Algae problem

unlimitedbulliesjavie

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I've had my tank setup for about 2 months and have this algae can someone help me I have leds as lighting
 
Here is a pic

1452089689765.jpg
 
Still having a Diatom Bloom. Not to worry, they do go away by themselves once the silicates are gone.
 
I would also add this is fully optional. you may leave it in, or not, based on how you want the tank to look. I find that in keeping my tank clean from the start there was never a period I was disappointed after having paid for things $$

when reef substrate is light colored, reflective (a little algae comes next) not capitalized by excluding life forms, these are the first colonizers and if left alone in time they would indeed go away. Option exists to have them gone in 30 mins (siphon and clean all areas)
 
what kind of substrate is that it looks neat, nice to see some color mixed in looks like some darker grains are mixed in as a look down into it from the front panel area
 
Normal algae growth it shows your tank is maturing you will see a lot of diff things happen happy reefing to you and good luck in your tank
 
that's how it will progress for a while having been left in, are you up for a good cleaning? simply lift out all rocks and rinse outside of tank, rinse this stuff off.

vacuum out the top layers of sand, guide the tank into compliance and expect a few rounds as it matures. lower lighting levels a bit as well.
 
that's how it will progress for a while having been left in, are you up for a good cleaning? simply lift out all rocks and rinse outside of tank, rinse this stuff off.

vacuum out the top layers of sand, guide the tank into compliance and expect a few rounds as it matures. lower lighting levels a bit as well.
Ok I'll try that thank you
 
and to me this sets the stage for all algae you will ever have even though this isn't algae. If you google problem algae tanks, they all have 1 factor in common and then vary greatly after this initial shared factor:

Whatever took over their tank was left in there and allowed to add mass.

Various algae kill vs removal modes will certainly alter your overall work/repeating, but in the end simply allowance is what causes all algae problems, not nutrients and not tank age. Its true low nutrients can control algae issues, but in counting the number of tanks that were already deploying fine po4 and no3 levels before the invasion, we can see that simple farming is the root cause. All other nuances are modes of prevention, but whether or not X makes your tank looks bad will always be countered by the option of doing more work to disallow X. anything that takes over a tank can be removed initially while the mass is small, or waited until later when its a big job. how often you repeat this is determined by the collective designs for your tank and other variables.

we all have final instant say over algae problems, independent of nutrients, fine trick to know there. we must have corrected five thousand tanks by now using that mode in the bottom thread in my signature, about the challenge tanks. to me, a new tank isn't about letting various things come and go, its about doing lots of work to guide your substrate into compliance initially, then easing back off over time as maturity takes over within the system to continue. Your tank is giving you the first of thousands of cleaning hints.

B
 

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