Kristy
Thu, 20th Nov 2008, 09:33 AM
Okay, I need to take the special ed class on reef chemistry because I seem to learn it very s-l-o-w-l-y. (Seriously if someone taught "reef chemistry for dummies," I would pay to attend!)
We struggle now and then with slight cyano issues (or a variation of cyano that seems to be a bit different) due to a healthy fish load and heavy feeding, among other sins. We also have bouts of another algae that I have never seen in anyone else's tank, a very slow growing leathery algae (brown to olive green) that you can peel right off the rocks, only shows up in a couple of isolated spots.
Last week I returned from six weeks out of town to find that Mike is not nearly as attentive a cleaner as I am. This combined with his love of overfeeding led to some swampy algae conditions we've NEVER encountered before. A 30% water change with some aggressive scrubbing had the tank looking much, much better but I am keeping a close eye on the algae growth. There is still some cyano but not much and it is clearly receding, still some leathery stuff, but that too is going away. Now I notice a new algae, best description is red hair algae, that is beginning to creep onto a few spots.
I am fighting it the best I can with manual removal and we will do another good water change this weekend. In the meantime, I could use a refresher about the reef chemistry issues that contribute to nuisance algae...
What do I want to be monitoring? What should our goals be as far as reef chemistry goes here (reduce phosphates, for example) and what is your best recommendation on how to achieve this?
We do have a sump that grows macro at a healthy rate, by the way.
We struggle now and then with slight cyano issues (or a variation of cyano that seems to be a bit different) due to a healthy fish load and heavy feeding, among other sins. We also have bouts of another algae that I have never seen in anyone else's tank, a very slow growing leathery algae (brown to olive green) that you can peel right off the rocks, only shows up in a couple of isolated spots.
Last week I returned from six weeks out of town to find that Mike is not nearly as attentive a cleaner as I am. This combined with his love of overfeeding led to some swampy algae conditions we've NEVER encountered before. A 30% water change with some aggressive scrubbing had the tank looking much, much better but I am keeping a close eye on the algae growth. There is still some cyano but not much and it is clearly receding, still some leathery stuff, but that too is going away. Now I notice a new algae, best description is red hair algae, that is beginning to creep onto a few spots.
I am fighting it the best I can with manual removal and we will do another good water change this weekend. In the meantime, I could use a refresher about the reef chemistry issues that contribute to nuisance algae...
What do I want to be monitoring? What should our goals be as far as reef chemistry goes here (reduce phosphates, for example) and what is your best recommendation on how to achieve this?
We do have a sump that grows macro at a healthy rate, by the way.