Is there some chemistry-based approach I should be taking to make sure the chaeto in my refugium thrives and hair algae doesn't suffocate it? Right now the hair algae is winning and I remove gobs of the stuff weekly by hand.
I'm sure many will say "add cleanup crew" but that feels more like addressing the symptom than the cause. Are there specific levels of anything chemistry-related that I should be monitoring/testing/dosing/maintaining to make sure the chaeto wins out?
Tank is ~1.5 years old mixed reef and doing great. The refugium has one of the cheaper kessil refugium-specific lights on it (H80 or something similar?). It is set at max intensity and in between the grow/bloom settings. The light runs 11 hours per day.
The only time I've noticed the hair algae suppressed and the chaeto thriving was when my nitrates and phosphates went sky high (~15ppm N and .2ppm P), but I assumed that high of P was not good for corals so I lowered it back down.
I'm sure many will say "add cleanup crew" but that feels more like addressing the symptom than the cause. Are there specific levels of anything chemistry-related that I should be monitoring/testing/dosing/maintaining to make sure the chaeto wins out?
Tank is ~1.5 years old mixed reef and doing great. The refugium has one of the cheaper kessil refugium-specific lights on it (H80 or something similar?). It is set at max intensity and in between the grow/bloom settings. The light runs 11 hours per day.
The only time I've noticed the hair algae suppressed and the chaeto thriving was when my nitrates and phosphates went sky high (~15ppm N and .2ppm P), but I assumed that high of P was not good for corals so I lowered it back down.
O believe me I'm well aware


