Hello all. I have chrysophytes in a newly set up system that has been running for about 6 months. I have never encountered this before, in many years and setups. I did confirm it by microscope. My nitrates have been steady at 5-10, and Phosphate steady at .07 - .1. I started with some live rock from one of my other established tanks, and some dry rock. Very little dry sand as well, plus a cup of live sand from a vendor in the Keys, plus I seeded coralline from about 4 different sources after I kicked the lights on. I have nothing in the tank except a goby and some snails and hermits, which I feed lightly just to keep some nutrients in the system. I have been taking it extremely slow for the system to mature. Lights off for the first 2 months, then on 20% - 40% intensity on an 8 hour schedule thereafter. These chrysophytes just showed up about 2 months ago, and have exploded. The entire tank is a think blanket of it on the rocks and sand. Manual removal is easy, which I have done multiple times, but it's back within a few days, worse than ever.
At this point, I am desperate for a remedy. Waiting it out is obviously not going to work. If at all possible, I do not want to treat with any algeacide or other chemical and just create some other problem. If I have no other choice, I'll do it. But I really, really don't want to. I did add some beneficial bacteria at start up, as well as a few bottles of Microbe-lift about a month ago, over a one month period. Now I just look at the mess and wonder what I can do. It just keeps getting worse.
In the past, I have found black-outs to only be a temporary fix, with no long term success of solving anything. But, being desperate, I have tried this for 3-5 days with this current problem, 2 different times, with no change. Since I have no corals yet, I am considering blacking out the tank for a lengthy period. Like a month or more. Whatever it takes. Does anyone know if this would permanently kill it and solve the issue? It is clear this stuff is photosynthetic. I am really struggling for answers here if anyone can help. I have searched and read all I can find, but I have no comfort on a path forward.
At this point, I am desperate for a remedy. Waiting it out is obviously not going to work. If at all possible, I do not want to treat with any algeacide or other chemical and just create some other problem. If I have no other choice, I'll do it. But I really, really don't want to. I did add some beneficial bacteria at start up, as well as a few bottles of Microbe-lift about a month ago, over a one month period. Now I just look at the mess and wonder what I can do. It just keeps getting worse.
In the past, I have found black-outs to only be a temporary fix, with no long term success of solving anything. But, being desperate, I have tried this for 3-5 days with this current problem, 2 different times, with no change. Since I have no corals yet, I am considering blacking out the tank for a lengthy period. Like a month or more. Whatever it takes. Does anyone know if this would permanently kill it and solve the issue? It is clear this stuff is photosynthetic. I am really struggling for answers here if anyone can help. I have searched and read all I can find, but I have no comfort on a path forward.