My starry blenny keeps my DT bryopsis free. I even let it grow in the fuge so she has something to graze on up there.![]()
Sorry for going completely off point, but is that an Irish Wolfhound?
Mike
My starry blenny keeps my DT bryopsis free. I even let it grow in the fuge so she has something to graze on up there.![]()
I banner this stuff so much I'm sure some must think I'm a kent rep sometimes!
Plain and simple it works most of the time.
It's not about elevated mag level as much as it is how much of your mag is tech M mag.
Yes, I get it, some people just HAVE to understand what this magic impurity is that makes it work.
I'm not one of those people, it could come from magic beans for all I care if it rids the bry headaches, and it's mag, relatively harmless even at highly elevated levels, and you're probably going to add some mag anyway so why not use the tech M
Kent actually did respond to this and explained why they could not disclose their process but I don't recall what the reason was, maybe someone has a link to their response.
As I understand it, Kent does know the trace contaminant that has the desired effect on Bryopsis. However, they can't market the ingredient alone or TechM itself as an algaecide, as that would require a great deal of safety testing and registration with the USDA.
I recently did the Kent M treatment in my tank. I had mag around 1375 before and had to raise it to 1900-2000 range before seeing any result.
Long story short, the bryopsis did die back A LOT but not entirely as I see a strand here and there still. My corals and inverts HATED the treatment. My fighting conch didn't move for two weeks and only after my third large water change did it come out of its coma. My corals are still all suffering from what looks like STN. Oddly enough though some corals didn't bat an eyelash and are going strong. Overall I lost probably 4-5 smaller encrusted frags. If I'm honest if I could do it over again I would avoid the treatment and just manually remove until it got untenable. I would also recomment moving any corals that show any sign of stress (if you have another tank). Wish I did....
just my 2 cents
it does not sound like bryopsis then. Bryopsis looks like a fern.
I wonder if I have some different variety of Bryopsis or something completely different. It grows like grass that just sprouted in your lawn. Each individual strand develops two branches. Whatever it is gfo, nutrient control, and my cleanup crew is taking care of it right now.
I'd take a picture, but this stuff is so small and short.