It's been about 4 weeks since I treated the DT with Fluconazole. A few days ago I did a 20g water change on a 110g system. Today I'll do another 20g change. They suggest a 30% so I'll do 2 at 20g each.
I'm happy to report that as far as I can see, without moving rocks, the Bryopsis is gone. And as advertised, it appears to have had no effect on any of the livestock. And I have a pretty wide variety of livestock.
I've had a couple of interesting side effects. My glass stays clean longer. I now scrape coraline algae off rather than diatoms. And when I did the first water change in the DT, I took the old DT water and did a 50% water change in the 16g RFA breeding tank. I was having issues with dinos on the black sand and wave makers. Over the next few days the dinos were letting go of the sand and floating on the surface. My skimmer which is an in-tank skimmer would get clogged with dinos and I would use a fine net to pull out all the debris. I had to do that several times a day for several days. But now the dinos are gone?
So here is what I'm thinking... or wondering... would a small dose of Fluconazole in a reef tank on a regular basis, help keep algae other than Bryopsis from getting started? Rather than the 10 mg to 20 mg dose per 10 gallons for Bryopsis, maybe a 5 mg per 10g or even a 1 mg per 10g could prove useful. Although now that I think about it, it might have bad effects on macro algae in the refugium for those of us who have refugiums or ATS systems.