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Your dinos are getting worse? What type of coral do you have? Do you dose 2 part and Mg? Do you have a healthy pod population?I'm at 0.18 PO4 and 5 NO3 and mine are getting worse
I don't have the best scope, hopefully you can see from this photo, im not sure what they are.@Reeferhigh remind me have you ID'd your dino's yet?
It looks like ostreopsis for meI don't have the best scope, hopefully you can see from this photo, im not sure what they are.
Forgot to tag you in my post. Waiting for your reply.
I don't have the best scope, hopefully you can see from this photo, im not sure what they are.
are there any scientific links that describe curing dinos in the aquarium
Ive yet to see any claimed method
I must have missed the answers to my previous questions. Feel free to PM me if you'd like.I'm not very experienced at ID, but that seems like a community that's at least somewhat heterogenous. Am I mistaken and that's 100% dino's? (Or nearly..)
Jolanta has answered, and I do see at least one or two cartwheeling blobs in there, so....
Another opinion never hurts (if @taricha is around).
Keep up with my posts here (follow function on my profile and on this thread) and follow my blog (reeformadness.wordpress.com) and you'll know what I know. There's a ton of info out there, but it's also a rapidly developing area of research.
Science doesn't really look at aquariums much (a little tho!), so you have to be willing to read outside the box and connect dots or you're left with nothing but hobby material to read. If that's all you have, you may as well try some House blessing spells.
One of the coolest finds in the literature has been that a healthy substrate (vs an immature, starved, bleached, h2o2's, antibiotic'd one) has a significantly lower biomass potential for Ostreopsis due to predation on and general competition with Ostreopsis – so they do not outcompete everything, just most everything, and especially when conditions are just right.
When we hobble or kill their less-tough competition and predators by doing all those parentheticals I mentioned, they can bloom uncontrolled. We take it from bad to worse.
Going from worse to better is always a long, hard road BTW.....in tanks and in life.
On that topic, check this one out (not a new one if you've been there before):
Response of heterotrophic bacteria, autotrophic picoplankton and heterotrophic nanoflagellates to re-oligotrophication
Gah!!! This is no "method" or push-button fix. Those are the reason I created this thread.
Improved husbandry has been the point of this thread (so far) – straightening out a dino-tank's nutrient situation. This requires some troubleshooting and usually some husbandry changes!
Time will tell of course, but this seems to work in 100% of non-Ostreopsis cases so far.
And better husbandry is a very sustainable "method" – importantly, there's nothing I've seen in the literature that contradicts this.
Unlike what seem to be the majority of dino cases (so far) where the dino's have most likely always been around and all they want is to not starve, be fed and otherwise left alone, Ostreopsis appear to be invaders from colder water that get a charge out of higher temperatures like our tanks supply. As near as I can tell, they're a side-effect of raised nutrients along with a reliable transportation vector – treated ballast water from ships coming from colder ports.
There are so many strains of Ostreopsis that the situation with them is still a little complicated to me, but N-limitation and C-limitation seem like they will also be in the fix along with lower temperatures.
Since our tanks tend to be very nutrient-loaded AND we have a habit of using more-C as our only tool to lower N, I think this is going to be tricky to fix.
Lowering livestock levels and dosing with kalk are two things....possibly also increasing light levels. But there's a lot more reading to do. All that may still only apply to "some" Ostreopsis.
P-starvation is still OUT for all strains of all dino's, BTW.
For what it's worth, the other solutions you mentioned might be alright to some degree if they were in any degree sustainable, but they are not – most of them are stunts more than they are treatments, and they harm the overall recovery effort instead of helping it.
Agreed. Some of those ostreopsis are turned sideways making it look like a different shape, but they are all the sesame seed ostreopsis.Yep 100% cartwheeling dinos, so ostreopsis it is.