<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7575431#post7575431 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by honeybee
Hello Mike,
It will be interesting to see if this algae can spead through your reef. The image in your photo is what I call the reproductive vegetative form, its purpose to rapid reproduction. Sexual reprodution almost never occurs in a reef. It usually sits in the reef as a modest clump accumlating nutrients and producting small reproductive cells in the leaf-like structures. At some time it will start to break up into very small fragments that drift around, attach to rocks, and develop invasion filaments or strands that product the reproductive form. Physically removing it from the rocks increases the fragmentation and speeds it's invasion.
I have two reefs, one with 10 watts per gallon of VHO light, half the bulbs are white actinics and half are blue actinics. Lights are on 12 hours. This algae now covers almost all of the surfaces.
The second reef has about 5 watts per gallon of power compact light, half blue actinic and half 10,000k white light. Lights are on 12 hours. Each time this algae was introducted into the reef it died.
The question is why did it live in one reef and die in the other. I have some thoughts on the answer and I am going to set up a test reef and see it I can frorce it to die off.
Honeybee