Does this stuff work ? Almost a year and a half and I have none just regular nasty algae….if I add this won’t they compete ? And kill of the green algae if it works ?
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You really have to get the algae under control for the coraline algae to really take off. You'll need to get the Nitrates and Phosphates under control and use a quality test kit to see where you are.Does this stuff work ? Almost a year and a half and I have none just regular nasty algae….if I add this won’t they compete ? And kill of the green algae if it works ?
It also spikes nutrients to make the coralline grow. If you get a small piece of rock or a coral frag that has coralline on it and you seed it in by scraping it off I think it might be better.
I heard it raises them which is why I don’t want to add it. One of the main ingredients is calcium etc. not all of them contain coralline spores so that’s how it work it raises levels allowing it to grow faster. And I’m thinking of PurpleUp specifically. https://www.reef2reef.com/threads/coralline-algae-in-a-bottle-does-it-work.529759/It should not be spiking what we generally consider nutrients(phosphate/nitrates). Both of those are not usually the limiting factor for coralline and usually actually just make it harder for it to grow.
I heard it raises them which is why I don’t want to add it. One of the main ingredients is calcium etc. not all of them contain coralline spores so that’s how it work it raises levels allowing it to grow faster. https://www.reef2reef.com/threads/coralline-algae-in-a-bottle-does-it-work.529759/
I mean not necessarily but you don’t want to spike already high levels. Look at the ingredients in PurpleUp which is what I’m thinking of. So to answer the OP’s question coralline in a bottle is the shortcut and may lead to more issues in an already algae ridden tank.Yes calcium would be a main ingredient. Thats not necessarily a bad thing and not generally referred to as a "nutrient" in the hobby.
I tried that I even had a hermit crab have it on his shell…the tanks about a year old I have a few spots but mostly just the nasty typeIt also spikes nutrients to make the coralline grow. If you get a small piece of rock or a coral frag that has coralline on it and you seed it in by scraping it off I think it might be better.
Do you have snails or any other algae eating fish like tangs? What size is your tank?I tried that I even had a hermit crab have it on his shell…the tanks about a year old I have a few spots but mostly just the nasty type
I mean not necessarily but you don’t want to spike already high levels. Look at the ingredients in PurpleUp which is what I’m thinking of. So to answer the OP’s question coralline in a bottle is the shortcut and may lead to more issues in an already algae ridden tank. I consider the big ones to be nutrients not all are bad but they shouldn’t spike eitner.
Okay well that’s what I was referring to lol. It was a misunderstanding. I know some do it contains the spores.Purple up is not bottled coralline. It is advertised as a "coralline accelerator". Bottled coralline is different. In any case neither contains "nutrients"; they contain major elements required in a tank....though i do agree it can be harmful to dose too much if not needed. It is not because it makes any standard algae issue worse though. The vast majority of algae primarily use nutrients....phosphates/nitrates....not the same things calcium based algae like coralline uses.
Purple up does nothing but skyrocket calclum if nothing is consuming it.I heard it raises them which is why I don’t want to add it. One of the main ingredients is calcium etc. not all of them contain coralline spores so that’s how it work it raises levels allowing it to grow faster. And I’m thinking of PurpleUp specifically. https://www.reef2reef.com/threads/coralline-algae-in-a-bottle-does-it-work.529759/

