Nice tanks!
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Thanks for the shoutout!My UNS 45A has been battling dinos (specifically ostreopsis) on and off a few times now. This most recently bout was pretty bad. Check out the photo below from last week.
I typically fight them off with UV sterilizer, upping nitrates/phosphates, adding pods and phyto, but it usually takes a few weeks. Based on some discussions I had with another reefer on Instagram (@cristata.reef), I decided to dose iron after noticing I had no detectable iron in this tank (I used Brightwell Aquatics Ferrion for this purpose). After 4 days of dosing iron, all visible dinos are gone! Check out the after photo I took yesterday.
Supposedly the added iron helps the macroalgae better compete with the dinos, but I'm definitely no expert on this topic and don't want folks to construe this post to mean iron is the magic solve for dinos. So please do your own research and of course, individual results may vary.
I think that looks really neat and is a very interesting plan! I hope to have mangroves on one end of my 125 reef, so I may be a bit partial to this look...Trying out something new. Re-did my UNS 60S to really showcase the mangroves in there that were just tucked away towards the back previously. I added an AI Prime HD Freshwater version over the mangroves to the right and an AI Prime HD Reef version to the left so I can add some coral as well. I plan to make this a Florida-specific "biotope" and include things you would find in Florida waters (at least that's my initial plan). Let me know what you think.
Thanks! And yes, air plants.I think that looks really neat and is a very interesting plan! I hope to have mangroves on one end of my 125 reef, so I may be a bit partial to this look...
Are those air plants on the driftwood to the right? ...or bromeliads? Whatever they are, that makes a nice little display also.
Very neat! I am again inspired by your thread!Thanks! And yes, air plants.
Is that neotherm set at 86 ? Are all ur macro tanks set at a higher temp?Update on my UNS 5N. Been battling dinos in this tank for weeks. But I've finally gotten things under control after adjusting a bunch of things, but I'm going to add a UV sterilizer to finish them off once and for all as well. A few recent shots of this tank (pretty filled in now!).
Lot more halimeda in this tank. Trying to give it a different look than my other tanks with more rigid and delicate looking algae.
Hitchhiker ulva/sea lettuce.
Pretty centerpiece feather duster.
Coming together!
Aside from macroalgae and maybe gorgonians, still up in the air.like the concept. Any ideas on what you might specifically be keeping in there?
I have my heaters attached to inkbird temperature controllers set at 76.Is that neotherm set at 86 ? Are all ur macro tanks set at a higher temp?
seagrass...Aside from macroalgae and maybe gorgonians, still up in the air.
seagrass would be really cool. great rec!seagrass...
Seagrass...
SEAGRASS!!!
Marine Plants in the Aquarium
macroalgae, marine plants, caulerpa, refugium substrate, marine macroalgae for salewww.marineplantbook.com
Syringodium filiforme, Halodule wrightii, and Halophila engelmannii would probably do best with their low lighting requirements.
Also, have you considered adding a clingfish (not the Urchin clingfish)? LiveAquaria sells "Caribbean black clingfish" on Diver's Den occasionally (they're labeled as Arcos rubiginosus but I believe they are actually Stippled clingfish or Gobiesox punctulatus). Gulf Specimen Marine Lab also sells the related skilletfish, (Gobiesox strumosus). They can become quite tame but they might eat very small fish.
Another issue is my tank is only 7" tall. LOL.The seagrass recommendation is interesting - i was told that you need a decent size (more than 1 sq foot) and depth (3" sandbed min for the shallowest species, more for others, and of course a good extra bit of depth - 10+ inches? - for it to grow.
@WheatToast is gour experience different? I'm Curious because I'd also be interested in a seagrass nano
Awesome!Bahama Llama/Remy visited my house a couple weekends ago! He made this video about it on his Youtube Channel:
Trying out something new. Re-did my UNS 60S to really showcase the mangroves in there that were just tucked away towards the back previously. I added an AI Prime HD Freshwater version over the mangroves to the right and an AI Prime HD Reef version to the left so I can add some coral as well. I plan to make this a Florida-specific "biotope" and include things you would find in Florida waters (at least that's my initial plan). Let me know what you think.
I think I'm ditching the Florida specific concept. LOL. I've actually added a bunch of additional macroalgae and a few new mangroves. I'll try to take some photos over the weekend and post them up.I don't know what's native to Florida, but I'm picturing a sort of minimalist desert scape with small balls of thicket type macro sparsely spread out up the slope like tumble weed. Something like gracilaria tikvahiae and patches of thick branched coraline. Maybe A few chunks of codium toward the top. Plenty of open space for some little hermit crabs to roam around. Maybe a pair of fire shrimp as well. They will stand out quite well.
I think I'm ditching the Florida specific concept. LOL. I've actually added a bunch of additional macroalgae and a few new mangroves. I'll try to take some photos over the weekend and post them up.
I'm trying to go for beach vibes now with this tank. I'd like hermits since that seems like a quintessential beach inhabitant, but still trying to figure out what hermits I can keep safely with my macroalgae. I've noticed scarlets going for certain macroalgae, so probably no to that.