Hello Everyone--
I'm hoping I can get some help in identifying and getting rid of an annoying pest in my tank. I think these are dinos but would like to confirm.
Been battling this for a year now. First it started out as snot on my rockwork but that's now cleared up after significant effort. Now they appear to have moved to my sand. They appear as a brown dusting on my sand and if I leave them long enough, bubbles will appear in the brown dusting. Daily sand vacuuming just results in the mess coming back and I've spent a fortune in salt doing water changes. I tried lights out for 3 days and it knocked them back but inevitably they returned.
I suspect they are Ostreopsis; what I am seeing under the microscope looks exactly like what I'm finding online. The magnified pic (80X) shows grains of sand with the dynos. It's not the best pic but they look like little footballs and they move. Also to note, I have lost a ton of snails that end up dying after eating them off the glass, sand, or rocks. Interestingly enough, I've got bumble bee snails and they seem unaffected.
Any help would be much appreciated on identifying and getting rid of these. I've got a Red Sea Reefer 525xl for tank size reference. Parameters are all okay. In fact, if I go down to zero NO3 and PO4, the dyno problem only gets worse.
I'm hoping I can get some help in identifying and getting rid of an annoying pest in my tank. I think these are dinos but would like to confirm.
Been battling this for a year now. First it started out as snot on my rockwork but that's now cleared up after significant effort. Now they appear to have moved to my sand. They appear as a brown dusting on my sand and if I leave them long enough, bubbles will appear in the brown dusting. Daily sand vacuuming just results in the mess coming back and I've spent a fortune in salt doing water changes. I tried lights out for 3 days and it knocked them back but inevitably they returned.
I suspect they are Ostreopsis; what I am seeing under the microscope looks exactly like what I'm finding online. The magnified pic (80X) shows grains of sand with the dynos. It's not the best pic but they look like little footballs and they move. Also to note, I have lost a ton of snails that end up dying after eating them off the glass, sand, or rocks. Interestingly enough, I've got bumble bee snails and they seem unaffected.
Any help would be much appreciated on identifying and getting rid of these. I've got a Red Sea Reefer 525xl for tank size reference. Parameters are all okay. In fact, if I go down to zero NO3 and PO4, the dyno problem only gets worse.