A little more than a month ago I restarted my 50 gallon reef. In its previous incarnation, it had two very minor dino blooms that subsided on their own after a few weeks; something about the tank just didn't support large populations of ostreopsis species of dinos (identified with my microscope and the help of a microbiologist). They made a third appearance with the restart and this time they started to take over the tank. Because I only had a few gorgonians and leathers, I decided to nip it in the bud with Fauna Marin's Ultra Algae X. That did nothing to the dinos after 21 days of dosing.
So, using my microscope and refractometer, I determined the specific gravity at which this species of dinos would suffer 100% casualties and found it to be 1.014. At this s.g., 99.9999% of the dinos dies immediately with a few hanging on for a few minutes more. Freshwater kills them instantaneously.
With that knowledge, I removed my few corals, fish, and inverts to a holding tank and proceeded to lower the salinity of the display to 1.014. It worked perfectly; I couldn't find a single living dinoflagellate among the numerous samples I took.
I will next raise the salinity, wait for any ammonia/nitrite spikes, and then reintroduce the livestock after a 10 second freshwater dip, including the fish. From now on, I'm going to give everything a quick 10 second freshwater dip before its placed in the tank or quarantine so as to kill any dinos before they make it to the display. I'm not sure what effect this would have on sps but I imagine a few seconds won't hurt much.
So, I thought this would be a good strategy to use on a new,small, lightly stocked reef. I just didn't want to battle this for months.
So, using my microscope and refractometer, I determined the specific gravity at which this species of dinos would suffer 100% casualties and found it to be 1.014. At this s.g., 99.9999% of the dinos dies immediately with a few hanging on for a few minutes more. Freshwater kills them instantaneously.
With that knowledge, I removed my few corals, fish, and inverts to a holding tank and proceeded to lower the salinity of the display to 1.014. It worked perfectly; I couldn't find a single living dinoflagellate among the numerous samples I took.
I will next raise the salinity, wait for any ammonia/nitrite spikes, and then reintroduce the livestock after a 10 second freshwater dip, including the fish. From now on, I'm going to give everything a quick 10 second freshwater dip before its placed in the tank or quarantine so as to kill any dinos before they make it to the display. I'm not sure what effect this would have on sps but I imagine a few seconds won't hurt much.
So, I thought this would be a good strategy to use on a new,small, lightly stocked reef. I just didn't want to battle this for months.