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@mccarroll this thread has giving me another chance of hope to fight these dinos. I have spoke to you before regarding this problem.
I also run a ULNS (Zeovit system) and after reading this thread, my po4 and n03 have been near 0 since I cycled the tank.
My sps and lps colors, PE, and growth are great
Questions: Are certain p04 or n03 products recommended for dosing?
For a 120g, where do I want my p04 and n03 levels to rise to, and for how long?
I want to give dosing p04 and n03 a shot and see if this can help me out.
I hope this works, but I will post my results as we work through this. I've tried bleach, h202, lights out (blanket over tank) and nothing has worked...
That video is mostly large-cell amphidinium. I think your nutrient approach is sensible.
Uv or other methods that target water column will be useless. Metro not helpful, Darkness useless too, and their ability to go down into the sand makes them less susceptible to chemical attacks like bleach and h2o2.
They are kinda hard to kill, but the good news is they are pretty low-toxin, and some tough grazers do eat them.
I don't see any. I see large cell amphidinium, a spherical (probably) dinoflagellate of some sort - at around 7 seconds, some pinnate diatoms, and not much else.Is it just me or were there some O. ovata wheeling around in there as well?
One comes into focus right about 7 seconds in the vid but I thought I saw more later too:
I don't see any. I see large cell amphidinium, a spherical (probably) dinoflagellate of some sort - at around 7 seconds, some pinnate diatoms, and not much else.
Is everyone using Seachem Flourish Phosphorus as their PO4 supplement?
Yep. Dinos love a monoculture. If you can push the system far from dinos only (even if you still have bunches of them) you're probably headed the right way.Cool! Still interesting that it seems to be a more heterogenous group than in at least some recent photo's/videos.
Little change of plans. Bought a house and just moved. After sucking all water out and some sand, I replaced with 1 20lb of live sand. Not sure how long it may be before I see dinos again. I'll keep track tho.
Thank you mcarroll, I can do some experiments if you want, my friend told me he will take my corals and also fish so I can try some other methods if you like to before I do a restart, I would like my English to be better I really dont know what PUAs are, its some kind of medicacion? If you want I do some experiments, tell me and I can try.@Jolanta I think a long-term blackout could work, but that may simply inspire spore formation so they come back when the lights come back on. (Me surmising....that's not from the literature.)
High temperatures (tropical numbers), and available nutrients (N, P and C) seem to be Ostreopsis's main preferences. They basically like ideal growing conditions.
Reducing N, C and temp specifically would seem to be very desirable if you can come up with a good set of methods. Any thoughts on this?
When you get down to talking about specific strains of Ostreopsis, then there seem to be differences in light preferences (among other things) which we might be able to exploit too.
Additionally, polyunsaturated aldehydes (PUA's) have been documented as suppressing Ostreopsis to an extent. Interesting that PUA's are apparently a natural byproduct of predation on diatoms by copepods. No copepods? No Diatoms? No natural suppression. It's just one angle of natural suppression that we might be able to enlist– there are others.
And according to research, they do still seem subject to competition and predation in an otherwise healthy ecosystem......for example, @brandon429 (correct me if wrong) seems to have a co-existing population of Ostreopsis, and I think I've seen one or two other folks document them as well.
Proactive measures like...
...are also recommended to help build a healthier diversity of microbial life during the recovery.
- adding copepods
- adding larger grazers like snails
- adding detritus, sand or rocks, corals, etc from a healthy tank, etc
From what I have read copper should work.
But copper wont be absorbed by rock so I couldnt use it after restart? I think it will kill all in the tank so it would be the same as add muriatic acid or a lot or bleach or Im wrong?Jolanta, seen as though you have no livestock why don't you try large amounts of copper dosing. From what I have read copper should work.