Algae ID please!

Deltec

Kruss7

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Hi all,


Looking for an ID on 2 kinds of Algae I’m facing, very small patches of it but I want to figure it out early.

First is a red hair style algae, it is hard to manually remove it from the rock, it seems to only also be in a lower flow area between my acro colonies.

The second is a green small leaf like algae

Parameters
Phosphates 0.05
Nitrate 5 ppm
Alk dkH
Calcium 430
Mag 1488
Ph 8.16
Temp 79
Salinity 1.026

98720347-3F94-499E-971A-9A8303A4D8B0.jpeg 6E445C93-9D12-4662-BA4F-BCE1ADF189B5.jpeg 078FFF23-E649-425F-AA09-C2B633065600.jpeg 5D8346A1-01AC-4619-A93D-CA5B0792EE62.jpeg 34EC8BFC-DC61-417E-952B-D0F893EA3366.jpeg
 
Last edited:
AS
AS
OP
OP
K

Kruss7

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pics under whites. if possible can we get any pics of pieces out of water? how solid is the algae?
Here’s some pics under whites.

the red algae was more solid than the pictures but I pulled some out the other day.
 

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Avast
Avast

SlugSnorter

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OP, it seems we narrowed it down to Gelidium and Dictyota, as always, nutrient management and manual removal will help


Dictyota:

Somewhat easy to remove by hand, or at least to cut down for the cleaners to grab at. Its eaten by some crabs, many urchins, and some the more voracious and multi-algae eating snails (Limpets, Chiton, and some Turbos) (and of course sea hares)


Gelidium:

pretty hard to remove by hand, and can regrow from little bits and spread from them too. Turbos and Urchins (as well as those sea hares) eat it. Some crabs may also eat it.
 

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OP, it seems we narrowed it down to Gelidium and Dictyota, as always, nutrient management and manual removal will help


Dictyota:

Somewhat easy to remove by hand, or at least to cut down for the cleaners to grab at. Its eaten by some crabs, many urchins, and some the more voracious and multi-algae eating snails (Limpets, Chiton, and some Turbos) (and of course sea hares)


Gelidium:

pretty hard to remove by hand, and can regrow from little bits and spread from them too. Turbos and Urchins (as well as those sea hares) eat it. Some crabs may also eat it.
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