Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I tried getting a better picture. Does diatoms stock together? When I try to stir it a bit it is kinda like a sheet.If it's diatoms, increasing the flow should help.
I thought about that, but it’s not really purple like the pictures showIt's cyanobacteria
I just realied I had a bag of purigen in my sump that I forgot had been in there for 3 months. Could that have been a phosphate sink and not allow the algae to go away? If it doesn’t get better by Friday, I will try and siphon it out.It could be cyanobacteria. Increased flow will also help with the cyanobacteria.
If it's cyanobacteria, you should be able siphon it up in large matts.
I don't use purigen, but any absorbent medium can become saturated and leech nutrients back into the water if left in too long.I just realied I had a bag of purigen in my sump that I forgot had been in there for 3 months. Could that have been a phosphate sink and not allow the algae to go away? If it doesn’t get better by Friday, I will try and siphon it out.
To piggyback, if it's snotty and has visible bubbles, it's most likely dinoflagellates.If it kind of breaks up into dust, it's diatoms. If it stays together in a sheet like you said, it is very likely cyano (which is not always red).
Oh okay! I will try and siphon it if it stays much longer. Thank you!If it kind of breaks up into dust, it's diatoms. If it stays together in a sheet like you said, it is very likely cyano (which is not always red).
I started with a mix of dry and live rock. I started with a 46 gallon tank and moved all the rock from that tank and then got dry rock to help fill the tank. I change out a bag of carbon once a week and change the filter sock every second day, so it doesn’t build up. I only empty the protein skimmer every 4 days or so when it fills up. This tank has been set up for 2 months, but some of the rock and media has been cycling for 5 months. I tested the tank last Friday and PO4 was pretty low and NO3 was a little higher, but still within normal range. That being said, I still wanted to bring it down.Did you start with dry rock?
Are you treating the tank with anything to remove phosphates or nitrates?
Are you carbon dosing?
How old is this tank?
What are your most recent test results for NO3 and PO4? How normal are those readings?
That being said, I still wanted to bring it down.
Thank you very much! If you don’t think carbon is needed, then I will take it out. I didn’t use it for a while, but when I saw algae I added it. I did move from a 46 gallon, to a 75, then to a 90, so maybe all that moving caused levels to go crazy. I do feed 2 times a day but I only had 2 clown fish when this problem started and just added a tomini tang two days ago, so I don’t feed too much at all.Ix-nay on at-they.
I'd even stop using the carbon until someday when you need it. A new tank shouldn't need it, and it might hurt.
Skimming is unlikely to hurt and that's the most you should be doing to filter a tank that new – especially one started with dry rock.
There are no perfect numbers to chase, but in theory if your phosphates are not zero AND you have anywhere around 16 times the amount of nitrogen as phosphorus, you're fine – you do not have a nutrient problem. If algae starts to grow, you might need to increase your CUC, but that's about it.
If only nitrates or only phosphates are accumulating, then you know you have a problem....something has things out of balance.
If you feed VERY regularly (maybe even use an auto-feeder) and DO NOT spike your tank with nutrients (often by adding a lot of fish or corals at once) you really shouldn't have a problem.