GSP!!

jettpeterson

Community Member
View Badges
Joined
Apr 13, 2021
Messages
66
Reaction score
15
Location
sanger
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I got this gsp on Thursday and it fully bloomed the first day then after that day Just was thin I got some Zoas that same day thatre doing great I’m thinking it’s the placement but I have moved them quite a bit just on the top rock though I need a second opinion on its placement. Lights aren’t actually that blue they just appeared like that on camera.

image.jpg image.jpg
 
Looks like you have a bacteria or algae bloom going on in your tank with cloudy water. How old is the tank?
It’s 1 1/2 years but I’ve done quite a bit of water changes bc I had been late on maintenance so I’m thinking it’s another bacterial bloom or something or something wrong with my rodi so I had bought another one and it’ll be here tomorrow
 
It’s 1 1/2 years but I’ve done quite a bit of water changes bc I had been late on maintenance so I’m thinking it’s another bacterial bloom or something or something wrong with my rodi so I had bought another one and it’ll be here tomorrow
Well cut back lights and check parameters. You may want to add an airstone because some blooms get toxic and use up 02 in the tank which is bad for fish survival.
 
Well cut back lights and check parameters. You may want to add an airstone because some blooms get toxic and use up 02 in the tank which is bad for fish survival.
Okay I’m trying this. do you know why the zoas would be doing good and not the gsp bc in my experience gap are a lot easier to keep
 
Well cut back lights and check parameters. You may want to add an airstone because some blooms get toxic and use up 02 in the tank which is bad for fish survival.


Since this looks like a bacterial bloom, cutting back on the lights would make things worse as it would lower the oxygen in the water
 
Give your GSP a little time, I dipped mine recently with hydrogen peroxide and give it a scrub with baby's toothbrush as it had this white stuff growing that was stopping it opening fully, now it's great and fully open, if your parimiters are correct then I'm sure it will open when ready, it may just be a little irritated by all the movement in your aquarium, and possible debris landing on it, give it a little blast with turkey baster or pipette frequently , I placed my frag low when I introduced also :) :)
 

Attachments

  • IMG20220616192020.jpg
    IMG20220616192020.jpg
    132.3 KB · Views: 44
  • IMG20220613180746.jpg
    IMG20220613180746.jpg
    181.5 KB · Views: 51
Be patient as long as it’s purple it’s alive. I put mine in peroxide for 3 minutes to kill some algae and it stayed closed for about a week. Finally starting to come out now.
 
Since this looks like a bacterial bloom, cutting back on the lights would make things worse as it would lower the oxygen in the water
Uh no, I left my lights off for the first four months of my tank so did my fish just hold their breath with no 02 in the water. Cutting back lights will do nothing to 02 as long as their is good flow and water ripple for gas exchange. Same thing occurs over night when lights are off. Air stone is just added insurance during a bloom in case it is toxic.
 
GSP will pout a few days and require medium water flow. Do address the bacterial bloom shown in pics. Bacterial blooms are a condition in which a sudden increase in the number of bacterial colonies occurs, specifically bacteria that are suspended in the water column. The bacteria grows so rapidly that collectively they become visible to the naked eye, causing the water to become milky/cloudy/hazy in appearance. This condition most often is seen in a newly started aquarium, but can also occur in a tank in which there is has been an increase in the nutrients in the water, particularly nitrates and phosphates. Excessive feeding of fish without cleaning the debris can also cause a sharp increase in nutrients that results in these blooms .
There are two types of bacteria at work in aquariums:
  • Autotrophic Bacteria: Bacteria capable of synthesizing its own food from inorganic substances, using light or chemical energy. The beneficial bacterias are autotrophs.
  • Heterotrophic Bacteria: Bacteria that cannot synthesize its own food and is dependent on complex organic substances for nutrition. The heterotrophs in the aquariums mineralize the organic waste (break down the uneaten food, fish waste, dead plant matter, etc. into ammonia).

It is more common that the heterotrophs are seen in bacterial blooms, not the trusted autotroph nitrifiers. It is the heterotrophs which are primarily responsible for creating the "bio-film" (slimy residue found on the tank walls and rocks. As the ammonia production increases due to the increased mineralization, the nitrifiers are slow to catch up and an ammonia spike occurs until the autotrophs reproduce enough to take care of it. Contrary to popular belief, bacterial blooms cause an ammonia spike, not the other way around.
It is unclear whether the autotrophic nitrifiers ever bloom into the water column or if they simply multiply too slowly to cause this effect.
Water changes will play a role as well as filter maintenance.

WHAT FILTER(S) ARE YOU USING ?
 
DO NOT let that GSP grow on your main structure. I kept mine 4" from my main structure and it still took over my entire tank. I'm at the point now where replacing my entire structure is about the only option.
 

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%

New Posts

Back
Top