Hi everyone,
I have a biocube that’s been set up since November last year. Basically its entire existence I’ve had this brown algae slowly accumulate on the back wall that continuously comes back after manual removal during a water chance. It’s slow growing, in the image I posted below it’s about 2 weeks of growth but even with weekly water changes it’s come back. My power heads also have a little bit of it but it mainly likes to grow on the back wall. There’s not a trace of any type of algae on any of my rock work whatsoever which is why I’ve somewhat ignored it for a while. I’m beginning to think it will steal valuable space from coralline algae which I would love to take the brown algae’s place. The algae is nearly invisible when viewing the tank from front on, so I included a more sideways shot that shows the furry nature of it.
On a related note, I have been dealing with mild amphidum dinos (see second pic) just on my sandbed for the last 1.5 months or so that cropped up after dosing tiny amounts of amino acids. I am planning to get more serious in my fight against the dinos with increased nutrients and adding more biodiversity for now (pods, phyto, bottled bacteria) but am worried if I increase nutrients too much it will cause this back wall algae to blow up. Im more interested in taking the long haul approach in getting everything balanced rather than dose a million algaecides and chemicals
My nutrients now are out of wack this week:
5 PPM NO3
0 PPM NO4 on ULR Hanna tester (going to start dosing tiny bits of PO4 to bring this up)
for the vast majority of the tank’s life my PO4 has been steady .06 while nitrate swings were my biggest problem. I’ve gotten my nitrates stable at 5 ppm for the last couple months but now phosphates have bottomed out which could be why i’ve seen an uptick in sandbed based dinos recently
Anyways, my current plan of attack is to first get nutrients balanced and nonzero and additional biodiversity to outcompete the dinos, but an ID on this back wall algae will help in the overall process. Again, I have no algae growth on the rockwork and my corals are doing well, it’s mainly just the back wall and sand bed that’s beginning to drive me crazy.
Thinking Microbacter Clean might help all around once my nutrients are balanced?
Thanks for any advice!
I have a biocube that’s been set up since November last year. Basically its entire existence I’ve had this brown algae slowly accumulate on the back wall that continuously comes back after manual removal during a water chance. It’s slow growing, in the image I posted below it’s about 2 weeks of growth but even with weekly water changes it’s come back. My power heads also have a little bit of it but it mainly likes to grow on the back wall. There’s not a trace of any type of algae on any of my rock work whatsoever which is why I’ve somewhat ignored it for a while. I’m beginning to think it will steal valuable space from coralline algae which I would love to take the brown algae’s place. The algae is nearly invisible when viewing the tank from front on, so I included a more sideways shot that shows the furry nature of it.
On a related note, I have been dealing with mild amphidum dinos (see second pic) just on my sandbed for the last 1.5 months or so that cropped up after dosing tiny amounts of amino acids. I am planning to get more serious in my fight against the dinos with increased nutrients and adding more biodiversity for now (pods, phyto, bottled bacteria) but am worried if I increase nutrients too much it will cause this back wall algae to blow up. Im more interested in taking the long haul approach in getting everything balanced rather than dose a million algaecides and chemicals
My nutrients now are out of wack this week:
5 PPM NO3
0 PPM NO4 on ULR Hanna tester (going to start dosing tiny bits of PO4 to bring this up)
for the vast majority of the tank’s life my PO4 has been steady .06 while nitrate swings were my biggest problem. I’ve gotten my nitrates stable at 5 ppm for the last couple months but now phosphates have bottomed out which could be why i’ve seen an uptick in sandbed based dinos recently
Anyways, my current plan of attack is to first get nutrients balanced and nonzero and additional biodiversity to outcompete the dinos, but an ID on this back wall algae will help in the overall process. Again, I have no algae growth on the rockwork and my corals are doing well, it’s mainly just the back wall and sand bed that’s beginning to drive me crazy.
Thinking Microbacter Clean might help all around once my nutrients are balanced?
Thanks for any advice!