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If the tank was stable before, something must have changed.
Allgae is caused primarily by excess nutrients. New brand of food? Letting kids feed the fish? Graham. "Tom J. Pappas" wrote in message om... I have a question about my freshwater aquarium, that I'm hoping someone can answer. I've had it up and going for 10 years. The last 3 or 4 months, I've had a problem with a slimy green algae. It grows on the artificial plants, driftwood, rocks, and gravel. I have no real plants. I clean the tank once per month. I remove about 30% of the water. Then I stir up the gravel and vacuum it. After that I wipe the glass. I empty and clean the carbon container, add fresh charcoal, and replace the foam sleeve. Water temp is a constant 78 degrees. I just did all of the above 3 days ago and algae is already forming again!!! Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Tom |
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![]() "Racf" wrote in message ... "Tom J. Pappas" wrote in message om... I have a question about my freshwater aquarium, that I'm hoping someone can answer. I've had it up and going for 10 years. The last 3 or 4 months, I've had a problem with a slimy green algae. It grows on the artificial plants, driftwood, rocks, and gravel. I have no real plants. I clean the tank once per month. I remove about 30% of the water. Then I stir up the gravel and vacuum it. After that I wipe the glass. I empty and clean the carbon container, add fresh charcoal, and replace the foam sleeve. Water temp is a constant 78 degrees. I just did all of the above 3 days ago and algae is already forming again!!! Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Tom Sounds like cynobacyeria (I probably misspelled that) or BGA. Search google for that or perhaps someone with expertise can comment on it from the plant guys...so I will crosspost for you..... Its a nutrient issue. PS. I would do a lot more water changes than you are to get the build-up out of there.......Just 25% at a time about 6 times over a few days......thats me though.... I've had this. The solution seemed to be a few days of total blackout to knock back the BGA, repeated every week if it reappeared. Coupled with that, I planted more plants, and let the duckweed cover more surface, cutting down a bit of light. I have CO2 but not regular or high-volumes of it (its manually injected into a bellchamber on a daily/as I remember basis). Initially saw BGA a few weeks into tank life, lasted a couple of months, been free of it ever since. It seems to dislike the exits of filters, and to that end I ditched my (lovely) internal 3-stage filters (2 of) and moved to an external canister, but didn't see a recurrance down the far end of the tank away from the filter exit. Tank is fairly heavily stocked both fish and plant wise, but seems to be in equilibrium - only get very occasional bit of black/green hair algae near the filter exit. Velvet |
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In article ,
says... "Tom J. Pappas" wrote in message om... I have a question about my freshwater aquarium, that I'm hoping someone can answer. I've had it up and going for 10 years. The last 3 or 4 months, I've had a problem with a slimy green algae. It grows on the artificial plants, driftwood, rocks, and gravel. I have no real plants. I clean the tank once per month. I remove about 30% of the water. Then I stir up the gravel and vacuum it. After that I wipe the glass. I empty and clean the carbon container, add fresh charcoal, and replace the foam sleeve. Water temp is a constant 78 degrees. I just did all of the above 3 days ago and algae is already forming again!!! Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Tom Sounds like cynobacyeria (I probably misspelled that) or BGA. Search google for that or perhaps someone with expertise can comment on it from the plant guys...so I will crosspost for you..... Its a nutrient issue. PS. I would do a lot more water changes than you are to get the build-up out of there.......Just 25% at a time about 6 times over a few days......thats me though.... Small (I repeat small) doses of hydrogen peroxide applied directly to the slime w/ an eyedropper will kill the slime producing bacteria. you'll probably see a few bubbles and in a while the slime look like it's curling up. vac the slime out and repeat until it doesn't come back. I've done this directly to slime on plants with no damage to the plant (hygro) underneath. I don't have any snails, shrimp etc. in this tank so I don't know about their sensitivities but my rainbows, pleco & krib weren't phased a bit. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Green algae covering | Billy | Reefs | 1 | May 15th 04 09:15 PM |
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