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I have a 10 G glass tank with 2 small fantails. It is almost 3 months
now that i have this tank. I monitor all the water parameters and it seems my tank has cycled well now. Aorund 2 weeks back i bought the mini bonsai decoration for my aquarium and when i took it off yesterday for routine cleaning i found it has become very slimy. Also I discovered some light brownish spots on another plant leaves which were removed upon light cleaning. All plantation is plastic in this tank & i have a 24x7 external power filter with 90 gph o/p with bio cartridge... I believe the slimy thing is algea and now my question is it is okay for plants to be slightly slimy or should i start some algea control right away. I do not wish to disturb OR bring down my painstakingly cycled tank. Every input will be appreciated. Thanks Kedar |
#2
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![]() Kedar wrote: I have a 10 G glass tank with 2 small fantails. It is almost 3 months now that i have this tank. I monitor all the water parameters and it seems my tank has cycled well now. Aorund 2 weeks back i bought the mini bonsai decoration for my aquarium and when i took it off yesterday for routine cleaning i found it has become very slimy. Also I discovered some light brownish spots on another plant leaves which were removed upon light cleaning. All plantation is plastic in this tank & i have a 24x7 external power filter with 90 gph o/p with bio cartridge... I believe the slimy thing is algea and now my question is it is okay for plants to be slightly slimy or should i start some algea control right away. I do not wish to disturb OR bring down my painstakingly cycled tank. Every input will be appreciated. Thanks Kedar Slime is often bacteria, not slime, although this may be non pathogenic bacteria, large build ups can rob your fish of oxygen. I do not think this is happening here though. You can clean your plastic plants in a 15-10% bleach and water solution for about 1/2 hour then rinse with a little sodium thiosulfate (found in most de-chlorinators such Start Right). If your fish are doing well and you are performing regular water changes, rinsing filter media (not changing it all), and all your water parameters including kH are good. I would just clean your plants and keep a watch of your fish and aquarium. Make sure your ammonia and nitrites are 0; Your nitrates are under 40-50 ppm; Your kH is above 80 ppm (if low pH fish, a Kh of about 80 ppm is OK) Carl |
#3
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![]() "Kedar" wrote in message ups.com... I have a 10 G glass tank with 2 small fantails. It is almost 3 months now that i have this tank. I monitor all the water parameters and it seems my tank has cycled well now. Aorund 2 weeks back i bought the mini bonsai decoration for my aquarium and when i took it off yesterday for routine cleaning i found it has become very slimy. Also I discovered some light brownish spots on another plant leaves which were removed upon light cleaning. All plantation is plastic in this tank & i have a 24x7 external power filter with 90 gph o/p with bio cartridge... I believe the slimy thing is algea and now my question is it is okay for plants to be slightly slimy or should i start some algea control right away. I do not wish to disturb OR bring down my painstakingly cycled tank. Every input will be appreciated. Thanks Kedar Ok the slime is called 'bio film' and it's a collection of algae, bacteria and fungi colonys. Most is probably just some diatomeous alage. Keep in mind that these 'brown slime' growths make up part of the total crew that keep your tank 'cycled' So Don't clean everything at once!! Ensure you clean filter sponges in water drawn from the aquarium. My advice would be to add a single bristlenose catfish or bushy nose plec or whatever they call ancistrus dolichopterus in your neck of the woods mate. After all that waffle.... yes it's perfectly fine for things inside the aquairum to be slimy. It is a sign of small lifeforms covering all the surface area, and this is 99% of the time a good thing. Most people wipe their front glass and I dip my plastic plants that need to look sshmick in a bucket of very diluted pool chlorine, then blast them with a hose, wipe them blast with hose again, soak in a bucket with a good squirt of dechlorinator and then replace looking sparkling new. It's a pain in the arse and I only do it in situations that I have to. I'd leave them unless they look manky, and just rinse under a tap or something. Remember only clean part of the tank at a time, the aim is not to wipe out too many slimy brown things at once. They are the guests of honour after all. ![]() |
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