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#1
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I would say you have some kind of nutrient in your tank or else why you have
so much algae battle. Testing for nitrate will not be usefull since your algae are obsorbing it. It should read close to zero or untracible. How are your water circulation? How does your Romora Skimmer skimmate look like? Does it get dark and smelly? I assumed your are using RO/DI water? Adding more snail are one of many tool to battle algae but you are not focusing on the source of the cause(s). CapFusion,... "Dave" wrote in message ... I'm considering doing water changes twice a week rather than once, only to remove more algae before it has a chance to grow back. Think adding an algae-eating blenny would be a good idea? - thanks Dave |
#2
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Dave;
I had to deal with this same problem in my tank for many months before I won the battle. The problem is the source of nutrient that is feeding the algae. If there is no food to feed the algae it will starve. There is no two ways about it. You must find the source of the nutrient and find a way to reduce it. I would suggest that you do bigger water changes less often. 5% seems low to me. As my tank is now more mature, I do less and less water changes and my tank is doing better and better. When I do one, I change 20-25 gal on my 90 gal tank. My system has a sump and a refugium now so the water capacity is somewhere near 120 gallons when I factor in the displacement of the LR. So I am doing around 15-16% at a time. I only do them once every two to three months. I used to do water changes every two weeks. I would also sugesst you beef up the biological filtration of your system. Two inches of sand is not enough. I would add some LS. A DSB will improve things in your tank. I saw immediate improvement in my tank when I added more live sand. I had 2 inches of crushed coral to start with. (that was the suggestion of the LFS at the time but that is a whole story for another post) I did it slowly over a period of time. I understand that it may be difficult for you to scrub your LR. In my tank there were several rocks that were very difficult/impossible to remove from the tank. I did find that removing them and scrubbing them in a bucket of old tank water followed by a rinse in another tank of old tank water worked the best at reducing the amount of algae. By " dump the bucket" I meant after you scrub the rock pour the old water into the toilet and get rid of it. When you rip the algae out in your tank you will allow some algae to float free in your tank and it will just land somewhere else and start growing. As I said before it can be a real bitch to get rid of. I almost gave up the hobby a few times in frustration. I also battled cyno and dinoflagellates at different times. Both were difficult but neithor had the staying power of hair algae. Good Luck Todd |
#3
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TEST PHOSPATES. mine were high.
wolfhedd "TW" wrote in message ... Dave; I had to deal with this same problem in my tank for many months before I won the battle. The problem is the source of nutrient that is feeding the algae. If there is no food to feed the algae it will starve. There is no two ways about it. You must find the source of the nutrient and find a way to reduce it. I would suggest that you do bigger water changes less often. 5% seems low to me. As my tank is now more mature, I do less and less water changes and my tank is doing better and better. When I do one, I change 20-25 gal on my 90 gal tank. My system has a sump and a refugium now so the water capacity is somewhere near 120 gallons when I factor in the displacement of the LR. So I am doing around 15-16% at a time. I only do them once every two to three months. I used to do water changes every two weeks. I would also sugesst you beef up the biological filtration of your system. Two inches of sand is not enough. I would add some LS. A DSB will improve things in your tank. I saw immediate improvement in my tank when I added more live sand. I had 2 inches of crushed coral to start with. (that was the suggestion of the LFS at the time but that is a whole story for another post) I did it slowly over a period of time. I understand that it may be difficult for you to scrub your LR. In my tank there were several rocks that were very difficult/impossible to remove from the tank. I did find that removing them and scrubbing them in a bucket of old tank water followed by a rinse in another tank of old tank water worked the best at reducing the amount of algae. By " dump the bucket" I meant after you scrub the rock pour the old water into the toilet and get rid of it. When you rip the algae out in your tank you will allow some algae to float free in your tank and it will just land somewhere else and start growing. As I said before it can be a real bitch to get rid of. I almost gave up the hobby a few times in frustration. I also battled cyno and dinoflagellates at different times. Both were difficult but neithor had the staying power of hair algae. Good Luck Todd |
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