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Any recommendation on best plan of attack? I just got an emerald crab a couple snails and a couple hermits. A CUC will remove the GHA but not the nutrients. Should I just manually remove them do a series of water changes?Green hair algae. A nightmare to remove from the sandbed. It intertwines itself with sand, which makes it too heavy to siphon and will cause you to lose a lot of sand while removing manually.
Most standard CUC won’t touch it. I’ve heard Mexican turbo snails will eat it, but tuxedo urchins are the only thing that have worked for me. Or you can just go ahead and manually remove it anyway.Any recommendation on best plan of attack? I just got an emerald crab a couple snails and a couple hermits. A CUC will remove the GHA but not the nutrients. Should I just manually remove them do a series of water changes?
32 gallon tank, will be a year old in September. Haven’t tested in a few weeks but I know my nitrates and phosphates are high. Haven’t performed a water change because I was battling Dino’s for a while.One more question, what size is your tank?
dang. Not a huge fan of urchins they just flip everything around in my tank. Probably just gonna attempt to manually remove during a water changeMost standard CUC won’t touch it. I’ve heard Mexican turbo snails will eat it, but tuxedo urchins are the only thing that have worked for me. Or you can just go ahead and manually remove it anyway.
But it’s still in the system, won’t it just regrow once the lights are on? Or do you remove it once it begins dying offNot sure what you have in your tank, but when I hit this stage I just turned everything down to 0 (po4 no3) and you can blackout for 3 days or so. I kept the po4 and no3 at 0 untill it started to die off on its own.
I mean it’s only a minimal amount on the rock 85% of it is on the sandbed@brandon429 good candidate for a rip clean dont you think?
I'd do some water changes, pull the rocks (either all together or one by one) and manually scrub off the algae in the bucket of old tank water, then i'd siphon out the majority of the sandbed and either rinse it in old tank water a few times to remove the detritus or simply replace the majority with new.
You're not going to snail and hermit crab your way out of this one.
It’ll turn white-ish with 0 and you can easily brush it off. From there on out I gradually allow the PO4 and NO3 to rise to desired levels.But it’s still in the system, won’t it just regrow once the lights are on? Or do you remove it once it begins dying off

