Discouraged

To add to comments, these diatoms 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 kibosh on 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 exponential 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.
 
To add to comments, these diatoms 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 kibosh on 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 exponential 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.
Yeah I have an RODI unit. Just replaced my DI Resin 2 days ago. I do a 10 percent water change, change out filter sock every 4 days or so, empty out my skimmer and wash it out, vaccuum my sand bed. And I have a clean up crew too.
 
This tank is a little over 3 months old. I am really discouraged. Looks ugly. I am doing 10 percent water change, change out the filter sock every 4 or so days, vaccuum my sand and still I have this **** in my tank. Everyone's looks so beautiful and here's mine.
20220515_144009.jpg
Are any of those rocks live or just painted? Your tank looks like most dry rock tanks look like. It will pass.
 
May as well get used to it because you will be dealing with various ugly phases throughout the first year. It just the nature of the hobby. Patience is critical but staying on top of your husbandry is essential also.
 
May as well get used to it because you will be dealing with various ugly phases throughout the first year. It just the nature of the hobby. Patience is critical but staying on top of your husbandry is essential also.
Yeah I understand. Doesn't mean I can't get discouraged. Just not pretty to look at.
 
I'm already getting some cyano in there. Don't know if it was good or bad.
Honestly your tank doesn’t look that bad. I’m going through a terrible cyano infestation right now. Get ready for a rough ride because Dino’s and cyano are way worse than what you have right now. But eventually it will get better. It just takes a long time. Find a good routine and stick with it. The more tinker the less stable things become. Here’s a pretty good video on what I think your going through.
 
I've come to the realization that for me 12 months minimum before I start getting frustrated. I've only been doing this for 6 or 7 years but have had as many as 4 tanks at once and many teardowns and moving to bigger tanks etc. I'm a tinkerer and change things when I get bored. It's a mental thing that drives my Gal crazy. I'm down to 2 tanks now and have recently completely rearranged one and moved all most all corals out and brought in new seasoned live rock and am having a go at sps heavy stocking. It's almost like starting over for me even using live rock from an established tank. Hair algae all over. Clean the glass everyday. Pull frags and scub off the algae etc. I see some of the tanks people have and I'm just like dang why can't I have a tank like that? I just keep plugging away and try not to get discouraged. I'm not a patient person by nature but I've definatly developed a lot more having this hobby. Changing this and dosing that trying to make things better only seems to make them worse I just kinda sit back and watch and hope and eventually things seem to come together. Just the fact that you havent lost anything puts you way ahead of me
 
Yeah it just is discouraging. Especially when I stay on top of all the maintenence and stuff. But my clowmfish are happy and all the inverts are happy. Haven't lost anything yet so I guess that's good.
You're on the right track. This is a big unfortunate side effect of building with mostly dry rock.

Keep up on your maintenance, keep doing your water changes, aim to achieve stability. As the tank matures, it may go through a few more ugly roller coasters. It's normal and part of it
 
You're on the right track. This is a big unfortunate side effect of building with mostly dry rock.

Keep up on your maintenance, keep doing your water changes, aim to achieve stability. As the tank matures, it may go through a few more ugly roller coasters. It's normal and part of it
Well, thank you for all the help and advice.
 
Honestly your tank doesn’t look that bad. I’m going through a terrible cyano infestation right now. Get ready for a rough ride because Dino’s and cyano are way worse than what you have right now. But eventually it will get better. It just takes a long time. Find a good routine and stick with it. The more tinker the less stable things become. Here’s a pretty good video on what I think your going through.
Thank you
 
How the tank looks now is not as bad as it's going to get. Price of using dry rock. My ugly phase didn't get into full swing until after 6 months
I used dry rocks (twice) and only had diatoms for a short period. Dry rocks isn’t a curse. I’s rather use dry rocks than deal with the critters that come with live rock later.

Yeah it just is discouraging. Especially when I stay on top of all the maintenence and stuff.
You should see it for what it is : a normal phase of a new reef tank. That is rather encouraging, on the contrary.

Go slow, don’t use chemicals, don’t use too much light and don’t feed too much and you’ll get there !
 
Yeah.... I just look at others people's tanks after like a month and they already look so good. I'm taking care of it and you don't think 3 months is a long time?
Anybody who seems to avoid an ugly stage is either faking it (like lying about their tank or scrubbing everything thoroughly for instagram) or doing something that actually skips an ugly stage, like using established live rock or stocking the tank full of corals on day 1. You're not doing anything wrong and everyone who starts with dry rock and doesn't add any corals early is going to have no reason for algae not to take over.
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

  • Yes!

    Votes: 32 45.7%
  • Not yet, but I have one that I want to buy in mind!

    Votes: 9 12.9%
  • No.

    Votes: 26 37.1%
  • Other (please explain).

    Votes: 3 4.3%

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