Hey everyone, I have been battling prorocentrum dinos for 1.5 years at this point. It likely started due to phosphate bottoming out as well as me using tap water. I am a student so I'm a little tight in the financial department so it took a while to get an RODI. My params: Alk 8.6, pH. 7.9, Calc 490-510, Mag 1430, NO3 8-10, PO4 .04 all tested using salifert. Temp and SG are around 77-80 and 1.025-1.026.
So far I have dosed phos and Nitrate and it successfully led to a huge algae bloom, but that became a problem because it was suffocating my corals and the dinos just started growing on the algae. Recently I got fed up with it and scrubbed all of the algae off with a toothbrush and some hydrogen peroxide. That wasn't the best idea because the dinos are back worse than usual. So for now I've decided to take a more laid back approach instead. I am planning on adding live sand and a piece or 2 of live rock. I also plan on adding a cup of florida pets mud, reducing the lighting, and just keeping up with water changes from there. Has anyone had experience with using live rock/sand to combat dinos. I regrettably started the tank with all dry rock. Any advice? #reefsquad
What I have tried: Silica dosing. Since I don't have any sand right now I don't think it was particularly useful, but when I add some live sand I will probably dose a little silica.
Blackouts with H2O2: Useless.
UV: Useless
Manual removal: Also Useless
I am not keen on using any chemicals like vibrant or dino X so I will be avoiding those.
So far I have dosed phos and Nitrate and it successfully led to a huge algae bloom, but that became a problem because it was suffocating my corals and the dinos just started growing on the algae. Recently I got fed up with it and scrubbed all of the algae off with a toothbrush and some hydrogen peroxide. That wasn't the best idea because the dinos are back worse than usual. So for now I've decided to take a more laid back approach instead. I am planning on adding live sand and a piece or 2 of live rock. I also plan on adding a cup of florida pets mud, reducing the lighting, and just keeping up with water changes from there. Has anyone had experience with using live rock/sand to combat dinos. I regrettably started the tank with all dry rock. Any advice? #reefsquad
What I have tried: Silica dosing. Since I don't have any sand right now I don't think it was particularly useful, but when I add some live sand I will probably dose a little silica.
Blackouts with H2O2: Useless.
UV: Useless
Manual removal: Also Useless
I am not keen on using any chemicals like vibrant or dino X so I will be avoiding those.