I agree it looks more redish, but maybe this is your light spectrum.
I recently found that (my strain of) dinos glows bright red under UV.
It does appear to be dinos though, largely due to the microbubbles, as cyano doesn’t have this same effect.
Follow the path to success I gave you, and this will be resolved fairly quickly.
UV is the key to creating space in the tank for good bacteria and algae to take it back.
If you’re worried about the micro algae, get an urchin, after the dinos are cleared away, but avoid turning to reef flux, chemiclean or vibrant again, as dinos will once again fill the space these create.
If you do actually get cyano when the dinos goes away, see this as a sign of success, and remove it naturally over a couple of months.
Quick fixes cause this “bounce from one issue to the next”, and why nowadays so many people get dinos, as this wasn’t always the case. “Back in the day” we never had dinos to anywhere near the same degree as today, as natural, more gentle methods, were king.
I recently found that (my strain of) dinos glows bright red under UV.
It does appear to be dinos though, largely due to the microbubbles, as cyano doesn’t have this same effect.
Follow the path to success I gave you, and this will be resolved fairly quickly.
UV is the key to creating space in the tank for good bacteria and algae to take it back.
If you’re worried about the micro algae, get an urchin, after the dinos are cleared away, but avoid turning to reef flux, chemiclean or vibrant again, as dinos will once again fill the space these create.
If you do actually get cyano when the dinos goes away, see this as a sign of success, and remove it naturally over a couple of months.
Quick fixes cause this “bounce from one issue to the next”, and why nowadays so many people get dinos, as this wasn’t always the case. “Back in the day” we never had dinos to anywhere near the same degree as today, as natural, more gentle methods, were king.