animalkingdom
New member
As the title suggests I am looking for the best ways to prevent bacteria mulm on rocks? I do carbon dose and am beginning to get the impression from others that it could attribute to the large amounts of bacterial mulm.
Snails (nerites, cowries etc.) also do an excellent job of cleaning the rocks from this biofilm.
will cowries live in a reef tank? I thought the temp would be too high
Consider dosing Korallen Zucht/ZEOs specialty formulation/product "Bio Mate", since you already utilize carbon dosing techniques.
You'll like the results you get, if you patiently give it a few months ...
Come back here in 3 months of 3-5x weekly dosing, @ half the recommended dosage, and let me/us know the results![]()
Mulm is a dark waste (detritus) that accumulates at the bottom of the tank which will then get covered in bacteria. If the stuff you have is clear or white then it is just live bacteria and it is being caused from overdosing carbon. Just stop dosing until it goes away. If you can visually see the bacterial colonies then you don't need to dose, there are enough of them. When its gone and hopefully has not acquired a green color, then start dosing again, but with much less...say less than half.
Why the half dose? i use the zeo system(main 4 and coral snow) now and in my slow flow fuge i get a brown coating on the deep sand bed. i thought i was getting cyno but could it be related to the mum your talking about? would the bio mate help me also?
Why the half dose? i use the zeo system(main 4 and coral snow) now and in my slow flow fuge i get a brown coating on the deep sand bed. i thought i was getting cyno but could it be related to the mum your talking about? would the bio mate help me also?