What is the best method to get Reed of this bacteria?
i personally would never use a product like chemiclean. it is not prejudice against just the bad bacteria it also kills good bacteria. ive had a few cyano outbreaks and what solved it for me was increasing the flow in the tank and lowering the hours the lights stay on.
i personally would never use a product like chemiclean. it is not prejudice against just the bad bacteria it also kills good bacteria. ive had a few cyano outbreaks and what solved it for me was increasing the flow in the tank and lowering the hours the lights stay on.
Chemiclean only addresses the symptom. It can be useful though in certain cases. I have used it to wipe out cyano that was caused by carbon dosing. But before using chemiclean the tank parameters must be in check.
Better flow and carbon dosing.
Some people like vodka, but I prefer a touch of sugar daily let the other bacteria out-compete the cyano and get pulled away in the skimmer.
I had it in a 29 at about the 4 month mark. .
It does not kill any good bacteria that I have been able to tell for 25 years of use off and on as needed.
I have never lost anything to the use of this product.
I already have good flow and I lower light times also lowers growth. I don't do that. That is more a patch then fix
Unfortunately, Chemiclean's active ingredient is an antibiotic and like pretty much all other red slime removers, it uses erythromycin contrary to what the label on the packaging leads you to believe. The label states it doesn't contain Erythromycin "Succinate" however, what they don't tell you s that there are many other forms of erythromycin. Chemiclean was banned in parts of Europe due to test results showing erythromycin which is in fact an antibiotic and also impacts beneficial bacteria such as denitrifying bacteria.As I said, there are many forms of erythromycin such as Erythromycin Sulfate, Erythromycin Estolate, Erythromycin Stearate, Erythromycin Ethylsuccinate, Erythromycin Ethylsuccinate, and others. Chemiclean just doesn't contain erythromycin succinate. Instead, from what I understand, it contains Erythromycin Sulfate.
In my experience, there are better ways to combat cyano and I always suggest avoiding red slime removers of any kind. Increased flow in the effected areas coupled with improved husbandry (regular vacuuming of the sand and blasting the rocks with a power head) are the main ways along with improved water quality. A good properly setup UV sterilizer will go a long way in eliminating cyanobacteria from the water column which will help halt it's spread but if the flow and husbandry isn't addressed, anything else is nothing more than a bandaid and likely an effort in futility.
Agreed. Fix the problem. Chemiclean only addresses the symptom. It can be useful though in certain cases. I have used it to wipe out cyano that was caused by carbon dosing. But before using chemiclean the tank parameters must be in check.
Would you please explain about the carbon dosing and Cyano ? I have seen a huge increase in the cano after dosing carbon for cleaner water.