My office tank is a little over 6 years old now, filled from top to bottom with LPS and soft corals.
I've been battling what has been called "Marine Snot" for close to a year now. Some reefers have stated that I have dinoflagellates, and I admit that my knowledge of marine bacteria is limited. My description of my problem is as follows.
My "marine snot" is transparent, long, and wavy. It collects on everything including live rock, glass, overflow (gums up and decreases flow at my overflow grid), pumps etc. Once my overflow grid is fairly plugged (when not cleaned) it stops filtering the top layer of water where the snot just swirls in large colonies on the surface. Since beginning of my snot, my algae problems completely ceased. I haven't seen algae of any type in my tank for some time. All coralline algae has died off. My glass is cleaned daily, and the "snot" colonies will collect on the glass in only a few hours it seems. My skimmer cup is filled with the foulest skimmate every 3 days or so.
Water parameters:
Temp: 78*
NO3: 0
Ca: 400
P04: haven't tested (usually base my phosphates on algae growth)
Alk: 7.2
pH: usually around 8.0 ( I usually don't worry about pH unless my Alk starts swinging)
Mag: don't test for it unless my Ca/Alk go out of wack.
I use IO reef salt
Previous reef habits included 10% water change every other week and daily dosing of vinegar. I believe this occurred due to vinegar, but with anecdotal information only. Once snot started forming vinegar was stopped.
Things I have tried:
1) Cut back my feeding to 3 x week and increased water changes to weekly x 3 months with no help
2) Lights out for 3 days with no help (did not cover tank)
3) stopped skimming and stopped water changes for 1 month; did not help
4) started vacuuming snot and then dosing H2O2 for 3 weeks straight. This seemed to help a little bit, but only seemed to get the amount down to about 50% from total amount.
I am a physician at a private practice. So finally I just took a sample of the snot and sent it to my lab. This is what came back in the report.
MICROBIOLOGIC CULTURE RESULTS:
CULTURE AEROBIC/ANAEROBIC
GRAM STAIN No white blood cells (polys) seen
Many gram negative rods
CULTURE:
Heavy growth of Vibrio alginolyticus
Heavy growth of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
No anaerobes isolated
STATUS FINAL 10/26/2014
SUSCEPTIBILITY
ORGANISM: Heavy growth of Vibrio alginolyticus
METHOD MIC
Amoxicillin/Clavulanic Acid SUSCEPTIBLE 4
Ampicillin/Sulbactam SUSCEPTIBLE 4
Cefazolin INTERMEDIATE 16
Cefepime SUSCEPTIBLE <= 1
Ceftazidime SUSCEPTIBLE <= 1
Ceftriaxone SUSCEPTIBLE <= 1
Ciprofloxacin SUSCEPTIBLE <= 0.25
Gentamicin SUSCEPTIBLE <= 1
Imipenem SUSCEPTIBLE <= 0.25
Levofloxacin SUSCEPTIBLE <= 0.12
Piperacillin/Tazobactam SUSCEPTIBLE <= 4
Tobramycin SUSCEPTIBLE <= 1
Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole SUSCEPTIBLE <= 20
SUSCEPTIBILITY
ORGANISM Heavy growth of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
METHOD MIC
Levofloxacin SUSCEPTIBLE 0.5
Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole SUSCEPTIBLE <= 20
I plan on beginning to dose Bactrim DS (trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole) probably tomorrow. I'll do one pill for my tank (60 g) dissolved in tank water first and then poured in slowly in the sump. I'll monitor my fish and corals etc for changes.
Do you see any problems with this or have any advice? Let me know. I'll keep everyone posted either way.
Jim
I've been battling what has been called "Marine Snot" for close to a year now. Some reefers have stated that I have dinoflagellates, and I admit that my knowledge of marine bacteria is limited. My description of my problem is as follows.
My "marine snot" is transparent, long, and wavy. It collects on everything including live rock, glass, overflow (gums up and decreases flow at my overflow grid), pumps etc. Once my overflow grid is fairly plugged (when not cleaned) it stops filtering the top layer of water where the snot just swirls in large colonies on the surface. Since beginning of my snot, my algae problems completely ceased. I haven't seen algae of any type in my tank for some time. All coralline algae has died off. My glass is cleaned daily, and the "snot" colonies will collect on the glass in only a few hours it seems. My skimmer cup is filled with the foulest skimmate every 3 days or so.
Water parameters:
Temp: 78*
NO3: 0
Ca: 400
P04: haven't tested (usually base my phosphates on algae growth)
Alk: 7.2
pH: usually around 8.0 ( I usually don't worry about pH unless my Alk starts swinging)
Mag: don't test for it unless my Ca/Alk go out of wack.
I use IO reef salt
Previous reef habits included 10% water change every other week and daily dosing of vinegar. I believe this occurred due to vinegar, but with anecdotal information only. Once snot started forming vinegar was stopped.
Things I have tried:
1) Cut back my feeding to 3 x week and increased water changes to weekly x 3 months with no help
2) Lights out for 3 days with no help (did not cover tank)
3) stopped skimming and stopped water changes for 1 month; did not help
4) started vacuuming snot and then dosing H2O2 for 3 weeks straight. This seemed to help a little bit, but only seemed to get the amount down to about 50% from total amount.
I am a physician at a private practice. So finally I just took a sample of the snot and sent it to my lab. This is what came back in the report.
MICROBIOLOGIC CULTURE RESULTS:
CULTURE AEROBIC/ANAEROBIC
GRAM STAIN No white blood cells (polys) seen
Many gram negative rods
CULTURE:
Heavy growth of Vibrio alginolyticus
Heavy growth of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
No anaerobes isolated
STATUS FINAL 10/26/2014
SUSCEPTIBILITY
ORGANISM: Heavy growth of Vibrio alginolyticus
METHOD MIC
Amoxicillin/Clavulanic Acid SUSCEPTIBLE 4
Ampicillin/Sulbactam SUSCEPTIBLE 4
Cefazolin INTERMEDIATE 16
Cefepime SUSCEPTIBLE <= 1
Ceftazidime SUSCEPTIBLE <= 1
Ceftriaxone SUSCEPTIBLE <= 1
Ciprofloxacin SUSCEPTIBLE <= 0.25
Gentamicin SUSCEPTIBLE <= 1
Imipenem SUSCEPTIBLE <= 0.25
Levofloxacin SUSCEPTIBLE <= 0.12
Piperacillin/Tazobactam SUSCEPTIBLE <= 4
Tobramycin SUSCEPTIBLE <= 1
Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole SUSCEPTIBLE <= 20
SUSCEPTIBILITY
ORGANISM Heavy growth of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
METHOD MIC
Levofloxacin SUSCEPTIBLE 0.5
Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole SUSCEPTIBLE <= 20
I plan on beginning to dose Bactrim DS (trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole) probably tomorrow. I'll do one pill for my tank (60 g) dissolved in tank water first and then poured in slowly in the sump. I'll monitor my fish and corals etc for changes.
Do you see any problems with this or have any advice? Let me know. I'll keep everyone posted either way.
Jim