![]() |
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
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Does anyone have any experience with this? It's like a very fine
grey-green powder floating on the water surface. It appears quite dense, making very interesting patterns (grey-green swirls) when pushed by the filter output. If I touch my finger to the surface, it immediately pulls away leaving a clearing about 4" in diameter, so it's not very thick. I'm not necessarily looking for a way to get rid of it as most of these funky algaes come & go without any intervention from me, but I was trying to collect some info, as I haven't seen this stuff mentioned before. TIA -- www.NetMax.tk |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In alt.aquaria NetMax wrote:
Does anyone have any experience with this? It's like a very fine grey-green powder floating on the water surface. It appears quite dense, making very interesting patterns (grey-green swirls) when pushed by the filter output. If I touch my finger to the surface, it immediately pulls away leaving a clearing about 4" in diameter, so it's not very thick. I'm not necessarily looking for a way to get rid of it as most of these funky algaes come & go without any intervention from me, but I was trying to collect some info, as I haven't seen this stuff mentioned before. TIA I have something akin to that on some of my tanks. It seems to only develop around floating leaves or protein films in my tanks and even strong surface agitation only moderately deters it. I swear we get every kind of algae problem here locally because of the fertilizer runoff in the tap water. I think it might be a kind of cyanobacteria. In my tanks where it has something to latch onto on the surface, like floating leaves, if left unremoved, it will grow into something akin to pond scum. Slimey, lots of air bubbles with a yellow-green color. I get it most often in the back of my 30 breeder among the floating val leaves because it's a bit harder to see that far back into the tank with the stand its in so I usually don't notice it until it starts cutting the light back a bit. Just pulled a bunch of it out of that tank last night actually. Very strong smelling too. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Cichlidiot" wrote in message
... In alt.aquaria NetMax wrote: Does anyone have any experience with this? It's like a very fine grey-green powder floating on the water surface. It appears quite dense, making very interesting patterns (grey-green swirls) when pushed by the filter output. If I touch my finger to the surface, it immediately pulls away leaving a clearing about 4" in diameter, so it's not very thick. I'm not necessarily looking for a way to get rid of it as most of these funky algaes come & go without any intervention from me, but I was trying to collect some info, as I haven't seen this stuff mentioned before. TIA I have something akin to that on some of my tanks. It seems to only develop around floating leaves or protein films in my tanks and even strong surface agitation only moderately deters it. I swear we get every kind of algae problem here locally because of the fertilizer runoff in the tap water. I think it might be a kind of cyanobacteria. In my tanks where it has something to latch onto on the surface, like floating leaves, if left unremoved, it will grow into something akin to pond scum. Slimey, lots of air bubbles with a yellow-green color. I get it most often in the back of my 30 breeder among the floating val leaves because it's a bit harder to see that far back into the tank with the stand its in so I usually don't notice it until it starts cutting the light back a bit. Just pulled a bunch of it out of that tank last night actually. Very strong smelling too. Doesn't sound like the same stuff. I've had the stuff you are describing. This one is more like grey-green drywall dust floating on the surface. I don't think it builds up in a film. During a water change, I can get some of it to attach to the glass, and then it clumps up a bit, with a yellow-green color. Sort of like the floating version of the single-cell bloom of algae spores, but since I can see the algae plants as dots, it must be multi-cellular. It's new to me. Maybe I need to add a molly to this tank. -- www.NetMax.tk |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
It almost sounds like a mold, doesn't it?
Jacqui "NetMax" wrote in message ... Does anyone have any experience with this? It's like a very fine grey-green powder floating on the water surface. It appears quite dense, making very interesting patterns (grey-green swirls) when pushed by the filter output. If I touch my finger to the surface, it immediately pulls away leaving a clearing about 4" in diameter, so it's not very thick. I'm not necessarily looking for a way to get rid of it as most of these funky algaes come & go without any intervention from me, but I was trying to collect some info, as I haven't seen this stuff mentioned before. TIA -- www.NetMax.tk |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Perhaps, aren't molds a type of fungus? What would it be feeding off,
the protein layer on the surface? -- www.NetMax.tk "C+J Tondreau" wrote in message . .. It almost sounds like a mold, doesn't it? Jacqui "NetMax" wrote in message ... Does anyone have any experience with this? It's like a very fine grey-green powder floating on the water surface. It appears quite dense, making very interesting patterns (grey-green swirls) when pushed by the filter output. If I touch my finger to the surface, it immediately pulls away leaving a clearing about 4" in diameter, so it's not very thick. I'm not necessarily looking for a way to get rid of it as most of these funky algaes come & go without any intervention from me, but I was trying to collect some info, as I haven't seen this stuff mentioned before. TIA -- www.NetMax.tk |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"NetMax" wrote in message
... "Frankrkay" wrote in message ... "NetMax" wrote; Perhaps, aren't molds a type of fungus? What would it be feeding off, the protein layer on the surface? I was also thinking along the same line. Slime Mold (Myxomycetes) - harmless, eats bacteria on rotting organic matter (protein layer on the surface). I ran into it a few years back - started on the surface of an outside pond.... Frank I often let algae run its course (it runs into some constraint and dies off, or levels to an acceptable growth.). In this case I'm making an exception, because it looks so disconcerting. The green-silver-grey dusty look making swirls in the surface just doesn't look very appealing. I'm going to radically change its environment to see if I can shock it out. The lights have been unplugged, so from 2.4wpg to almost zero. Lets see what it looks like after a few days. -- www.NetMax.tk Quick update, I left the tank in almost blackout conditions for 11 days, and the surface algae/mold has vanished. It probably cleared itself faster, but I like to be sure when I'm dealing with easy to hide single cell organisms ;~). None of my plants seem to have suffered from the blackout, and paradoxically my Echinodorous tennellus seems to have even thrived a bit. The fish are all quite enthusiastic about the lights being back on (picture a dozen Monos going back and forth across the front of the tank like an excited and tireless puppy). Thanks for everyone's comments. -- www.NetMax.tk |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
you think you have problems with algae! | Ka30P | General | 1 | September 30th 04 08:36 PM |
RO/DI choice | Splitskull | Reefs | 9 | July 6th 04 09:13 PM |
too much & not enough algae | Jason in Oakland | General | 2 | March 17th 04 11:12 AM |
Why good plant growth= bad algae growth | [email protected] | Plants | 2 | February 22nd 04 10:45 PM |
Algae ruining hobby for me | Stilgar[bbs.isca.uiowa.edu] | General | 9 | February 10th 04 06:11 AM |