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Diatoms



 
 
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  #1  
Old January 10th 07, 07:59 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
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Posts: 121
Default Diatoms

rtk wrote:
I've developed a nasty case of brownies. I think it's just a coincidence
that I opened a new bag of salt, same company. No new anything in the
tank. I tried an inch of fine sand on top of the old, but that didn't
stop anything. I change 6 gallons of water per week from the 55 gallon
tank. Here's a pic with a few details:
http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/...l****erID.html

I'd appreciate any suggestions. It is seriously ugly.

rtk


Just add a small conch or two and stop worrying as to the why.

The conch will make short work of diatoms on sand. Problem solved.

If I had to guess as to what is going on... there must be SOME new
source of nutrients that the diatoms are blooming from - you may want to
test your phospate levels, or just try some phosban or other iron
hydroxide based filter media as see if it helps. Could be organic
matter? Is your skimmer clean? What do you have for cleanup crew for the
sand? (I don't see ANYTHING in the way of sand cleaners on the link you
gave) I am thinking that you simply have to much organic matter trapped
in your sand bed. Which is not bad in and of itself...


  #2  
Old January 10th 07, 09:23 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
rtk
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Posts: 18
Default Diatoms

Add Homonym wrote:

rtk wrote:

I've developed a nasty case of brownies. I think it's just a
coincidence that I opened a new bag of salt, same company. No new
anything in the tank. I tried an inch of fine sand on top of the old,
but that didn't stop anything. I change 6 gallons of water per week
from the 55 gallon tank. Here's a pic with a few details:
http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/...l****erID.html

I'd appreciate any suggestions. It is seriously ugly.

rtk



Just add a small conch or two and stop worrying as to the why.

The conch will make short work of diatoms on sand. Problem solved.

If I had to guess as to what is going on... there must be SOME new
source of nutrients that the diatoms are blooming from - you may want to
test your phospate levels, or just try some phosban or other iron
hydroxide based filter media as see if it helps. Could be organic
matter? Is your skimmer clean? What do you have for cleanup crew for the
sand? (I don't see ANYTHING in the way of sand cleaners on the link you
gave) I am thinking that you simply have to much organic matter trapped
in your sand bed. Which is not bad in and of itself...


Thank you! I do have a variety of snails. I put a new green
chromis in and never saw him again, so I might have that
little source. I'll stick a brush down the narrow tube of
the skimmer and see if that's messed up. I reduced the
lights to 6 hours a day and will them back up when things
calm down. I'm also siphoning up the ugly ickies every other
day. Now I'll look for a conch.

rtk
  #3  
Old January 10th 07, 10:05 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
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Default Diatoms

rtk wrote:

Thank you! I do have a variety of snails. I put a new green chromis in
and never saw him again, so I might have that little source. I'll stick
a brush down the narrow tube of the skimmer and see if that's messed up.
I reduced the lights to 6 hours a day and will them back up when things
calm down. I'm also siphoning up the ugly ickies every other day. Now
I'll look for a conch.

rtk


what type of snails? Turbo's and astreas don't do much for the sand.
Cerith and Nassariuses do a good job of eating stuff off (and slightly
under) the sand.

Problem with conchs is of course thay can get quite big. But they eat
the crap up faster than snails, in my experience. (which is somewhat
limited)

By the "narrow tube" of the skimmer... you mentioned you had an aqua c
remora I think? Do you mean the "spray injection" tube? You might check
that, but what I meant is is there crap growing on the inside of the
reaction chamber and or intake tube? Do you have the preskimmer/baffle
thingy that they sell as an option for the remora's? If not, and if
there is crap growing inside the reaction chamber, it COULD be that your
skimmer is putting out water with more dissolved organics in it than the
water that is going INTO it.
  #4  
Old January 11th 07, 12:16 AM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
rtk
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Posts: 18
Default Diatoms

Add Homonym wrote:


By the "narrow tube" of the skimmer... you mentioned you had an aqua c
remora I think? Do you mean the "spray injection" tube? You might check
that, but what I meant is is there crap growing on the inside of the
reaction chamber and or intake tube? Do you have the preskimmer/baffle
thingy that they sell as an option for the remora's? If not, and if
there is crap growing inside the reaction chamber, it COULD be that your
skimmer is putting out water with more dissolved organics in it than the
water that is going INTO it.


I mean the very skinny tube that requires removal of a
plastic screw to put a 1/2 inch cleaner down. I clean the
skimmer twice a week. Tomorrow I'm going to take down the
whole skimmer and scrub all of it.

rtk
  #5  
Old January 10th 07, 09:30 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
kim gross
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Posts: 70
Default Diatoms

Add Homonym wrote:
rtk wrote:
I've developed a nasty case of brownies. I think it's just a
coincidence that I opened a new bag of salt, same company. No new
anything in the tank. I tried an inch of fine sand on top of the old,
but that didn't stop anything. I change 6 gallons of water per week
from the 55 gallon tank. Here's a pic with a few details:
http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/...l****erID.html

I'd appreciate any suggestions. It is seriously ugly.

rtk


Just add a small conch or two and stop worrying as to the why.

The conch will make short work of diatoms on sand. Problem solved.

If I had to guess as to what is going on... there must be SOME new
source of nutrients that the diatoms are blooming from - you may want to
test your phospate levels, or just try some phosban or other iron
hydroxide based filter media as see if it helps. Could be organic
matter? Is your skimmer clean? What do you have for cleanup crew for the
sand? (I don't see ANYTHING in the way of sand cleaners on the link you
gave) I am thinking that you simply have to much organic matter trapped
in your sand bed. Which is not bad in and of itself...


Normally Diatom blooms come from Silca. And your water source is
normally the main source of diatoms. Are you using RO/DI water? If not
I would be willing to bet that you have silca in your water source and
that is causing the diatom bloom.

Also adding that inch of fine sand could have released some silca into
the tank also, if it was added before the bloom I would say it was the
source, but with it being added after the bloom it could not have caused
the initial bloom.

Kim
  #6  
Old January 10th 07, 10:04 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
KurtG
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Posts: 351
Default Diatoms

kim gross wrote:
Normally Diatom blooms come from Silca.


Silica, right? Silicon dioxide which acidifies when dissolved in water.

And your water source is
normally the main source of diatoms.


You meant silica again, right?


Are you using RO/DI water? If not
I would be willing to bet that you have silca in your water source and
that is causing the diatom bloom.


Interesting. I heard that silica doesn't belong in a reef aquarium, but
I never knew why.

--Kurt
  #7  
Old January 10th 07, 10:06 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
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Posts: 121
Default Diatoms

KurtG wrote:

Interesting. I heard that silica doesn't belong in a reef aquarium, but
I never knew why.

--Kurt


I don't understand what the big deal is. Diatoms are harmless.
  #8  
Old January 10th 07, 10:06 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
Tristan
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Posts: 489
Default Diatoms

Silica is not even close to silcates. Silicates make problems silcia
is inert and comprises 97% of all ocean bottom and beach sands.




On Wed, 10 Jan 2007 17:04:13 -0500, KurtG
wrote:

kim gross wrote:
Normally Diatom blooms come from Silca.

Silica, right? Silicon dioxide which acidifies when dissolved in water.

And your water source is
normally the main source of diatoms.

You meant silica again, right?


Are you using RO/DI water? If not
I would be willing to bet that you have silca in your water source and
that is causing the diatom bloom.

Interesting. I heard that silica doesn't belong in a reef aquarium, but
I never knew why.

--Kurt



-------
I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know!
  #9  
Old January 11th 07, 12:17 AM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
LoŠust-101
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Posts: 23
Default Diatoms


"Tristan" wrote in message
...
Silica is not even close to silcates. Silicates make problems silcia
is inert and comprises 97% of all ocean bottom and beach sands.

Beat up any old granmothers today yet tristan? punch them in the face eh?
Why yo udont attack the men?
remeber before you lose ISP tristan when you were Roy? Wich old granny this
one was, eh?

"Roy" Tristan wrote in message
...
I used to use a product called a Windsong, it was later changed to
the name of Roy Mckoi, and then later it became a Roy lo.......but
its genetically known as a Roy Wolf. It worked fine except yu had
to keep holdiing its head under while it sucked up the skum. Perhaps a
few bricks or weights around the neck of that device would make it
work better.......



On Wed, 10 Jan 2007 17:04:13 -0500, KurtG
wrote:

kim gross wrote:
Normally Diatom blooms come from Silca.

Silica, right? Silicon dioxide which acidifies when dissolved in
water.

And your water source is
normally the main source of diatoms.

You meant silica again, right?


Are you using RO/DI water? If not
I would be willing to bet that you have silca in your water source
and
that is causing the diatom bloom.

Interesting. I heard that silica doesn't belong in a reef aquarium,
but
I never knew why.

--Kurt



-------
I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know!


 




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