I'm trying Cuprisorb as most other methods didn't work. Well, not most - all.Anyone ever use cuprisorb for dinoflagellate problem
I can't tell what that is in the pics. The colour sure looks like dinos or diatoms, but I've currently got a cyano vs dinos battle happening and the stupid things are exactly the same colour. (Checked with my microscope. Are the dinos eating cyano and picking up the colour? I think the cyano is actually winning)I'm trying Cuprisorb as most other methods didn't work. Well, not most - all.
I've also read several threads about Cuprisorb and dinos. It's not directly connected to copper, but rather to iron, or some other unknown that Cuprisorb seems to absorb and get out of the tank.
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It is close to half a year since I added 80 pounds of live rock and now I'm seeing a decline in my SPS corals, just like I predicted.
I've seen it so many times it was simply inevitable. Only this time it took a bit longer than usual.
This time I have decided to use daily siphoning and hydrogen peroxide.
I'm wondering if comparing to the glass test, is the Dino?
Dinos will not always react the same way so I think this test is not a good one even though it can give a good indication if they do connect. Mine used to do just that, but it's a rare sight today.
I tried to do the glass test to determine if I have Dino. I can't find the link anywhere that I found. I remember it saying that if you put a napkin on the top of the glass and add your tank water through it. With ambient lighting in about an hour the Dino will connect to each other. I'm wondering if comparing to the glass test, is the Dino?
Back in the middle of dino paradise again....sheesh! My last outbreak was stopped through aggressive tank maintenance, UV sterilizer and a lot of phyto and pods. This time I have decided to use daily siphoning and hydrogen peroxide. Any input or personal experiences with H2O2 against dinos would be appreciated.
I want to try carbon dosing , but haven't found a good answer yet for how Dino will behave
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Why don't you add phosphate? Or add biospira/stability/etc. Carbon dosing is supposed to increase bacterial populations, but may feed the dinos. Adding bacteria directly should skip the middle man so to speak, and still drop nitrate.
hth
ivy
Back in the middle of dino paradise again....sheesh! My last outbreak was stopped through aggressive tank maintenance, UV sterilizer and a lot of phyto and pods. This time I have decided to use daily siphoning and hydrogen peroxide. Any input or personal experiences with H2O2 against dinos would be appreciated.
What is it in the dirty method that causes a reduction in them? I really don't want to have a hair algae and cyano outbreak with all my sps corals in there. Have you done dirty with sps corals? How did they react?DNA- you have sps, right? Why do you do water changes? Have you tried carbon dosing? I want to try carbon dosing , but haven't found a good answer yet for how Dino will behave
Billy- have you tried dirty method plus daily siphoning? Put the hose into you sump in a filter sock. That worked for me - they came back less and less everyday. ... Plus over feeding and pods and phyto.
Definitely still need to stay away from water changes - they come back every time. But now I somehow got my nitrates high and unsure what to do about them. Chaeto won't grow- probably cause no po4. Thinking about carbon dosing still