wave98
Pearly
well, I guess the obvious concensus is, to go BB and cook rocks!
Anyone think that I'm convinced?
Happy reef keeping! Wave98
Anyone think that I'm convinced?
Happy reef keeping! Wave98
Their is no concensus Wave on what you should do with your system. Its yours you can do what ever you wish. I have to admit I am a bit confused? you ask for info, call folks un-informed and say that things said are myths, Yet when you are offered the info (scientific and practical) to help in you project you respond with the above?? What exactly are you looking for??well, I guess the obvious concensus is, to go BB and cook rocks!Anyone think that I'm convinced?
Blazer88 said:Not sure if this has been covered in this thread yet, but what are the best snails for hair algae removal? I understand most won't eat the stuff if it's long, but once it's trimmed down which ones will eat if? I've had astrea snails which work ok, but aren't there larger ones that work better? I'm going in to Blue Sierra tomorrow to get some more clean-up crew and want to get the best for algae control.
Blazer88 said:I tested some food and found something I have never realized. Rinsing the food in RO/DI water made an unbelieveable difference in PO4. It seems this would be a big enough difference to prevent algae. I did this with both frozen mysis and cyclopeeze flakes and got the same results Any thoughts?
krish75 said:I went snorkeling the other day with a few friends and we swam on the outside of the island in open waters. I didn't see any form of algae which was what I expected. As we swam around the bend and into a cove, there were rocks and reefs piled up all the way from the shore out to say 40ft and stretched for about 1/4 of a mile. 90% of the rocks/reefs were covered in hair algae and no type of coral...It looked like a lawn! Now this was only about 150-200ft from where we were before, with no algae out in the open water. 2 of the conclusions I came up with was (1) water flow. The cove was as clam as a lake and supported hundreds of fish. In addition the water felt noticeably warmer in the cove. Does this have anything to do with the algae...flow and temp?
a friend of mine showed me this site today http://www.garf.org/ If you go to the Algae control folder and then Reef janitors, it will list the different types of algaes and which snail/crabs will clean it up. Hope it helps.
IMO, which isn't much (LOL) I feel the best way to keep algae at a minimum, is firstly by heavy skimming, mechanical filtration, and good husbandry while at the same time having really good flow and consistent water parameters (which includes temp etc.) Like Mike (Mojoreef) once told me, get rid of the waste before it begins to break down. Then lastly, biological filtration to fall back on as a cushion if these other methods happen to fail at any point. This is what I am attempting to do with my setup to see if I can get a hold on algae before it gets a hold of me. My source of biological filtration will be bio-balls though for a FO setup, but I plan on not relying on them too much, but I need something to fall back on as I am not using much LR or substrate.
Well Krish, I mostly agree with you for what it's worth, although considering biological filtration "lastly" seems a bit dangerous. If you use bio-balls, they will not be a back-up, they will be the front line in your filtration whether you like it or not. That's just how they work. They are not so bad in a FO system, since most fish aren't bothered much by nitrate, but they will definately produce nitrate, and here we go with nutrient control again.
Too little will cause problems in dead spots, but as for too much flow, I think It can cause a problem also when the flow is not directed properly and is not evenly distributed to keep ditritus in the water column long enough to be picked up by other marine life or removed by filtration.
do like what was mentioned earlier and allow your ro/di water to have some treatment (like from your phosban reactor) before even using it to defrost or top off.
What if I add a few pieces of rock covered with algae into my sump submerged under my bio-balls (with lighting) once I see algae starting to develop in the main tank? If you all agree with what I said before about algae being used to prevent new growth, then I can put it in my sump, so I don't have to see it and let it out compete any new growth in the tank. It will be a means of nutrient export. Has this ever been tried because I've never heard of the combo (bio-balls and algae in a sump)? It seems kinda logical that it will work because algae seems to grow just as fast as nitrates are produced. Can this be an answer to controlling algae in a FO tank? Just a thought though
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