pugbreath13
In Memoriam
Yes thats it.
I posted above before I saw your post.
Thank you so much!
I posted above before I saw your post.
Thank you so much!
redfishsc,
AF does not seem to work well with bryopsis or derbesia. Several hobbyists have tried it against byopsis and did not achieve control. I have a derbesia (siphoning algae) and did not achieve good control after dosing AF for quite an extended period of time.
I thought you had tried the mag elevation method?
A picture of Despersia-marinea which seems to be a common pest in reef tanks:
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From my experience, AlgaeFix does not work on the derbesia.![]()
I believe the despersia came from me switching salt mixes and had used it in making water for this tank.
My gut feeling is that it takes both products to kill despersia but that's only based on my experience from my 2 tanks so please take it FWIW.
I have been giving some thought about using selected corals in my tank as biological control for my derbesia problem. The left side of my rock pile has little derbesia on it. The small cheap purple mushrooms seem to do a good job. I have quite a few of these mushroom now. I was thinking about placing them on some heavily infested derbesia areas and see what kind of results I get. The derbesia does not grow on my sand. It does grow on the glass, but that is easy to control. Any thoughts about how to best experiment with this method?![]()
I've been thinking about trying to raise the copper level in my tank. The problem is there is no adequate test kit that I am aware of. Guessing at your tank copper level can be off enough, since the level you may want to try is very close to killing things. I have only seen copper toxicity to algae noted in a few research papers. Haven't seen anything for derbesia. The papers I have read show quite a wide variance in copper toxicity to algae. Some are quite low, while others can be too high for use in a reef aquarium. If I could find a reliable copper test kit for the range we are looking at I would give it a try. The only other way of using copper I can think of would be to add small doses & watch the results. Keep increasing the amount you add in small amounts but spaced far enough apart to allow the copper level to return close to normal. I would remove all valuable shirmp and use a few cheap shrimp as a monitor.![]()
I have been giving some thought about using selected corals in my tank as biological control for my derbesia problem. The left side of my rock pile has little derbesia on it. The small cheap purple mushrooms seem to do a good job. I have quite a few of these mushroom now. I was thinking about placing them on some heavily infested derbesia areas and see what kind of results I get. The derbesia does not grow on my sand. It does grow on the glass, but that is easy to control. Any thoughts about how to best experiment with this method?![]()