Hellllllppppp!

Salted220

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I was away for xmas eve and xmas came home and my tank is super cloudy I notice tiny white specks on the glass but not sure what it is. Ph, temp salt all good
20191226_110424.jpg
20191226_110431.jpg
 

MERKEY

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How old is your tank?

Looks like a bac bloom if the tank is still young.
 

Gernader

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The tiny white specks must be copepods which they are good to have in your tank. The picture isn’t that clear to be positive though. If the tank is cloudy, it means that there is a bacterial bloom or from your sand.
 

stanleo

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Looks like a new tank. If it is that could be what mine went through when it was new. Bacterial bloom and just go through your regular maintenance routine and it will resolve itself in a few weeks.
 

Sashaka

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Agree..bacteria bloom. Do a large water change, add an air stone if you have any life in the tank until the bloom is over to add extra oxygen to the tank, and get a bottle of bacteria in bottle and put it in.
 
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Salted220

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Agree..bacteria bloom. Do a large water change, add an air stone if you have any life in the tank until the bloom is over to add extra oxygen to the tank, and get a bottle of bacteria in bottle and put it in.
I still never plumbed in my UV but now I will get it in today. And do a 50gal water change? Think that will be enough? What kind of bac do I add?
 

CuzzA

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Water change will not help, nor will adding more bacteria. Time and skimming or a UV sterilizer are the only solution. I would keep flow very high for increased surface agitation to help keep the water oxygenated as the bacteria can quickly metabolize all of the o2 and kill your fish.

I also wouldn't rule out sand disturbance. New sand takes a long time to clear unless you constantly vacuum the cloudy particulates.
 
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Gernader

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I still never plumbed in my UV but now I will get it in today. And do a 50gal water change? Think that will be enough? What kind of bac do I add?
You can use Dr. Tims one and only bacteria, microbacter7 from brightwell aquatics, or turbostart from fritz.
 
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Salted220

Salted220

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You can use Dr. Tims one and only bacteria, microbacter7 from brightwell aquatics, or turbostart from fritz.
I used Mr.Tims to help cycle the tank. I'm gonna go get a air pump and air filter to put in the tank and the 1 45° fitting to get my UV hooked up. Because of course I have 2000 fitting but not one 45° ughh
Thanks for all the answers you guys are awsome.I'll let you all know how it goes. And happy holidays everyone.
 

Sashaka

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Sorry..double post
 
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Sashaka

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New tank? The UV should do the trick, but I still recommend water changes. They will not remove all the bacteria, it multiplies too fast, but water changes should allow some relief to life in the tank by diluting the bacteria and allowing more oxygen to enter the water. The bacteria in the bottle will boost the good bacteria you are trying to cultivate on and in your rocks and sand bed. While it may feed the bloom a bit, my guess is you did not have enough of it to handle the feeding and waste of the new fish. Your system just needs to mature more. Here is a link to help you understand what happened and to guide your next steps. The second link is to an R2R thread about the topic. Good luck! Keep us posted.
 

islander84

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I’m no expert but here’s my input from my experience and knowledge I have accumulated over the last decade of reefkeeping. There are several different types of bacteria and it sounds like you have a bloom of heterotrophic bacteria, which stay in the water column. The nitrifying type of bacteria live on substrate materials (rock, sand, media, etc..)

In my experience it can be difficult to get it under control. Dosing different strands of nitrifying bacteria can help but a uv filter works best as the bacteria bloom is in the water column vs attached to substrate.


 
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Salted220

Salted220

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Yes I got the uv installed and working and noticed a huge difference the next morning. So I think it's working still keeping a eye on it all
 

Dom

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If you are running a protein skimmer, that will introduce oxygen.

Personally, I'd hit the breaks on adding anything to the tank for about 6 months to give the tank time to stabilize.
 

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