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Bryo I can do, broken gifs, now that's unacceptable!Dang it my J.Lo gif isn’t working. Lol
@TikiBird we could sooo be friends!
No we aren't. You are just frustrated. Your speed bumps help people like me learn.Yes! I need a reef friend. I’m pretty sure everyone else is getting tired of hearing about my tank. [emoji23]
Okay guys, so I’ve got the flucanazole and I’m going to try using it on this bryopsis.
A problem is that I just tested and my nitrates are high again! Ugh. I don’t know if I’m still feeding too much or what. My numbers (using API) are:
Temp: 78
Salinity: 1.024
pH: 8.2
Am: 0
Nitrite: 0
Nitrate: 20-40
Calcium: 420
Phosphate: 0
dKH: 11 / KH: 196.9
I’m about to do a 25% water change.
My question is, do I need to get the nitrates lower (do more water changes) before I use the flucanazole, since it will raise them even more as the bryopsis dies? Or does it not raise them that high?
Thanks for any advice!

Hes a just a good guesser.Or you can listen to Salty. Lol. He knows.

Tiki
Why haven’t you test rocked your algae yet
You have the easiest algae to beat I’ve seen. No fluc, no external lucky locus of fix required. You can have the algae beaten within about two days by simply killing it and rinsing out your sandbed.
The test rock is just that, before we fix your whole tank we use a tiny test portion to prove receptivity in your target. Have you seen our 200 pages of algae correction threads?
When we state a tank can be fixed by a certain date, it gets that way
Can spot an easy fix a mile away. Test isn’t even needed...it’s just a method for showing any doubts/invaded conditions that the certain species of invader are easy to fix before we kill it all. Lemme know, it takes two days.
Things you add or do to the water affect your non targets, and corals should command your nutrient levels, not what it takes to starve algae that already adapted to oligotrophic conditions in the wild. we don’t use indirect actions in our threads, we do opposite. It’s better you turn this around without fluconazole, you’ll see how easy it is to opt out of an invasion and fluc only works on a handful of genera...this kill practice works on all.
The only reason your tank has this algae is due to lack on grazers, in nature it grows the same if we boxed off grazers from a perfect reef, studies show on google scholar. We become smart grazers in our threads of cured tank after pics.
You need to rinse the whole sandbed because this is a nano, there’s a thread on that with before and afters, and because that’s your fuel source given your topoff water is accounted for.
You have simple, easy, fixable on dec 3 algae to beat.
Dinos would be much worse here
A neat new theory we are testing is that all nanos can be invasion free, if they have access to all substrates due to such an easy tank size. We didn’t need to know any other details about the invasion other than knowing if it’s a nano or a large tank.
I don't mind one bit if you don't want to run the method, I remember offering it in prior posts. Not a prob, but if you change mind and want to test our ability to generate solid outcome pics, let's do!


