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ENTEROMORPHA SP. |
Did you ask how to kill it or did you first want to identify.
Someshmuck,cladophoropsis and not cladophora. It's sucks a whole bunch and there isn't a known identifiable solution.
Some people said fluconazone works on some species but may not work on this one.
I think he is correct on the diagnosis as cladophoropsis after a google search. Apparently this stuff is the devil. Would love to know how to get rid of it. I’m currently in the middle of trying Fluconazole as we speak. Only 3 days in so far though so not a big noticeable difference.How does this address the original post? And what does it relate to?
Press on. its your tank.I think he is correct on the diagnosis as cladophoropsis after a google search. Apparently this stuff is the devil. Would love to know how to get rid of it. I’m currently in the middle of trying Fluconazole as we speak. Only 3 days in so far though so not a big noticeable difference.
It’s not bubble algae. Positive on that.Does it pop? Looks almost like bubble algae but its long
Definitely not this. It’s doesn’t branch.Cladophoropsis, Green Wiry Algae
Species in this genus, and related ones, cling to the rock, and spread from a runner. The branches do not get tall, and they are often found with hobbyist frags or on live rock.
Manual Removal: Difficult. Macros that have fragile runners and creep along the rock are the hardest to manually remove. Do the best you can. Get a dental pick and get it all the first time and be done with it.
Clean Up Crew: Rock Boring Urchins, Emerald Crabs, Turbos, and Sea Hares occasionally pick on it, but don't seem particularly interested in it.
Starving it out: It seems to be particularly good at adapting to nutrient lulls, and it is unlikely that a small amount of the algae here and there will be starved out of your tank.
Fortunately these algae species tend to grow slowly, and aren't particularly common.
We distinguish this from Green Turf Algae by keeping this heading limited to green algae that creep along the rockwork, rather than grow up from it.
That’s interesting, this stuff doesn’t seem to like high light intensity at all. It only grows in my tank in low light shaded areas. Areas with direct light it doesn’t grow at all.Cladophoropsis is a species name and may look different than the pictures provided.
As far as my research went when i was dealing with my algae, what you got looks like cladophoropsis. In my case, it survived both vibrant (do not recommend, in my case vibrant killed off most of my torches) and fluconazone (so far no problems with anything) treatments so YMMV. It did take it down a notch but so did manual removal of piles of it when i overhauled my tank so I can't tell you if it'll fix your problem.
Fluconazone killed off all other algae variants I had in my tank except for film algae, cyanobacteria, gelidium (wiry red algae), and Cladophoropsis. (No traces of bryopsis or GHA)
One thing I noted was the the cladophoropsis that survived were in low light areas of my tank and IIRC fluconazone does something to an algaes capability to photosynthesize.
Cladophoropsis??
I have this persistent and apparently very hard to kill algae. Several minutes of 3% hydrogen peroxide knocks it back significantly but it eventually comes back. And I can't realistically treat 75 lbs of live rock, loaded with coral with peroxide. Has anyone dealt with this nightmare? I'm about...www.reef2reef.com
I feel that! It might be good to do fluconazone and move your rocks and stuff around and expose all the algae to your light. It might be a good idea to beat it.That’s interesting, this stuff doesn’t seem to like high light intensity at all. It only grows in my tank in low light shaded areas. Areas with direct light it doesn’t grow at all.