Trying to ID this algae that been growing on some of the rock work and also the crab shell. I believe it's or at least looks like Calothrix which my initial research say it's a type of Cyano.
The crab looks like a troll, I had to laugh when I first saw him. He was hiding/missing for 2 weeks.
Any opinions on what type of algae this is growing on my rocks and sand bed?
www.reef2reef.com
see how in two hours both tanks are reset
once forced clean, then begin ID and clean up crew or dosers or param changes, never do that in the invaded condition though when reefing with easily handled nanos
all algae controls in a nano are effected in the clean condition vs the totally invaded condition. Safer for your animals and more likely to win
even if a treatment was known for that you don’t want rotting algae filling up every nook, thats a cyano invasion tradeoff in two months, cleaning cannot be bested by anything currently in the hobby it’s why the after pics are so sharp. A deep clean does not stop algae, coralline and correct light balance stops algae given good topoff water, decent grazer balance etc
there is no requirement to figure all that out in the invaded condition, you have a way to make the reef shine up quickly and work out the challenges on a smaller scale
@brandon429
Remove the rock, applied peroxide with a spray bottle, and after a few minutes scrub away. I then rinsed with some new saltwater a couple of times and placed back on tank. Looks a lot better!
Should I wait a few days before doing the same process on the other rocks? Or only on the ones with the same type of algae?
Also is it safe to continue dosing Vibrant as part of the maintenance/preventive process? I still have a bit of bubble algae.
Last when should I resume testing? My Nitrate were really low but I assume it was because of the algae.
Hey nice pre modeling let’s check back on Tuesday or so before proceeding
I really think that rock will work well compared to non treated ones but it’s no rush since the reef has been running this long
the method includes the full take down sand rinse, some of the invasion is housed up as bits in there to come back, but no need to start with the deep clean until the test rocks show nice behavior compared to the others in a few days
cleaning the sandbed made way in both the example reefs for future headaches to have far less waste and feed. As of now if you reached in your sandbed and grabbed sand and dropped it, a massive dangerous cloud would result
so if the test rocks show good promise, cleaning from the bottom up and then hitting the last rocks this way is the home run
i like seeing how the initial rock behaves before all the work. If it’s looking sharp in a couple days I would hammer the system back into compliance like we did for WVU
Test won’t play much of a role over physical cleaning in my opinion. After the system is tuned up, and made clean, then testing will help to balance coral coloration and system health but params play little role in curbing this growth