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#1
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I have some green hairy type moss/algae growing in my tank. It started
about a year ago and now has grown about a 3" diameter. My tank and angel fish /snails/hermits wont eat it, anyone have any suggestion as to how to remove it. Its grown on my live rock and is diffucult to remove that rock without moving alot of other rocks that are piled on top of it. Any suggestions- THKS/Rick |
#2
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Pull what you can away by hand then while syphoning(preferrably during
a water change) use a toothbrush to scrub what you can away. You may have to use tweezers or another similar tool if you have a hard time removing the algae by hand.... IMO, Briopsis if it's totally undesirable by the fish. Good luck. ---------------------------------------- Usenet Gateway provided by http://www.CaptiveReefing.com |
#3
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as far as algae if its hair algae you can get a few more snails and
try increasing your flow. and Lawn Mower blenny works awesome too. but you will want to get a leg up on it. Just like Repto said remove as much manually as you can. ---------------------------------------- Usenet Gateway provided by http://www.CaptiveReefing.com |
#4
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You seem to be knowledgable, however, with a closed mind reguarding
other aquarists(aka kids), I am disappointed. There are absolutely no real experts in the subject of Marine Biology. Really, we are all novice with some having more experience than others. I am well aquainted with other "marine biologists" that would advise other methods... please, be careful for there are alot of inquiring persons looking for answers to their problems. And as far as "pet store books"... the majority of those quality books are written by those with an extensive amount of experience with "marine biology". Just my 2 cents... there realy is no one solution. ---------------------------------------- Usenet Gateway provided by http://www.CaptiveReefing.com |
#5
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I agree with you and apologize for my sarcasm.
Is just that I am tired of reading barbarisms in those books knowing that their main purpose is to draw blood, I mean money, from aficionados. A sal****er aquarium is nothing but an enclosed piece of the ocean and if you treat it otherwise, is not going to behave like such. I hope you understand that I am trying to be helpful in a way that people benefit from it. In the other hand, you have a comercial website in your signature meaning that you benefit from the mainstream, which I find wrong, way of treating aquariums. Who is the regular reader going to belief? A person with economical interests or the person that has nothing to win or loose? Be your own judge! Yes, there are marine bios that have a price and write those books, I don't! jrs "Reptoreef" wrote in message ... You seem to be knowledgable, however, with a closed mind reguarding other aquarists(aka kids), I am disappointed. There are absolutely no real experts in the subject of Marine Biology. Really, we are all novice with some having more experience than others. I am well aquainted with other "marine biologists" that would advise other methods... please, be careful for there are alot of inquiring persons looking for answers to their problems. And as far as "pet store books"... the majority of those quality books are written by those with an extensive amount of experience with "marine biology". Just my 2 cents... there realy is no one solution. ---------------------------------------- Usenet Gateway provided by http://www.CaptiveReefing.com |
#6
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![]() In the other hand, you have a comercial website in your signature meaning that you benefit from the mainstream, which I find wrong, way of treating aquariums. LOL There are a lot of people that call themselves biologists, and think they understand aquariums, but becaue they have had limited experience in actualy having the aquarium setups like many hobbiest, they don't fully understand how things work, even though they in thier smugg thinking, think they know it all. Who are they going to believe, Someone that thinks he knows everything, or someone who has had lots of actual experience whith what they ar working with. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets |
#7
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We already know who they belief, I was just being sarcastic.
They don't hire aquarists to maintain the aquariums in Seaworld, Miami Aquarium or any other sea related theme park for a reason! Also, all over the world aquarium hobbyists are seen as just that. Go to the Biological Abstracts and count the papers published all over the world on the topic by hobbyists (don't need but one hand to count and that is to make a zero) Yeap, you can keep spending your time and money using the HOBBYISTS approach, lol.... Biologists, we don't know everything and that has never been our claim. We know a lot more than a hobbyist, that is a fact Jack, not a guess. jrs "Wayne Sallee" wrote in message hlink.net... In the other hand, you have a comercial website in your signature meaning that you benefit from the mainstream, which I find wrong, way of treating aquariums. LOL There are a lot of people that call themselves biologists, and think they understand aquariums, but becaue they have had limited experience in actualy having the aquarium setups like many hobbiest, they don't fully understand how things work, even though they in thier smugg thinking, think they know it all. Who are they going to believe, Someone that thinks he knows everything, or someone who has had lots of actual experience whith what they ar working with. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets |
#8
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I have begun converting one of the cheeto tanks into a GHA farm.
That stuff seems very efficient at removing all bad things in its path. I wonder what light spectrum will make it grow faster... For GHA lower kelvin lamps seen to do well for growth... the power compact floodlamps running @ 2900K seem to grow it well for me, especially as they age, the seem to be shifting further down and the hair algae in one of my refuges is taking off like mad. On the plus side as you mentioned from what I can see it is great for taking up nutrients, nitrates on that system mormally hovered around 10-20ppm but over the last couple of months since the GHA started growing faster they are holding at 0-2ppm. More natural filtration, so long as it's in the refuge who cares? ---------------------------------------- Usenet Gateway provided by http://www.CaptiveReefing.com |
#9
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Rest assured that we at CaptiveReefing.com make absolutely no profits.
I moderate that board only because I was invited to do so. I too believe in the ecosystem, but feel there is more than one method. Honestly, I am a prior LFS owner and just gotta say that it was one of the hardest jobs ever!!! I really enjoy being able to chitchat and share my views of captive reefing as well as to learn from others. I do understand the sarcazm and understand the frustrations, as well. No hard feelings. Jason ---------------------------------------- Usenet Gateway provided by http://www.CaptiveReefing.com |
#10
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Ok, enough arguing of who's d&@k is bigger or who's better at
what... we all agree that there's more than 1 approach to a successful reef. How about we get back to discussing our tanks, suggestions, and questions. BTW, marine biology is the study of marine life... that happens even at home with the "hobbiests". ---------------------------------------- Usenet Gateway provided by http://www.CaptiveReefing.com |
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