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Unread 09/12/2015, 09:05 AM   #1
serene75
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Green Hair Algea

Hi all,

I did a mistake and now I'm harvesting what I did..
I have recently upgraded my 40 gallon breeder tank to innovative marine SR120 tank, by that I added additional dry rock's to my tank.. the big mistake is that I did not cure the new rocks, and now I'm facing algae all over my tank ..
I have been going regular water changes and adding in phosphate RX drops but still the problem remains..

What can I possibly do to clear them out.. need advise please .


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Unread 09/12/2015, 09:09 AM   #2
shifty51008
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If your phosphates were high you will have to change the gfo daily, it actually gets used up within a couple hours depending on levels.

Add a few turbo snails to help also till you get your phosphate and nitrate levels in check.


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Unread 09/12/2015, 09:10 AM   #3
shifty51008
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Also are you useing rodi water for your water changes?


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Unread 09/12/2015, 10:00 AM   #4
serene75
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Quote:
Originally Posted by shifty51008 View Post
Also are you useing rodi water for your water changes?
Yes I do use and I also now add some water conditioner to be more safe


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Unread 09/12/2015, 10:01 AM   #5
serene75
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Quote:
Originally Posted by shifty51008 View Post
If your phosphates were high you will have to change the gfo daily, it actually gets used up within a couple hours depending on levels.

Add a few turbo snails to help also till you get your phosphate and nitrate levels in check.
I changed my GFO today with the water change ..


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Unread 09/13/2015, 09:17 AM   #6
zaitmi
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Send pic of ur tank..so that other members can help u in better ways also post ur parameters.


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Unread 09/13/2015, 04:03 PM   #7
stingeragent
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Is it GHA? You could get a sea hare. Will make quick work of it. They starve out fast though once they eat everything so you'll have to rehome him.


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Unread 09/13/2015, 11:41 PM   #8
AZRippster
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Investigate Algae Turf Scrubbers (ATS). I was battling bryopsis (GHA) in our 450 DT until I implemented an ATS. GFO helped, and being vigilant in not overdoing feedings goes a long ways, but nothing as significant as an ATS. Once the ATS' mesh grew roots, it took about 2 weeks for the bryopsis to disappear. Admittedly I still have GFO running, but I will be taking that off in the next 2 weeks. Besides the removal of phosphates, an ATS has numerous other benefits.


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Unread 09/14/2015, 01:20 AM   #9
CStrickland
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AZRippster View Post
Investigate Algae Turf Scrubbers (ATS). I was battling bryopsis (GHA) in our 450 DT until I implemented an ATS. GFO helped, and being vigilant in not overdoing feedings goes a long ways, but nothing as significant as an ATS. Once the ATS' mesh grew roots, it took about 2 weeks for the bryopsis to disappear.
I don't think bryopsis and gha are the same. I would think an ats would work a lot better on gha than bryopsis.
Here's a good link for id'ing algae that I've found helpful: https://www.reefcleaners.org/nuisance-algae-id-guide


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Unread 09/14/2015, 08:47 AM   #10
blando233
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change GFO and i would also check your RO to make sure it is at 0. Obviously water changes and what i did when i had this issue i bought a emerald crab and when i stuck him in the tank i put him right by the hair algae and the next day it was gone. I feel like they do there work at night. After that i just keep checking to make sure my phos is at 0 etc.


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Unread 09/14/2015, 08:48 AM   #11
Bent
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If it is indeed GHA. Your best option is:

1: nutrient control. Your using an RO/DI but I would fill up a glass with the output and check it for Po4. If that checks out, then you are getting nutrients probably from a couple of sources. The two biggest culprits are food/detritus and rocks leeching it. Did you cook your rock before adding it? One thing to do is fill a bucket up with R/O saltwater mix, test the po4, drop one of the questionable rocks in it, add a heater and power head and run it for a couple days. After about 2-5 days, test the po4 and compare it to the original. If it's high, then the rock is leeching it. In that case there isn't much you can do besides keep your GFO fresh and scrub them. Eventually when the po4 source is exhausted the algae should die back. Then make sure you address the detritus. Take a shop vac to the sump and suck all that crap out and Siphon the sand bed during water changes. For between water changes, you may even want to either invest in one of those gravel vacs, or you can simply route the end of the siphon back into the sump and put the end in a filter sock. That way you can siphon and filter to your hearts content between changes.

2: light is another source of energy for it, decreasing your photo period by a few hours, or just doing a 3 day blackout will help as well. Though if the nutrient issue is still present, the algae will return once the lights come back on.

3: manual removal is unavoidable. While a sea hare will indeed eat it, I can offer a few pointers that I have learned from my attempt at keeping one long term. (Successfully so far.)
-a sea hare (or any CUC member) will only address the symptom. While they typically are wonderful and chewing up the stuff, the reason why they are so good at it is also a problem. They must eat a lot simply because their GI system is grossly inefficient. Which means that they are simply relocating the algae for hair form to...err.."pellet" form. Which they make a TON of. So unless you are cleaning up their pellets, the algae will come back.
-I don't condone purchasing an animal that you plan on using and throwing away. So when the hair algae is gone, and you let him starve because you weren't prepared to meet his needs, that's on your conscience.

So you see, your still going to have to manually remove the stuff regardless.

Hope that helps.


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