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Unread 04/21/2006, 12:32 PM   #1
EB847
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will these eat hair algae?

got beginnings of hair algae (i think). will the margarita snails i just ordered eat it?


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Unread 04/21/2006, 12:52 PM   #2
Alaskan Reefer
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Margarita snails most likely not. Turbo snails sometimes.


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Unread 04/21/2006, 12:57 PM   #3
EB847
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suggestions? yellow tangs?


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Unread 04/21/2006, 01:18 PM   #4
RichConley
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Adding a tang is just going to make the problem worse.


Thats a tiny skimmer for that tank...


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Unread 04/21/2006, 01:26 PM   #5
ONEMANBAND
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Your tank is a month old, algae is naturally going to occur. Just keep testing water and try to limit phosphate inputs. Your tank will take at least 6months to a year to get "established"


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Unread 04/21/2006, 01:41 PM   #6
fish are life
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get a cowry. preferably a tiger cowry (spelling) they eat it like nothing els.


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Unread 04/21/2006, 02:01 PM   #7
pufferpoison
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what about a sailfin / algae blenny? aka lawnmower blenny? i just bought one and he's very little but is on the back glass with the hair algae giving his best


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Unread 04/21/2006, 02:03 PM   #8
reverendmaynard
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They are good HA eaters, the problem with them is they sometimes starve once it's gone. Make sure it'll eat prepared foods before buying.


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Unread 04/21/2006, 02:05 PM   #9
reverendmaynard
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A foxface will eat almost any algae, mine cleaned up my entire tank down to peach fuzz in about 2 weeks.


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Unread 04/21/2006, 02:19 PM   #10
palmer59
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Herbivores will help keep things clean but you still going to have to export nutrients out of the tank for it to be successful in the long run. In my opinion is a balancing act between importing and exporting nutrients.

Mike


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Unread 04/21/2006, 02:41 PM   #11
EB847
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Quote:
Originally posted by palmer59
Herbivores will help keep things clean but you still going to have to export nutrients out of the tank for it to be successful in the long run. In my opinion is a balancing act between importing and exporting nutrients.

Mike
besides water changes, how else can i do that?


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Unread 04/21/2006, 02:44 PM   #12
ANNIESREEF
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Quote:
Originally posted by EB847
besides water changes, how else can i do that?
I would like the answer to that also. I do all the right water changes with ro water(not tested yet). Still every other day I am in the tank with a toothbrush....


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Unread 04/21/2006, 02:50 PM   #13
reverendmaynard
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skimming, carbon, growing macro


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Unread 04/21/2006, 04:57 PM   #14
The Reefer91
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also phosphate reactors help a little


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Unread 04/21/2006, 05:19 PM   #15
palmer59
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Agree with last two answers. On my 280G I change 35 gallons every other week and I'm also wet skimming at the rate of two gallons or so a day. I use PO4 removal media (small amount), carbon and Ozone. There are other more controversial methods that shall remain unnamed but they seem to also rely on very heavy skimming for export.

Mike


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Unread 04/21/2006, 05:54 PM   #16
Alaskan Reefer
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Aggressive skimming, phosphate removing chemical media, macroalgae (with or without a separate refugium), water changes.

There aren't too many other ways to export nutrients...

Good (25X volume turnover+) flow in the tank will also help keep detritus suspended in the water column, which will help get it to the skimmer or macroalgae instead of settling on and eventually in your LR.

Other than dirty (not RO/DI) source water, the mistake I think that leads to most HA problems is overfeeding or constantly feeding with unrinsed frozen foods -- which can be HEAVY in phosphate, expecially frozen mysis shrimp...


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Unread 04/21/2006, 06:33 PM   #17
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Nothing will eat the long stuff: they'll only clip it off and let it drift into your downflow teeth, causing overflow. Get a toothbrush and rake that off down to a reasonable height. Then your margaritas can get the glass, conchs and hermits can get the sand, and other snails can get the rocks. But while you're doing that (the hard way) you have to change whatever caused your problem, which may be tank age, or too much feeding, or whatever. The good news is the algae you toss is 'exporting' phosphate, which won't go back into your system.


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Unread 04/21/2006, 06:34 PM   #18
Alaskan Reefer
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Aggressive skimming, phosphate removing chemical media, macroalgae (with or without a separate refugium), water changes.

There aren't too many other ways to export nutrients...

Good (25X volume turnover+) flow in the tank will also help keep detritus suspended in the water column, which will help get it to the skimmer or macroalgae instead of settling on and eventually in your LR.

Other than dirty (not RO/DI) source water, the mistake I think that leads to most HA problems is overfeeding or constantly feeding with unrinsed frozen foods -- which can be HEAVY in phosphate, expecially frozen mysis shrimp...


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