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mjslaugh

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 27, 2008
Messages
124
Location
Cheney, Washington, United States
Nitrates at 0.

I took some pics of my setup now as it is, and I checked the Nitrates just now and they read zero, so I think I am getting close to cycled. The other neat thing I noticed is that the diatom bloom is like half the size it was last night, you can still see the areas of it(I circled them in pic 2), but it is much better. You can also see what I think is Aptasia in pic 3, I was going to let it grow a bit just to make sure I know what it is before I kill it(if it is Aptasia).
 
Nice tank. Try getting a closer shot at the aiptasia for a positive ID. You don't want that thing to grow and spread in your tank. Better dealt with sooner than later.
 
Thanks, I like it, I stacked the rock in the tank when the sand blinded it and it turned out really nice so I haven't touched it other than a couple little adjustments for lighting for my mushroom and razor clam hitchichickers. The cool thing is it created a little cave in the center not huge but about a 5" cube. Here is the best pic I can get of the little critter, my camera is great for detail far away, but it sucks at focusing up close, I think I may have to get a manual focus for it, but anyhow here it is.
 
Ya, aptasia. Get our your turkey baster or a syringe and fill with boiling hot water. Squirt it directly and it will disintegrate (basted cooked anemone)

The "razor clam" is most likely a reef mussel
 
Looks like you're off to a good start here. Congrats!
It might be nothing, but in the pic with the "razor clam" it looks like there might be a spot of bubble algae on the rock- down in the bottomish right side of the pic. If it is bubble algae, now is a good time to take care of it before you've got livestock and whatnot in there.
 
I have a handful of mussels on my live rock (which surprisingly have lived for a while now) and I would guess that that is what it is, although it's shell halves seem really flat. Bubble algae is a bit tricky because you have to be careful not to pop it when pulling it off as that will release spores and cause a greater outbreak. Your best bet is to remove that rock, then try a pulling/wiggling kind of deal either with your fingers or a pair of tweasers. Then rinse the rock off with either RO/DI water or water removed during a water change. Don't risk doing this while it's in the tank. You're at a good point now where there's not much in the way to hinder taking the rock out. All this is of course assuming that it was bubble algae.
 

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