your phosphates and nitrates are 0 because your hair algae is abosrbing them.. try turning off the lights, and covering up the tank so htere is no light for 2-3 days, should do the trick.
Only h ting that worked for me was contantly pulling it out by hand, pulling accessable rocks to scrub them, frequent water changes and run a phosphate absorber (even if your tests say zero). Do everything you can think of to remove nutrients from the water column. Even with all of that it took me 3 months to get rid of it. Perserverance is the key.
How long has the tank been set up? What kind of flow do you have? What kind of substrate? The more details you can give, the better advice you will get about how to kill the hair algae and how to prevent its return!
I had an identical experience as rdnyva. I spent June through September battling an outbreak and it's finally on the way out. My tank was 9 months old and pristine when it started so it can happen at any time. I thought I would never win.
The bottom line is hair algae can't grow without nutrients. If you are having a hair algae outbreak you don't really need to test-- you can assume there is a problem. 99% of the time it's an organic phosphate issue and most aquarium phosphate tests only show inorganic phosphate.
Manually remove all you can and follow it with a water change a couple times/week. Keep doing that for a few months and it will eventually subside. Keep close tabs on your Alkalinity as well. Might also be a good idea to add some more snails and hermits.
Upgraded to new tank from 75g approx 6 months ago...
Aragonite substrate - approx. 180-200lbs
Had 90 lbs live rock and added approx. 80 lbs Marshall Island about 3 months ago...
2 - Hydor #4's for flow plus a quite one 6000 return pump split to 4 return spouts...
Octopus Skimmer - 8" diamater - NW-200
Looks like I'm in the same boat.
Started my battle with GHA Friday with the delivery of my two phosban reactors. One filled with carbon one with phosban.
GHA started a month after the addition of 50 more pounds of live rock that I cured for about 3 weeks.
Mine is covering most of my base rock so removal isn't an option.
And it really doesn't pull off.
So I just scrubbed it last night with a tooth brush till it disintegrates.
After the tank cleared I just changed my filter sock.
We'll see if the addition of phosban, scrubbing and frequent water changes win out over the GHA.
You may also want to increase the magnesium level -- read somewhere on this site that the hair algae just goes white and dies. Also, phosphate remover to keep it dead.
Elevated levels of mag don't seem to harm corals either. I had a terrible HA outbreak from an unscrubbed LR piece I got from a friends tank.
I'm gonna try this since I can see that after two months of cooking, two small strands of HA is starting to grow. The tank is very new though -- three weeks old, so its going through the algal stage anyway, running phosban as we speak, gonna elevate mag tomorrow, when I remember to stop by the LFS on the way home!
I started my 90 gal reef last January. It was pristine until about two months ago. Then a green hair algae problem.
I figure that it started due to the type of water I was using during my water changes. I got lazy ans started usng some boxed "real" ocean water I bought at PetCO. I have since stopped using this and only use Instant Ocean.
I tried turning the lights off for three days and that worked well. While it did not clear it all it removed 75%. I now only run the light for about 4 hours per day. The corals don't seem to be bothered by it. However, I do not have any SPS.
Still a bit of the algae. Though no where close to what it was before I shut the lights down for three days.
Not Bad it's been 11 days since hooking up the two little fishies phosban 150. My phosphates are now holding at 0 down from 0.15. And The GHA is turning white.
Occasionally I see a clump of the GHA being blown around the tank.
So it looks like this may do the trick.
Great product I wish that I would have tried one sooner.
But I always thought they were a gimmick like some of the other media/devices on the market that are suppose to be magic cures.
You need to test your source water too. Where are you getting the water from? You can do a 100% water change every day but if the water you are using has Phosphate you are not going to help a thing. make sense?
IMO lights of 2-3 days is not going to do a thing. You kill it my getting rif of it's food source like others have said.
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