So after fighting what I thought was a diatom outbreak for the past several months, I was finally able to get a sample under a microscope and the results confirm I have been chasing the wrong problem. The videos below clearly show what appear to be dinos, and I’m thinking they are ostreopsis. It looks like there may be some other things going on in the water but I think dinos are the main issue. The reason I was thinking diatoms was that my tank is a high nutrient environment. My NO3 usually runs between 25-50 and recently PO4 0.5 -1.0 and most of what I read was that dinos thrive in low nutrient environments - apparently thats not always the case! As I battled this thinking diatoms I increased my H2O changes but it seemed to worsen the situation. This led me to my RO source and TDS was 14. I added a DI filter and this dropped my TDS to 0-1 so I thought I would beat the diatoms. But things didn’t improve. I also trialed vinegar dosing to reduce NO3 and subsequently PO4 thinking this was feeding the outbreak but this only made the outbreak worse and created a cyano problem and the NO3 and PO4 didn’t come down. I also tried running some GFO Phosguard but PO4 didn't budge and the rust colored outbreak continued. I was able to isolate my substrate as leaching PO4 so I’ve been in the process of removing the sandbed with plans to replace it with new. I’ve removed anout 75% over the past 3 weeks and only have about 10lbs remaining in the tank. This still didn’t help. Frustrated, with kids back in school I asked my daughter to take a sample to put under a school microscope and this is the result. It makes sense now thinking about carbon dosing making it worse, as was running GFO, mass water changes and regularly blowing off the rocks and sand. All of these as I understand it actually promote dino spread. I have also been seeing some snail deaths which apparently is another consequence of dinos.
So, what to do....
My system:
-90g sumpless running 8 years
-Fluval FX6 Canister with foam pads, matrix and GAC (I know, the canister is a ‘nitrate factory’ but I’ve successfully run the system for years being sumpless hence the long time high nutrient environment)
-Reef Octopus BH1000 HOB skimmer
-3 Koralia Powerheads
-Apx 50lbs live rock
-lightly stocked - 2 ocellaris, regal blue tang, foxface, six line wrasse, yellow tail damsel, BTA, mix of LPS, acros, zoas, softies, CUC only feed 1.5 cubes frozen/day and half sheet of nori
I’m likely going to be selling this set up including livestock as I am downsizing my living space and may be going to a 10 or 20g waterbox. But I dont want to pass this on to someone who takes the system. I am hoping not to spend more $$ investing in a UV sterilizer so other than vacuuming with a sock to manually remove the dinos, stop H2O changes, maybe do a 36 or 48 hour blackout...any other advice? Not too thrilled about using chemicals but may not have a choice. Most solutions involve raising NO3 and PO4... not an option in my situation as they’re already high.
Hopefully this info will help others and if anyone has any other suggestions, Im happy to hear.
Thanks!
So, what to do....
My system:
-90g sumpless running 8 years
-Fluval FX6 Canister with foam pads, matrix and GAC (I know, the canister is a ‘nitrate factory’ but I’ve successfully run the system for years being sumpless hence the long time high nutrient environment)
-Reef Octopus BH1000 HOB skimmer
-3 Koralia Powerheads
-Apx 50lbs live rock
-lightly stocked - 2 ocellaris, regal blue tang, foxface, six line wrasse, yellow tail damsel, BTA, mix of LPS, acros, zoas, softies, CUC only feed 1.5 cubes frozen/day and half sheet of nori
I’m likely going to be selling this set up including livestock as I am downsizing my living space and may be going to a 10 or 20g waterbox. But I dont want to pass this on to someone who takes the system. I am hoping not to spend more $$ investing in a UV sterilizer so other than vacuuming with a sock to manually remove the dinos, stop H2O changes, maybe do a 36 or 48 hour blackout...any other advice? Not too thrilled about using chemicals but may not have a choice. Most solutions involve raising NO3 and PO4... not an option in my situation as they’re already high.
Hopefully this info will help others and if anyone has any other suggestions, Im happy to hear.
Thanks!
