Need some help, the ugly stage is here

BristleWormHater

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I need some help with Id on algae, and what cuc members to add. Here's pics

Diatoms:

20240820_173548.jpg
20240820_173601.jpg




What is this?
20240820_173619.jpg



Bubble algae
20240820_173736.jpg



What is that (on top of the left side of dipsastraea)
20240820_173827.jpg



Same stuff as the dipsastraea but the goni seems pretty bothered by it
20240820_173853.jpg




What is this
20240820_173937.jpg
20240820_173939.jpg

I'll try to get better pics but I think these are bryozoans
20240820_174707.jpg
 
Beat me to it. If the tank is new, the ugly stage will come and go. Just part of the maturation process.......
I'm mostly concerned about the algae growing on the coral. It is very hard to remove and it just grows back, so I need something to eat it, any ideas?
 
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What I use to do was put a siphon or pump sucking water out of tank in the direct vicinity when I tried to pop them off so if they broke open better chance of sucking spores into bucket. If it's not firmly attached just sucking it out with siphon tube.
 
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Start with the sticky threads here:

*you will definitely need more than 3 snails...

*some of what you're seeing is part of the normal process. Keep track of your nutrients and don't let them bottom out, manually remove what keeps you up at night, and be patient...
 
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I would be careful using that med to treat your bryopsis - it can easily cause dino in a young tank which is the worst thing to have...you will wish you had your old algae back lol

What snails do you have?

Emerald crabs can be helpful for that tougher green algae (doesn't look like typical hair algae, might be turf?) but you need to keep an eye on them as sometimes they are naughty.

You need a CUC but you also should manually remove it yourself in a young tank.
 
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Start with the sticky threads here:

*you will definitely need more than 3 snails...

*some of what you're seeing is part of the normal process. Keep track of your nutrients and don't let them bottom out, manually remove what keeps you up at night, and be patient...
Yeah I'm working on cuc, just too lazy to drive all the way the fish store, I'll go when I run out of RO water.
 
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I would be careful using that med to treat your bryopsis - it can easily cause dino in a young tank which is the worst thing to have...you will wish you had your old algae back lol

What snails do you have?

Emerald crabs can be helpful for that tougher green algae (doesn't look like typical hair algae, might be turf?) but you need to keep an eye on them as sometimes they are naughty.

You need a CUC but you also should manually remove it yourself in a young tank.
Never heard of fluconazole causing Dinos and don't see how it could considering it raises nutrients. I had 2 emeralds, removed them both after the picked on my coral. It is not typical hair algae it is bryopsis (hence fluconazole). Working on cuc currently
 
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Never heard of fluconazole causing Dinos and don't see how it could considering it raises nutrients. I had 2 emeralds, removed them both after the picked on my coral. It is not typical hair algae it is bryopsis (hence fluconazole). Working on cuc currently

When flux kills off algae, it makes it room for other things to compete, not always friendly things.

It’s fairly common occurrence that can be found in multiple threads in the search

This is a somewhat recent one



I am just warning you to be careful.
 
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