Can very clear water promote cyano growth?

Jon_W79

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lapin

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In Austin we have a toxic blue green cyano that is appearing in our rivers and lakes
One study points to a cause: A flood 2 years back added extra Po4 to the water. The zebra mussel epidemic, filtering out all the normal algae and stuff. The super clear water has allowed toxic cyano to bloom and has become a problem.
 

taricha

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Could very clear water(I think it may be very clear at least partly because of a lack of humic substances)promote the growth of cyanobacteria?

Actually, the underlying data is that humic acid was a nutrient that increased growth of spirulina, but only up to 0.2 or 0.3% - higher than that had diminishing returns.

Screen Shot 2021-06-21 at 8.52.19 AM.png


0.1, 0.2, and 0.3% grew more biomass than 0.0%, and 0.1% humic acid is actually a lot (1000 mg/L). It would be super yellow or maybe even brown by aquarium water standards, I think.
 

brandon429

why did you put a reef in that
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I must agree because we like to completely disassemble tanks, wash out their sand for hours, re install only perfectly clean rocks over washed sand with all new water. its the clearest condition a reef tank could be in...and we're kicking cyano's tail in the process though its a huge amount of work. if they're already moving homes anyway, nobody complains as a side benefit was the skip cycle transfer. we get one pass fixes in about 90% of jobs, 10% require some touch-up guiding. high % compliance outcomes on file.
 

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