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Unread 02/10/2014, 05:14 PM   #1
Keitho109
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What type of algae is this ? And how do I make it go away

I have this red algae starting to spread thru my tank and I'm not sure on how to get rid of. Ill post a picture in the attachments with this post. I was thinking it might be some like red hair algae and read online that it's phosphate problem so I added some phos-ban in my fuge in a high flow area to try and rid the problem. What eats this stuff tangs ? Rabbit fish ? Emerald crabs ?


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Unread 02/10/2014, 05:32 PM   #2
Mhay
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Possibly cyano. How old is the tank? If it is cyano typically a phosphate reactor will help. If it's a newer tank it might just run its course and be done


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Unread 02/10/2014, 05:36 PM   #3
Misled
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Yep, that's cyano. As said, if the tank is young, give it some time.


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Unread 02/10/2014, 06:09 PM   #4
Keitho109
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Tank is almost two years old I turned off my pumps and let the water become still then scrubbed the stuff off with a tooth brush, netted the big chunks then did a 20 percent water change to suck up what I could that was on the rock/sand/floating. I moved some of the jets around to try and create a different flow threw the tank to maybe help the dead flow areas. I figured it was cyano just wanted to be sure I've only been in the hobby for about two years now. Doing a 75g display tank with a 75 gallon sump build this summer have already bought both tanks. Hopefully more ppm will lessen some of my issues. But I know with bigger tanks come bigger problems.


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Unread 02/10/2014, 06:17 PM   #5
bnumair
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not algae its cyano bacteria. kill lights for 4 days. increase flow in areas you see it most. its common in young tank.


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Water Quality: NO3 0,Phos 0,Cal 440,Alk 7.5,Mag 1300

"Reef Fast, You Crash, Reef Slow, You Pass" Mike's Reef 3:16

Current Tank Info: 350g DT,95g sump, 50g Frag tank, 4800gph return 4x Sea swirls. 6x AI Vega Color. 200# Pukani rock, dual recirculating skimmer, Biopellet, GFO Carbon rx's, Cal rx. Closed loop. 1.5hp chiller, genesis renew. Apex & RKE
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Unread 02/10/2014, 06:25 PM   #6
Sk8r
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Read the sticky on cyanobacteria above. Everybody gets it, but it's usually not a serious problem.


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Salinity 1.024-6; alkalinity 8.3-9.3 on KH scale; calcium 420; magnesium 1300, temp 78-80, nitrate .2. Ammonia 0. No filters: lps tank. Alk and cal won't rise if mg is low.

Current Tank Info: 105g AquaVim wedge, yellow tang, sailfin blenny,royal gramma, ocellaris clown pair, yellow watchman, 100 microceriths, 25 tiny hermits, a 4" conch, 1" nassarius, recovering from 2 year hiatus with daily water change of 10%.
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Unread 02/10/2014, 07:29 PM   #7
Keitho109
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Killing the lights for that long won't hurt the corals ?


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Unread 02/10/2014, 08:56 PM   #8
bnumair
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killing lights for 3-4 days will not hurt corals. hurricanes/storms in seas last for weeks with no sunlight. 3-4 days lights off is a very common practice in reef tanks for rid algae or cyano.


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Water Quality: NO3 0,Phos 0,Cal 440,Alk 7.5,Mag 1300

"Reef Fast, You Crash, Reef Slow, You Pass" Mike's Reef 3:16

Current Tank Info: 350g DT,95g sump, 50g Frag tank, 4800gph return 4x Sea swirls. 6x AI Vega Color. 200# Pukani rock, dual recirculating skimmer, Biopellet, GFO Carbon rx's, Cal rx. Closed loop. 1.5hp chiller, genesis renew. Apex & RKE
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Unread 02/10/2014, 11:07 PM   #9
Keitho109
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bnumair View Post
killing lights for 3-4 days will not hurt corals. hurricanes/storms in seas last for weeks with no sunlight. 3-4 days lights off is a very common practice in reef tanks for rid algae or cyano.
Makes sense thanks for the advice


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Unread 02/11/2014, 03:17 AM   #10
Crooked Reef
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Increased flow in the area will help also.


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Unread 03/04/2014, 07:41 PM   #11
Keitho109
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Okay so I increased the flow in these areas and did a four day lights out cycle and it hasn't gone away what's the next option. Is been about two months now of battling the stuff trying to brush it off the rock and suck it out in a water change.


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Unread 03/04/2014, 07:54 PM   #12
AT_Hiker
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I use to battle cyanobacteria a lot, but after I bought a yellow-headed goby the problem went away. now keep in mind that putting a sand-sifting goby in your tank introduces other issues...like your rock work getting knocked over, and having sand where you don't want it, but the cyano is long gone.


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Current Tank Info: 75 gal. DT, 20 gal sump using Herbie overflow. Skimmer: SRO XP1000SSS. Return Pump: Eheim 1260. BRS dual reactor for GFO & GAC. Lights: 2 Ecotech XR30W Pro Gen 3, Powerheads: 2 Ecotech MP10s Controller: Neptune Apex Jr. Water: BRS 6 Stage RODI
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Unread 03/04/2014, 08:30 PM   #13
Keitho109
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I have a orange spot goby but I have black sand in my tank I think I'm going to try my luck with white sand in my new 75 gallon build. I just did a water test for the start of this week and here is my results
High range ph is 7.4
Nitrate is 20 ppm
Nitrite is 0ppm
And ammonia is at 0 ppm - 0.25 ppm


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Unread 03/05/2014, 06:39 AM   #14
faithenfire
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trochus snails are supposed to have a special love for cyano. they work well in my tank
i like them. they last longer than turbos and can turn themselves over and will eat algae too


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Current Tank Info: I am a caretaker of a 7ish year old 26 gal bowfront tank. I have watchman goby, a gold stripe neon goby, a rainford goby, pajama cardinal, possum wrasse and a clean up crew including a wall/rock climbing serpent star
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Unread 03/05/2014, 09:59 AM   #15
pyithar
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+1 on trochus snails. when i had cyano in my fuge, i put two of them, and they cleaned every bit of it. i then raised my Mg a bit. i havent seen any cyano since.


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Unread 03/05/2014, 05:40 PM   #16
Nace
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What are your phosphates at? For me the lights out plus turning back on my reactor with GFO in it solved the problem.


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Unread 03/06/2014, 11:46 PM   #17
Keitho109
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Thanks

Quote:
Originally Posted by pyithar View Post
+1 on trochus snails. when i had cyano in my fuge, i put two of them, and they cleaned every bit of it. i then raised my Mg a bit. i havent seen any cyano since.
Thanks I have trochus snails on the way


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