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Unread 11/25/2013, 04:21 PM   #1
KevinM83
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Join Date: Jan 2013
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Unhappy Help! Red Valonia Outbreak

Outbreak is an understatement. I've been having an issue for some time with a single rock and spreading algae, but the birth of my first child has taken priority over dealing with it. Needless to say, I put it off, and now there is a lot of it in the tank. Hundreds of spores and it is now on multiple rocks.

I removed a lot of the affected rock two weeks ago and manually removed most of the spores then rinsed in tank water before replacing. That seemed to work at first, but now I think I have more spores than before.

I have cut back on feeding and light schedules, but it hasn't done anything.

What do I do? Hydrogen peroxide dip the rocks? Additives? Scrub again? I also have a small rock with a torch coral frag on it and the bubbles are starting to overtake. How should I remedy to make sure it isn't hurt? Coral RX?

I'm a beginner and struggling here! Thanks for any help!

29gal biocube
2 Ocellaris Clownfish
1 Torch coral
Green Star Polyp patch
Snails and Blue Leg Hermit Crabs


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Unread 11/25/2013, 04:51 PM   #2
sneeyatch
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Location: Virginia Beach, VA
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Red bubble algae isn't part of the valonia family, it's something different. It's actually a stemmed plant and you need to remove the stem / root of it in order to get rid of it. Best way is to break or cut the rock and remove a portion of the rock with the plant.

And yeah - it will spread like wildfire if you pop it as you already know.


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Unread 11/25/2013, 05:11 PM   #3
KevinM83
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Removing the portion of the rock is not an option. It's spread out across the surface.... Is there a sip to kill the roots or some other way? Am I replacing my rocks?


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Unread 11/25/2013, 09:48 PM   #4
sneeyatch
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Given the size of your tank, I would say no - but you can try urchins. They're pretty nondiscriminant as to what they eat, so the may help.

A lot of large herbivorous fish like tangs and fox face will eat it and keep it under control. I used to grow it in my sump and feed it to my tangs back in the day. They loved it.


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Unread 11/26/2013, 10:55 AM   #5
KevinM83
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I only have a 29 gallon so tang is not an option.

I may try to removethe rocks manually, rinse and peroxide dip it. My coral is hurting.....


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