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#1
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I am losing the war against red hair algae in my tank. My nitrates are 0
and and my PH is steady between 8.0 and 8.2. The temperature of the tank is between 80 and 82 degrees. I have (2) 250W metal halides that are on 8 hours a day and (2) 45 Watt actinic lights that are on 12 hours a day. ( I don't have a phosphate test kit...could that be the problem?) The red hair algae does not grown on the live rock much. Instead it grows every day on the sand. I rake it each night until there sand is white again, but the next day it grows right back. I have crown snails, astral snails, some unidentied snail, emerald crabs, blue legged hermit crabs, brown lagged hermit crabs, but nothing seems to eat it. Any ideas? |
#2
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What's your phosphate levels?
~John |
#3
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I don't have a test kit. Guess, I'll go shopping tonight. I'll let you
know. "John" wrote in message ... What's your phosphate levels? ~John |
#4
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I got an additional powerhead to increase circulation and installed a
protein skimmer. I haven't had any red algae since. "John" wrote in message ... What's your phosphate levels? ~John |
#5
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The red algae in my 30-gallon tank disappeared when I added another
powerhead to increase circulation and installed a protein skimmer. "david" wrote in message link.net... I am losing the war against red hair algae in my tank. My nitrates are 0 and and my PH is steady between 8.0 and 8.2. The temperature of the tank is between 80 and 82 degrees. I have (2) 250W metal halides that are on 8 hours a day and (2) 45 Watt actinic lights that are on 12 hours a day. ( I don't have a phosphate test kit...could that be the problem?) The red hair algae does not grown on the live rock much. Instead it grows every day on the sand. I rake it each night until there sand is white again, but the next day it grows right back. I have crown snails, astral snails, some unidentied snail, emerald crabs, blue legged hermit crabs, brown lagged hermit crabs, but nothing seems to eat it. Any ideas? |
#6
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I have noticed that it helps when I keep the surface of the sand moving with
a power head it helps, but i makes a mess. I have a good protein skimmer. "maddie" wrote in message ... The red algae in my 30-gallon tank disappeared when I added another powerhead to increase circulation and installed a protein skimmer. "david" wrote in message link.net... I am losing the war against red hair algae in my tank. My nitrates are 0 and and my PH is steady between 8.0 and 8.2. The temperature of the tank is between 80 and 82 degrees. I have (2) 250W metal halides that are on 8 hours a day and (2) 45 Watt actinic lights that are on 12 hours a day. ( I don't have a phosphate test kit...could that be the problem?) The red hair algae does not grown on the live rock much. Instead it grows every day on the sand. I rake it each night until there sand is white again, but the next day it grows right back. I have crown snails, astral snails, some unidentied snail, emerald crabs, blue legged hermit crabs, brown lagged hermit crabs, but nothing seems to eat it. Any ideas? |
#7
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What you describe sounds much more like Cyano Bacteria. It
will grow like a mat or sheet on your sand, and you can even gently scoop it together and siphon it out. If nothing else will get rid of it, ChemiClean by Boyd Enterprises will kill it off. Marc david wrote: I am losing the war against red hair algae in my tank. My nitrates are 0 and and my PH is steady between 8.0 and 8.2. The temperature of the tank is between 80 and 82 degrees. I have (2) 250W metal halides that are on 8 hours a day and (2) 45 Watt actinic lights that are on 12 hours a day. ( I don't have a phosphate test kit...could that be the problem?) The red hair algae does not grown on the live rock much. Instead it grows every day on the sand. I rake it each night until there sand is white again, but the next day it grows right back. I have crown snails, astral snails, some unidentied snail, emerald crabs, blue legged hermit crabs, brown lagged hermit crabs, but nothing seems to eat it. Any ideas? -- Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com |
#8
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Yes, it does grow like a matt. I assume ChemiClean is reef safe? Thanks
for the help! "Marc Levenson" wrote in message m... What you describe sounds much more like Cyano Bacteria. It will grow like a mat or sheet on your sand, and you can even gently scoop it together and siphon it out. If nothing else will get rid of it, ChemiClean by Boyd Enterprises will kill it off. Marc david wrote: I am losing the war against red hair algae in my tank. My nitrates are 0 and and my PH is steady between 8.0 and 8.2. The temperature of the tank is between 80 and 82 degrees. I have (2) 250W metal halides that are on 8 hours a day and (2) 45 Watt actinic lights that are on 12 hours a day. ( I don't have a phosphate test kit...could that be the problem?) The red hair algae does not grown on the live rock much. Instead it grows every day on the sand. I rake it each night until there sand is white again, but the next day it grows right back. I have crown snails, astral snails, some unidentied snail, emerald crabs, blue legged hermit crabs, brown lagged hermit crabs, but nothing seems to eat it. Any ideas? -- Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com |
#9
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Why not just try adding more water circulation to the sand area but not
directly blasting it. Try to avoid adding any chemical to your water if can avoid it. CapFusion,... "david" wrote in message link.net... Yes, it does grow like a matt. I assume ChemiClean is reef safe? Thanks for the help! "Marc Levenson" wrote in message m... What you describe sounds much more like Cyano Bacteria. It will grow like a mat or sheet on your sand, and you can even gently scoop it together and siphon it out. If nothing else will get rid of it, ChemiClean by Boyd Enterprises will kill it off. Marc david wrote: I am losing the war against red hair algae in my tank. My nitrates are 0 and and my PH is steady between 8.0 and 8.2. The temperature of the tank is between 80 and 82 degrees. I have (2) 250W metal halides that are on 8 hours a day and (2) 45 Watt actinic lights that are on 12 hours a day. ( I don't have a phosphate test kit...could that be the problem?) The red hair algae does not grown on the live rock much. Instead it grows every day on the sand. I rake it each night until there sand is white again, but the next day it grows right back. I have crown snails, astral snails, some unidentied snail, emerald crabs, blue legged hermit crabs, brown lagged hermit crabs, but nothing seems to eat it. Any ideas? -- Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com |
#10
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"Marc Levenson" wrote in message
m... What you describe sounds much more like Cyano Bacteria. It will grow like a mat or sheet on your sand, and you can even gently scoop it together and siphon it out. If nothing else will get rid of it, ChemiClean by Boyd Enterprises will kill it off. Dear Marc and the original poster. *DISCLAIMER* Far be it from me (a freshwater dude) to be giving advice to reefkeepers (those who have crossed over to the dark side) but would'nt it be cheating to be adding chemicals to a reef? You would only be treating the symptom anyway. Would'nt it just return once the course of chemicals is finished? If it is Cyano as Marc states then its not that much of a problem, as this is one of the easier algaes to control. To the OP, you say your Nitrates are Nil, this IS the problem. Nitrates and phosphates work hand in hand and when one of them tips the balance as in 0 Nitrates and available phosphates you will get Cyano. Basically you have a chemical imbalance. Don't waste your money on buying a P04 test kit as you already know THIS IS THE PROBLEM, no need for the test kit. Either do some water changes (to correct the imbalance) or buy a phosphate sponge to remove excess po4. If you decide to just let it run its course it will EVENTUALLY balance out, your tank has probably been disturbed, as in maybe you lost some fish or possibly have too many photosynthesising plants (hence 0 NO3), it will take a while, you have to be patient and just keep attacking the stuff, physical removal etc. During this time the cyano will be dying off you MUST have your skimmer working optimally and I do suggest doing smaller frequent water changes because as the Cyano dies it will release some nutrients back into the water (Notably Iron) which will be fuel for other algae species like Hair or thread algae. On second thought maybe your tank has not changed and your tap water has! This is quite common during seasonal changes, perhaps your water is sourced from a different reservoir! Maybe that po4 kit is not such a bad idea after all. -- **So long, and thanks for all the fish!** |
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