Dinos on the way?

JoJosReef

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Been treating the tank with Fluconazole (Flux Rx) which has done a marvelous job removing the bubble algae and little bit of GHA that had appeared. I was worried about cyano coming in, but it looks like I might be getting brown coating on the sand, gyre and return nozzles:
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1689796980073.png

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Time to shift into high gear. UV, nutrients and more microbiome/fauna on the way!
 
I'll get a microscopy on them tonight. Just measured NO3 at ~0.2ppm, and that is 2 hours AFTER adding aminos (Salifert). PO4 was at 0.15ppm by Hanna. ALK 7.7dKh (Salifert).

I'm going to dump some old sand from my Evo in there too to see if the extra sand bacteria can help out. It's been in a bucket wet for about a week or so.
 
At the stage you are at now; I ran UV, dosed nitrates to 20ppm, and phos to .1.

Every day I would also turn off my return, turkey baste then into the water column and then add microbacter7 loaded coral snow. Let that all clump together for a bit, 20-30 minutes, with returns off and power heads going. And skimmed wet.

Whipped them in 2.5 days. It's been almost a month do and not a sign anywhere since.

I'd verify they are dinos first though.
 
Identify it then take action! If you know exactly what you are dealing with then the Dino’s battle will be easier.
 
Been treating the tank with Fluconazole (Flux Rx) which has done a marvelous job removing the bubble algae and little bit of GHA that had appeared. I was worried about cyano coming in, but it looks like I might be getting brown coating on the sand, gyre and return nozzles:
1689796956918.png

1689796980073.png

1689797002950.png


Time to shift into high gear. UV, nutrients and more microbiome/fauna on the way!
This appears to be established diatoms which are a brown algae that typically appear in a reef tank that has just completed its cycle but they can also appear in an established reef tank. They can cover sand, rock, pumps, glass, you name it. Diatoms look ugly but in most cases they are harmless so the key is to not panic when they appear.
Diatoms feed mainly off of silicates but also consume dissolved organic compounds, phosphate and nitrates. Unfiltered tap water can contain silicates and is a good way to jump start a bloom if you use it to mix salt or to replace water that evaporated from the tank. The best way to prevent this from happening is to filter water through a RODI unit, although you can still get a diatom bloom when using RODI if the cartridge that removes silicates expires.
Diatoms are typically harmless to a captive reef and can be beaten once their food source expires. Once you put the end to the source, the outbreak should last a couple of weeks so just be patient and it will pass.

For major outbreaks you may want to consider the three day blackout. Diatoms are easily wiped from the glass with a mag float, a turkey baster or a toothbrush can access other areas of the tank. Be prepared for them to re-establish themselves quickly, they are likely to be able to resettle and have re-growth rates.
To prevent their return, practice good aquarium husbandry by doing regular water changes, keep the substrate clean, don’t overfeed the fish, ensure your skimmer is running at an optimal level and rinse out filter socks and sponges on a regular basis.
Some cleaner crew to help control it are : Cerith snails, Nerite snails and Trochus snails and also Astraea snails are effective at removing diatoms.
 
I'm on the tail end of dinos right now. The dinos are finaly receding and starting to turn into green algae.

But that looks more like some diatoms of some sort to me.
I've had that same kinda stuff but uv always is good to have.
 
Bringing the microscope to the office tomorrow b/c I forgot to bring home a sample. @vetteguy53081 if diatoms, that would be great. My conches LOVE diatoms. It's a possibility. My RODI unit is at the end of it's sediment/carbon/DI resin life, and I've been registering 1TDS for the past week or two. So that would make sense.

Thanks all!
 
There are 2 types of dinos. Treatment depends on which one you have. Scope them and then check out macks reef on fb. There is a ton of info and that's what I used to beat mine. And i had the hard ones.
20221124_083606.jpg
 
Yeah I’d change out the RODI filters/membrane. I ran with tap for a fair while and had the same problems that your getting now.
 

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