I have a 65 gallon fish-only tank with three large fish (tomato clown fish, blue tang and lunar wrasse), no refugium and a 407 Fluvial filter with two carbon bags and phosphate removing pads, both changed monthly. It has been impossible to keep nitrates under control, even after trying GF reactors, vodka, feeding less, nitrate removing solutions, expensive skimmers, increasingly frequent water changes, etc. etc. the latest was an 85% water change and I still can't get it below 40 ppm. The blue tang in particular is constantly showing signs of stress so I can only attribute it to the nitrates. PH is 8.3, salinity is 1.024, ammonia 0, nitrites 0, temp 78. Very constant, with a regular weekly and monthly maintenance schedule.
Instead of having to move to a bigger tank, with a refugium, my question is whether it is worth trying to add chaetomotrpha algae directly into the tank as a last resort to controlling nitrates in this tank. I figured it could also help with the Tang's nutrition. My idea was to put the chaeto in some kind of container with slots to keep it from growing out of control but at the same time give the tang a chance to nibble. I'm not doing this for looks. It's purely practical. Worth doing it is it replacing one problem with another?
Any comments would be appreciated.
Instead of having to move to a bigger tank, with a refugium, my question is whether it is worth trying to add chaetomotrpha algae directly into the tank as a last resort to controlling nitrates in this tank. I figured it could also help with the Tang's nutrition. My idea was to put the chaeto in some kind of container with slots to keep it from growing out of control but at the same time give the tang a chance to nibble. I'm not doing this for looks. It's purely practical. Worth doing it is it replacing one problem with another?
Any comments would be appreciated.
