I agree to most of the above statements, where I differ is #1 bubbles on the substrate below a green algae film is probably a bacterial algae along the lines of Cyano (red slime) and is just part of your cycling proccess along with diatom blooms until the needed bacteria has colonized to a balanced level. #2 continue to feed daily, just in smaller quantity. #3 if you already have light demanding livestock ie; corals I wouldn't run minimal light hours for very long having 8-9 hours of lighting now and gradually increasing towards 12. IME & IMO you should have a minimum of 8-10 hours of primary lighting and Actinics or Dawn/Dusk lighting on either side for a total of 12-14 hours. Having a refugium will remove Nitrates and Phosphates in your system how much will depend on the ratio of fuge area to DT and bio-load in it. The macro algae consume and utilize these nutrients in order to grow (contrary to many beliefs they do not store up these nutrients indefinately or are able to release it all back into system if they die) by pruning these macros it just promotes better growth (like grass in your yard) and part of thier waste bi-product they do release is oxygen.
For my 75g DT I am utilizing a std 40g fully as a fuge (3.75 s/f of fuge for less than 6 s/f of display) It houses 3 varieties of Caulerpa, Chaeto, Red turf algae and a bazillion pods, snails & stars lit 24/7. This I believe is probably a minimal ratio to really being considered a primary filtration source rather than just a boost to the LR and place for pod production. I have ran this type of setup for well over 20 years, almost always on high bioload systems and current system for 17+.
Anyway, some more food for thought.