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Are you looking for help or appreciation?algae problem in saltwater fish tank
New to the hobby parameters alkalinity 8.5 calcium 450 SPS and LPS mixed reef I am using all four reef tropic Marin for my dosingAre you looking for help or appreciation?
If you're looking for help you could start by providing information about tank parameters, age of tank, and what you are using to remove the algae.
thank you for the information. Will keep thought on that.Quite a fun looking reef! Love the zoa palate! What’s your CUC? I’m not super knowledgeable, but I can tell you that bumblebee snails, small hermit crabs, and Mexican turbo snails are never a bad idea. Many people love peppermint shrimp too as a part of a CUC because they can even eat aiptasia! However they have been known to eat corals too. They like a lot of foods and if they don’t get enough variation they can become trouble makers. Sometimes they won’t even eat whatever nuisance got you to introduce it in the first place. I have never owned one myself, as even though I have heard mostly good things about peppermint shrimp, the negatives just don’t justify it for me. You could also try sea slugs, but they run the risk of getting shredded in your powerhead or getting sucked up by your filter. I have read some people cover their points of danger with mesh though and have no issues. Could be fun excuse to buy something like a sea hare. Biological solutions are a lot of fun imo.
It looks kinda like sea hair algae which could mean you have a low flow rate. From what I know, hair algae can only grow if there is enough nutrients and low enough flow to make roots.
Again I am also not very knowledgeable in the saltwater world, but I hope this helped even a little
how can I fix that?Looks like Dinoflagellates
how can I fix that?
What’s your phosphate level? Where I live the phosphate is incredibly high and I have to treat my water a second time to remove the phosphate that makes it through the resin of my RO system to keep it lowNew to the hobby parameters alkalinity 8.5 calcium 450 SPS and LPS mixed reef I am using all four reef tropic Marin for my dosing
Listen to him first lol he seems to know what he’s talking aboutAre your nutrients low? They can be difficult to irradiate. Often you need to increase nutrients, diversity, dose pods, phytoplankton, some use blackouts and UV.
Not going to lie, it is the most annoying thing to have and not all types respond to the same treatment.
Here is a useful thread:
A Dinoflagellate Treatment Guide
As the title suggests, this is intended as a short guide on what to do when you suspect dinoflagellates are trying to overtake your system. It is an attempt to boil down the protocols discussed across 11,000 posts in this "Are you Tired" thread...www.reef2reef.com
Okay, do you know what your Nitrate and Phosphate levels are?New to the hobby parameters alkalinity 8.5 calcium 450 SPS and LPS mixed reef I am using all four reef tropic Marin for my dosing
Okay, do you know what your Nitrate and Phosphate levels are?
Can you take a photo with white light only (turn off the blues) ?
It's a little difficult to determine what it is growing on the rock.
It may be algae or as suggested above, Dinoflagellates.
I checked all my parameters. They are perfect.
What is the phosphate specifically?I checked all my parameters. They are perfect.
With my bioload anything above .25 and I get a bloomWhat is the phosphate specifically?
Okay, do you know what your Nitrate and Phosphate levels are?
Can you take a photo with white light only (turn off the blues) ?
It's a little difficult to determine what it is growing on the rock.
It may be algae or as suggested above, Dinoflagellates.
0.03What is the phosphate specifically?
That is odd for sure. I’m out of ideas lol sorry. How big is your CUC?0.03
What are you using to measure it?0.03
thank you will keep that in mindWhat are you using to measure it?
If it's a Hanna Phosphate ULR the error margin is +/-0.03
That could mean that your phosphate is actually 0.00 which could explain Dino's.
You should aim for around 0.10ppm