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![]() This algae is the toughest thing to get rid of. Once it takes over a tank it is very very hard to get rid of it. I guess you had a patch here and there and you let it go and it bloomed and sprouted everywhere.
Only many pacific turbo snails will get rid of it that I know of. Maybe there is something else but in my nano tank wich is overrun by this algae, only the turbo are having some effect. I have tried high magnesium without success. If you have a lot of it, I suggest putting a lot of turbo snails but they must be pacific turbo or mexican turbo snails. Good luck..this is a plague. "Most likely some specie of Asparagopsis, most likely A. taxiformis or . armata, both of which are Rhododophyta that seem to defy the conventional cause and effect relationship associated with excessive algal growth due to either insufficient herbivory and/or excessive nutrients. They are capable of growing in poorly lit refugia, brightly lit reef tanks, bare bottom systems with detrital control, and even on occasion dim sumps. They contain the pigment phycoerythrin, which takes dim light over a broad spectrum and reemits it as a usable higher energy light in a narrow red band. This allows the algae to live in light environments that other autotrophs would find difficult to impossible to survive in, and will account for the difficulty in eradicating it. Interestingly enough, this is not usually associated with live rock, rather with specimens of coral when added to a system. Another reason for quarantine." Quote:
Last edited by daniella3d; 11-22-2010 at 02:05 AM. |