Trying to overcome my agae woes. All (98%) of my long hair algae is gone in the display tank, but now I have a stubborn Turf Algae growing. I saw videos of people suggesting spot treating each day where roots are more stubborn, but some threads on here seem to have me believe there is no such thing as spot treating and that it impacts the whole tank regardless. I originally thought the h202 would breakdown relatively quickly, but further research seems to suggest 2-4hours.
Spot treating would be applying h202 in display with a dropper (5-7ml) to the problem areas with zero flow in tank for 30-40 minutes. I tried it two days a week ago and Algae in those spots is lighter, but I didn't do follow up treatments after reading the forums more as I originally thought this was a less invasive approach than treating the whole tank or using another algaecide. So far i do not see visable negative affects to coral/fish/inverts. Is there an overall consensus I'm just not finding?
I have a 40G Breeder with sump (30G tank, ~15gal of water, filter socks, skimmer, chaeto refugium). Refugium is only a few months old so still establishing. Chaeto is growing but so is a bunch of other algae/slime (not dinos) in there.
I'm leaning into better controlling nitrate phosphates, but terrified of bottoming them out after a long battle with Dinos which there has been no signs of visually or under microscope for about a year (yay!).
Here are some pictures up the algae attached to sand siphoned during a water change.
Spot treating would be applying h202 in display with a dropper (5-7ml) to the problem areas with zero flow in tank for 30-40 minutes. I tried it two days a week ago and Algae in those spots is lighter, but I didn't do follow up treatments after reading the forums more as I originally thought this was a less invasive approach than treating the whole tank or using another algaecide. So far i do not see visable negative affects to coral/fish/inverts. Is there an overall consensus I'm just not finding?
I have a 40G Breeder with sump (30G tank, ~15gal of water, filter socks, skimmer, chaeto refugium). Refugium is only a few months old so still establishing. Chaeto is growing but so is a bunch of other algae/slime (not dinos) in there.
I'm leaning into better controlling nitrate phosphates, but terrified of bottoming them out after a long battle with Dinos which there has been no signs of visually or under microscope for about a year (yay!).
Here are some pictures up the algae attached to sand siphoned during a water change.
