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Sounds like you might have a phosphate problem.... better have that checked.
Especially if you don't use RO/DI or distilled water. (I know that our tap water is full of some nasty stuff!!) An investment in some 'sand critters' is probably a good idea. Make sure that you get reef safe. Try some blue leg crabs, turbo snails, etc. I have heard that you need to add one per gallon, any combo. So with a 125 gal you'll need a 125 (total) of the little critters. "Mark" wrote in message om... I have a 125 gallon reef tank with a deep sand bed. That's 4-5" of Aragamax sand. I find that I am having horrendous problems with red algae covering everything. I did a 50% water change last week and already everything's covered again. I can practically set my watch by it. All fish are very healthy (growing noticeably) and the corals (pretty much all soft) are as healthy as they can be considering they regularly get covered over by a sheet of red algae. The algae that forms on the sand normally has a lot of gas bubbles that form under them and within a day lifts a sheet of it up to the top of the water and it gets pulled to my overflow. Everytime I test my water parameters, they look very good -- no ammonia, undetectable nitrites and nitrates. I find the Ca and Alkalinity to be rather strange though. The Alkalinity regularly is in the vicinity of 12meq/L while Ca is something like the high 300's. As I'd understood it that was not supposed to be possible. I also confess that I have not been super-good about adding Ca and buffer solutions on any kind of a regular basis. I've done some looking and the answers I see to the problem of red algae in a deep sand bed tank are either a) you need more water flow or b) you need to recharge the fauna in the sand. I had a slightly more powerful pump in the tank when it was first setup, but I found that it started to blow the sand around and it looked like a hurricane in there. So I backed the circulating pump off to a slightly lower flow model and it looks good to me. I saw no dead spots. Recently, in an effort to see if even high flow would help, I put a reasonably high powered powerhead in there which really moves the water now. No effect on the algae problem or its rapid reformation whatsoever. I've had this problem for many months and had recharged the sand critters within the last 6 months. I take it that since I have gas bubbles forming on my sand under the red algae, and that feeding doesn't seem to be polluting my tank, that says that the deep sand bed is "working" on some manner. I feed 1-2 times per day and try not to overfeed, although I've heard that that's not as likely to be a problem with a DSB tank. I could throw more $$ at getting an influx of sand critters yet again, but I have no clue that it's going to help as it didn't really before. I'm finding that the enjoyment of having a reef is rapidly getting replaced with the disgust of remove red algae from everything but the fish every couple of days. I've heard of the red algae removers, but as I understand it, those kill other things and I don't particularly want that. Any help would be greatly appreciated. And if anyone has a need for some red algae, I can let some go real cheap :-). Thanks Mark |
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