven | General | 3 | February 6th 04 03:43 AM |
overrun by brown algae | Elliot | General | 2 | December 9th 03 06:19 PM |
Algae questions | BigHaig | General | 4 | November 23rd 03 06:48 AM |
derbesia algae outbreak | Dave | General | 18 | October 28th 03 10:57 PM |