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#1
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I have been battling BBA for a while now in my 55 gallon freshwater
tank. I know that excess phosphates are one contibuting factor. Untill recently I was unable to find a test to tell me what my phosphate levels were. Well, I finally found a phosphate test and it says that the phosphate levels in my tank are 2 ppm. I also tested my tap water and the levels are the same (2 ppm). My question is, what level of phosphate is considered "excessive" pr high...does BBA need a certain level in order to thrive? I have recently purchased some "phosban" and put some into my canister filter. The next day my phosphate level was at 0.5 ppm. Any information is greatly appreciated. Thanks. |
#2
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... I have been battling BBA for a while now in my 55 gallon freshwater tank. I know that excess phosphates are one contibuting factor. Untill recently I was unable to find a test to tell me what my phosphate levels were. Well, I finally found a phosphate test and it says that the phosphate levels in my tank are 2 ppm. I also tested my tap water and the levels are the same (2 ppm). Where did you find the phosphate tester? -ED |
#3
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I bought mine at a "petland" store. It is manufactured by Aquarium
Pharmaceuticals. Here is a link to the AP site: http://aquariumpharm.com/en_us/produ...yname=TestKits |
#4
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Even if the PO4 test is correct, your enmtire assumption about the
cause(not the correlation) of PO4 being the root or even the contributing gfactor to BBA is flatly wrong. This was shown over a decade ago both in the USA and in Germany. We limited the PO4 to less than 0.1ppm, which is about as low as any decent test kit can go, which was a Hach and a Lamotte test kit and we used KH2PO4 for standards to check if the test kits where accurately reading. We found no corelation between BBa and PO4 levels, if anything, there was a strong relationship between higher PO4 levels and lower presence of BBA. In any event, folks routinely on most popular aquatic plant forums and boards add KH2PO4 to maintain 2-3ppm of PO4 through the week. They have no BBA. I've been adding PO4 for at least 15 years. I have no BBA. Sio if you accept that high PO4 causes algae/BBA, where is my algae? This hypothesis is wrong, this is a myth and has been said as such. The information you got that is was caused by high/excess PO4 is very outdated, 20-30 years or more old and based on __myth__, not any testing. If someone says algae is caused by X, I add X to an otherwise healthy tank, and I do not get algae, it's difficult to sugegst that X causes algae. If you want to stop BBA, learn how to use CO2 if you add that. Low and variable CO2 levels are the only cause for BBA I'm aware off in CO2 enriched tanks. In non CO2 tanks, stop doing water changes and add enough to top off for evaporation. For the CO2 tanks, add enough to get about 25-30ppm and keep it there throughout the day peroid. That's it and you do not need PO4 removers, they will not help. Regards, Tom Barr www.BarrReport.com |
#5
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#7
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Actually BBA appeared in my tank once my pH sensor went faulty and lowered
my pH to 6.2 - that was some 80+ppm of CO2! It quickly took over. The only way I know of destroying it is to use Flourish Excel, you need to perform the initial dose and then everyday thereafter, do a 2x or 3x dose for 2 weeks. When you put the stuff in the tank, squirt it directly onto the algae - it will die within a couple of days going red and then white. Also up your CO2 to at least 30ppm - apparently this stops it growing but I'm not convinced about this tbh. Of course make sure you tank are in balance, all the proper plant nutrients, low phosphate (0.1ppm), low nitrate (5ppm) and get your plants growing. BBA will gradually die off if your plants are growing well and everything is in balance. -- Best regards Mark wrote in message oups.com... Even if the PO4 test is correct, your enmtire assumption about the cause(not the correlation) of PO4 being the root or even the contributing gfactor to BBA is flatly wrong. This was shown over a decade ago both in the USA and in Germany. We limited the PO4 to less than 0.1ppm, which is about as low as any decent test kit can go, which was a Hach and a Lamotte test kit and we used KH2PO4 for standards to check if the test kits where accurately reading. We found no corelation between BBa and PO4 levels, if anything, there was a strong relationship between higher PO4 levels and lower presence of BBA. In any event, folks routinely on most popular aquatic plant forums and boards add KH2PO4 to maintain 2-3ppm of PO4 through the week. They have no BBA. I've been adding PO4 for at least 15 years. I have no BBA. Sio if you accept that high PO4 causes algae/BBA, where is my algae? This hypothesis is wrong, this is a myth and has been said as such. The information you got that is was caused by high/excess PO4 is very outdated, 20-30 years or more old and based on __myth__, not any testing. If someone says algae is caused by X, I add X to an otherwise healthy tank, and I do not get algae, it's difficult to sugegst that X causes algae. If you want to stop BBA, learn how to use CO2 if you add that. Low and variable CO2 levels are the only cause for BBA I'm aware off in CO2 enriched tanks. In non CO2 tanks, stop doing water changes and add enough to top off for evaporation. For the CO2 tanks, add enough to get about 25-30ppm and keep it there throughout the day peroid. That's it and you do not need PO4 removers, they will not help. Regards, Tom Barr www.BarrReport.com |
#8
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*Note: There are two "Koi-Lo's" on the pond and aquaria groups.
"Mark Baldwin" wrote in message ... The only way I know of destroying it is to use Flourish Excel, you need to perform the initial dose and then everyday thereafter, do a 2x or 3x dose for 2 weeks. When you put the stuff in the tank, squirt it directly onto the algae - it will die within a couple of days going red and then white. Mark, that didn't work in my tanks. All the Excel did was stop it from spreading. It never turned white. It took several algae eaters to clean up the tanks plus the Excel and micronutrients. Now however, I have a black stringy, wiry algae none of them will eat. I'm going through Excel like a drunk goes through a 6-pack. Also up your CO2 to at least 30ppm - apparently this stops it growing but I'm not convinced about this tbh. Of course make sure you tank are in balance, all the proper plant nutrients, low phosphate (0.1ppm), low nitrate (5ppm) and get your plants growing. BBA will gradually die off if your plants are growing well and everything is in balance. -- Koi-Lo.... Aquariums since 1952. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 Aquarium FAQ are at: http://faq.thekrib.com/ ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö ~~~~ }((((({* |
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