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Myka 12-13-2009 11:16 PM

Marie, could you post pictures of the algae that you are wanting to get rid of? Just wondering if the amount is minor or more significant...

marie 12-13-2009 11:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Aqua-Digital (Post 472346)
Hi Marie,

The old saying if it "aint broke dont fix it" strongly comes in to play here.

If you are happy with the tank as it is then do not change anything, but if you want to start some interesting food regimes for better colouration or other advances then these level would need to come down.

But the important thing is for you to do what you feel is right for your tank, we as outsiders can only advise, and still flick back to the first photos and admire at your great achievements ;)

What would be your suggestion to get the levels down? Assuming I start regular water changes...phosphate removers? Is water changes enough to get nitrates to stay down?
If I had gone by my eyes alone I would of said nitrates undetectable, I couldn't see any pink/red in the test tube at all

marie 12-13-2009 11:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Myka (Post 472352)
Marie, could you post pictures of the algae that you are wanting to get rid of? Just wondering if the amount is minor or more significant...

Myka, I have to say I might be a bit nitpicky and the amount isn't that significant.
I have some cyano type (I say type because this stuff doesn't seem to mind higher flow areas) that coats the underside of the rocks and the back wall of the tank. I have brown wafer algae coating the overflows, 3 different types of caulerpa trying to squeeze in where the fish can't reach, my absolute worse nemesis Dictyota is trying to rear its ugly head and of couse "out of control" coralline algae

christyf5 12-13-2009 11:37 PM

Marie, if I were you, I'd just try increasing the frequency of waterchanges for awhile and see if that helps without doing anything else. That may be the easiest way to fix the problem and if it doesn't well you can try something else :biggrin:


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