Here we go again.
Another picture of the bronze small cells.
Ideas fellas?
The color still suggests dino pigments....doubt that's very concrete though. Could as easily be something that ate dino's.
Any remarkable movement?
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Here we go again.
Another picture of the bronze small cells.
Ideas fellas?
The color still suggests dino pigments....doubt that's very concrete though. Could as easily be something that ate dino's.
Any remarkable movement?
I do not blast the rocks, i do vaccum the top layer of sand tho.@m0jjen Still looks like a fair amount of green growing in the tank, so at least there's that. Do you vacuum the gravel and "blast clean" off the rocks when you do water changes, BTW?
I would start blast the rocks and I would get more intensive with the gravel vacuuming. Running a diatom or micron filter helps too.
Removing cells – whether living or dead – should be a major priority. Bacteria will keep the tank excessively nutrient limited as long as there's such a humongous carbon source in the tank to propel them.
Metro is not sufficient by itself – there are too many affirmative examples of this to discount.
Bacteria will keep the tank excessively nutrient limited as long as there's such a humongous carbon source in the tank to propel them.
I would start blast the rocks and I would get more intensive with the gravel vacuuming. Running a diatom or micron filter helps too.
Removing cells – whether living or dead – should be a major priority. Bacteria will keep the tank excessively nutrient limited as long as there's such a humongous carbon source in the tank to propel them.
Sorry, referring back to prior comments in the thread....
Dino's we're dealing with are "armored"...they have a shell called a "theca" that's composed of an extremely high-carbon substance (cellulose I think?).
Bacteria are ordinarily carbon-limited in a healthy reef environment.
Once conditions switch and dino's go into "Mode Overkill" and start blooming, they have switched to heterotrophy....they're no longer depending on dissolved nutrients and sunshine, they're eating things....like bacteria. It's a huge food source, so they bloom like crazy. Lots of cells!
As cells divide and die off, the guts of the cell decompose rapidly under bacterial action.
But the skeleton (shell/theca) takes significantly more nutrients (particularly N and P) for bacteria to be able to fully break them down.
So the skeletons accumulate and accumulate, growing more and more bacteria, which put a more and more thorough drain on dissolved nutrients.
Fine for the heterotrophs that can eat stuff and have no dependency for dissolved nutrients...but your entire photosynthetic food chain suffers...and literally dies off. Trading the good guys for the bad.
All along the bad dino's are outcompeting all the other good heterotrophs either by sheer numbers or by toxin generation. They are capable of fairly complete decimation of the microbial food web. Beyond a certain point, it pretty much makes a recovery impossible without external inputs.
If we thoroughly sterilize some growth medium, and just let nature fill in the gaps, it usually isn't good things that take over. Which is why we basically never do that. We choose what we want to live there to keep out the "baddies"In my opinion the reset was detrimental because I had absolutely no biodiversity in the tank and Ostreopsis had free reign.
I wouldn't expect them to be specialists in every kind of tank problem.I called into the lfs yesterday to buy something to dose phosphate. There was some shock and a chuckle as I explained what I was trying to do. The guys there are really knowledgable and very experienced. But they talked me out of dosing phosphate. I left with nothing, except recommendations. They recommended overfeeding to increase the phospates.
...
They have 2 or 3 phosphate chems for plants.
That's been the trickiest piece to figure. And squaring our experience in reef tanks with what the published lit says about dinos in the wild.I guess the link between low nutrients and Dinos is not widely known or understood...
Just want to amen this. It's not just Beardo. Seen the same story through we investigated different details....As I pulled corals from my main display, I did diluted peroxide dips 8:1 then 4:1 water:3% peroxide, followed by low salinity dips, 1.010 sg, then 1.008 then even straight DI water followed by 2 - 3 weeks in the QT tank. Even with all this I still ended up with amphidinium and recently found some ostreopsis from cysts that were brought over on the corals. Ostreopsis, Coolia and Prorocentrum were killed by the low salinity dips but not amphidinium or cysts of the others.
From my experience my recommendation would be if you want to do a full reset then completely start over and forget trying to save corals and inverts. There is also the possibility of bringing dinos on the fish from dinos on the slime coat. Freshwater dips and QT may be able to take care of that.
For disinfecting the system and ensuring cysts are killed; some testing was performed on ship ballast water. It took 1,000 ppm free chlorine residual for 24 hours to prevent any cysts from germinating. Hydrogen peroxide was also effective but at stronger doses leaving bleach as the best choice.
On a separate note, if a reset is the path that is decided, how do we then ensure dinos don't take over the system in the future? I bought a couple coral frags from a LFS (they were on consignment) and put them in QT. I collected some samples from the corals and put them under the scope and found Ostreopsis.
The best option seems to be the basis of this thread, establishing a healthy system with the biodiversity to handle the inadvertent introduction of dinos.
Hey now! Dirty method allowed me to raise a mighty army of hundreds and hundreds of terrifying bristleworms.The closest I've seen to what we're doing outside of this thread is something casually referred to as "dirty method"...sorta what your LFS recommended. I don't think there really is such a think as "dirty method"...really just a name applied to laziness in most posts. I'm not sure there are any problems that can be solved just by overfeeding your tank.
I did this once. I added a drop of liquid miracle grow to a beaker of dinos and all the dinos were gone next day. Later realized I burned them with ammonia in the fertilizer. Unfortunately after I looked into it, the levels of ammonia needed to halt dinos (they encyst) is at or above levels harmful to fish etc.Well hold on now. I did some reading on coolia and ostre. Seems if you add ammonia to a sample of this specie, they die. Could it be possible that feeding enough to spike ammonia? I'm being part cheeky and part serious lol I wouldnt want anyone to do that unless at their own risk.
Here we go again.
Another picture of the bronze small cells.
Ideas fellas?
I think it sounds like that weird tiny golden motionless mucous-y kind that does a good impression of symbiodinium. NCreefguy managed really good pics of them a while back.[no motion] what so ever. All the cells are still and everything is connected by some mucus
And plus I tested super high doses (like 10x recommended) of metro vs amphidinium and found that kind really didn't care at all.It's clear that more than metro was at work or the dino's would have returned.
Metro is not sufficient by itself – there are too many affirmative examples of this to discount.
I think it sounds like that weird tiny golden motionless mucous-y kind that does a good impression of symbiodinium. NCreefguy managed really good pics of them a while back.
compare pics here. See if you think it matches.
Does it get lighter/darker through the lighting cycle like other dinos?
This is my first post on this thread, but want to give a big thanks to @mcarroll and @taricha. My tank is about 6 months old and had been battling dinos for about the last two. I fit right into the category of all dry rock and bottomed out nutrients, 0 N and 0 P.
[...]
Now my corals have never looked better! Thanks so much for all the work on this!! I know it's still early, but I finally feel excited about my tank again!