Help please alge id.

nzxtguy123

Community Member
View Badges
Joined
Apr 18, 2017
Messages
50
Reaction score
20
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I've had this since I turned my lights on trying to figure out how to get rid of it.
Below are my water parameters. And some good pictures best I could get anyway.
Any help would be awesome any questions just ask.




40 Gallon
11/07 Tuesday 08:14 AM
Temperature: 77.9 °F
pH: 7.7
Nitrate: 0 ppm
Phosphate: 0.014 ppm
Salinity: 1.025 SG
Alkalinity: 8.4 dKH
de2b156bc52e99dd47a5e8f46be66458.jpg
e1c374b5b737103243994b2eee64e10d.jpg
aaba7882c55c4a2c957545f1708e3808.jpg
cc4b692f120498128b4ca92a174e1a70.jpg
 
Clean up crew 5-7 hermit crabs
5 astria turbo snails
40 gallon nuvo
Rock was from the previous owner I let it dry out for a month while I was getting the tank ready. Tank is 4 months old.
 
So dry rock, low nutrients and not enough clean up crew. That falls right in line with dinos and the thread I linked
 
Great that's the worst news lol I'll read through the 1000 posts lol and see if I can positivly identify it.
 
Great that's the worst news lol I'll read through the 1000 posts lol and see if I can positivly identify it.

It might not be cancer.

To me, it looks like turf alge , hairlage with cyano in it.

If you haven't already , no carbon dosing , aminos , cut back on feeding frozen foods. Add bottled bacteria like a dr tims.
Use some kalk water in the ato.
Upnthe water changes.
Even if it's Dino's that the first steps

The turf alge you'll have to scrub and then toss in a bunch more Anika's or find a an alge eating fish to keep it mowed.


Yea first pic says "snails wanted "
 
A week blackout will certainly kill dinos, 3 days is not enough, my tank still has bouts of dinos here and there
 
Blackout is a bandaid and doesn't fix the root of the problem
Yes. It is.

But. :rolleyes:

With Dino's you do want to discourage a large mass. They breed exponentially and some give off a little toxin. So a lights Mixed other stuff can help.

Attack from all sides.
IMG_0291.JPG
 
Yes. It is.

But. :rolleyes:

With Dino's you do want to discourage a large mass. They breed exponentially and some give off a little toxin. So a lights Mixed other stuff can help.

Attack from all sides.
IMG_0291.JPG
I agree.

I'm just pointing out that blackouts don't fix the problem at hand. I don't think one of the oldest forms of life on Earth is easily killed off because of a lack of light. If that was the case, QT procedures would call for a blackout and you could rid all our tanks of dinos
 
I agree.

I'm just pointing out that blackouts don't fix the problem at hand. I don't think one of the oldest forms of life on Earth is easily killed off because of a lack of light. If that was the case, QT procedures would call for a blackout and you could rid all our tanks of dinos
I whole heartedly agree.

Just adding to your though and how to use the method.
 
I think your problem is cyanobacteria or most probably a combination of cyanobacteria and diatoms. Both frequently occur together for unknown reasons. To be sure you need a microscope.
 

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%
Back
Top