CeeGee
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<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14673376#post14673376 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by DMBillies
That "fungus" you have is very weird. First thing, fungi tend to thrive in low pH environments, so raising your pH can't hurt there.
I'm also curious, since I do believe your tank is very low nutrient especially if you're using GFO and were dosing carbon, whether you've got any coralline growth? Coralline is a calcifying algae so just like your corals it will not be able to lay down the calcium carbonate needed to grow when the water is too acidic and just like any plant needs certain nutrients to thrive. My guess is, the fungus, which can grow well in a low pH environment is helping to use up what little nutrients are available in the tank. Also of interest is the fact that fungi actually emit C02 as they "feed" instead of fixing it like algae. I'm not sure the extent to which this could realistically be influencing your pH, but it can't possibly be helping matters.
Your clean-up crew doesn't touch the fungus?
Since you've established that it probably isn't algae (and it certainly doesn't look like one to me), again I'd start by raising your pH. Then coralline and other film algaes will have a better chance of competing against the fungus (or whatever it is). If your corals are pale, you might also reduce your striving for a really low nutrient tank. After all, corals and most of the animals in your tank need a certain amount of food to thrive, you're just trying to remove the leftovers before it breaks down and can feed a huge algae bloom. In your case, if you get the pH straightened out you might be able to use moderate coralline growth to compete against the fungus and help slowly reduce the amount of the fungus in your system.
That seems crazy, I know, but my hunch is that you aren't getting any coralline and probably very little other film type algae growth. That could be exacerbated by the fact that everything is covered with this fungus which undoubtedly has a defense mechanism to prevent getting easily crowded out by other species (so those good types of algaes don't have anywhere to settle and get a foothold). So... what I'm really proposing is a balancing act... which is really all any of our tanks are. Not all algae growth is bad and coralline is especially desirable because it prevents other nastier algaes (like hair algae and hopefully, for your case, this weird fungus) from being able to settle the substrate.
Edit: If you're blowing a fan in your window at night and not seeing an increase in pH relative to nights were you aren't (you need to test at the same time), the c02 in your house may not be the problem. I'd recommend the cup of water trick I talked about in my blog. Test your tank water in a cup, walk outside, stir the water really hard for a few minutes, then walk back inside and test the pH again. It would be even better if you could do it in the morning and at night. That will give you the best indication of how much you can expect your pH to rise as a result of outside aeration. In my case, it was a pretty stable .2 regardless of the time of day, which is fairly significant...
I am home so let me try and answer some of this.
Clean up crew does little to help the matter. I have a very small clean up crew as I haven't added any critters since I first set up my old tank. So my remaining snails are at least 4 years old. I would add more but they don't touch it and I have no other micro algae in the tank (yet).
No coraline except on rocks that had it to start with. None on the back glass, none anywhere. I always figured this was due to running T5's as I always read coraline likes lower intensity lighting. In the display tank their is no coraline whatsoever as I cooked those rocks and none remains on them.