living_waters
In Memoriam
Keep in mind I believe that's from a 180 to 36 comparison I trim prob a baseball size once a month and I feed preaty decently but I feed them slowly so its not put to waste will a alge scruber help with cyano?
YES! I win the cyano is defeated!��
BlueCorn and i have used chemiclean twice. Like you, i've inly had to use it twice in the last few years, but when i did use it-it did the job. We've had success with it. Aside from our manual removal, bulb changes, siphoning.I want someone who knows about the Chemiclean product to tell me why exactly I shouldn't use it. I used it after about 3 months of being set up, and the the red cyano went away like magic! For at least a year it was gone. When it came back again I used it and again it worked beautifully. Is there something that I could be doing to my tank that happened to your tank or at least someone you know's tank with this product? My fish and coral seem just fine, but I am thinking about trying out a few sps frags in the coming months. Anyone?
Cyanobacteria is a photosynthetic bacteria. Chemi-clean is a product that kills bacteria. But bacteria is the bedrock of the filtration systems in our tanks.
There are many different kinds of bacteria, as Sk8tr mentioned; some antibiotics kill only gram negative or gram positive bacteria, while others kill both. I personally do not know if cyanobacteria is of only one type, and if so, which type it may be. I do know, however, that it is bacteria that converts ammonia to nitrite and then to nitrate, and thus it is bacteria that is essential to keeping things alive in aquaria. That is why I think it is unwise to use Chemi-clean, or any antibiotic, in a tank in an attempt to kill cyanobacteria.
Bacteria are everywhere, and indiscriminate killing of them can have unintended consequences.
when i had cyano i used a product call chemiclean ! it erradicated the ciano !
From Sk8r. You were really very, very lucky. It can also crash a tank that's on minimal equipment. It is a gram-positive antibiotic. Your sandbed is (mostly) gram-negative, which is how this product avoids killing off your sandbed and live rock. But it does damage the tank ecosystem, and your tank may take months to recover. That treatment and lights-out do exactly the same thing: they kill the cyano. The effectiveness of the antibiotic is absolute, and your tank's survival depends on a) how much biomass there was and b) how effective your skimmer is to get that instant die-off out fast. The effect of the lights-out treatment is less drastic, and kills off the cyano at a slower rate, which a weak skimmer or successive water changes can deal with safely. Your ecosystem also remains intact, and can better handle the increased bioload.
My advice to novices is don't use this until you're an expert: otherwise luck and the factors above are a real dice roll.