karimwassef
Active member
Add lots of soft corals??
Could I have found the solution? Is it possible that the Dino's are being fuelled and protected within the tank by the Lugols?
Taricha- any interest in running the CC experiment?
Interesting. I don't own any Lugol's products or anything containing Iodine that i'm aware of, outside of the salt.
Garlic Guard: Garlic Extract - 9900 ppm, Allicin (active ingredient) - 130 ppm, Vitamin C - 1000 ppm
VitaChem: Ascorbic acid, marine algae (ulva and kelp), plankton extract, biotin, soluble brewer's yeast, cobalamine concentrate, L-Lysine HCL, d-alpha tocopherol, inositol folic acid, and hydrochloride monohydrate.
May be related, may not be, but I figured it might be worth noting.
My best guess (and some evidence but not super conclusive) was that it was Iron.
That could be. I know that when I started running GFO, my dino problem went through the roof. Now, I know from my time with planted tanks that ferric iron is insoluble in water and completely unavailable to plant life. But, how about dinos? Or does its insolubility mean nothing can make use of it outside of its use as a filter media?
Sure. Worth a shot.
Why do you think your sps reacted like they did. Any theories?
The toxic effect of the antibiotic metronidazole on aquatic organisms said:Metronidazole has a low molecular weight, resulting in easy penetration of the cell membrane of both aerobe and anaerobe microorganisms. Inside the cell metronidazole is reduced to reactive intermediates that damage the DNA of the microorganism. The reductive process is thought usually to be mediated by a ferri-doxin system that exists in anaerobes. This may explain the specific effect of metronidazole against anaerobic microorganisms.
imidazoles and other compounds may present environmental problems including 1) adverse effects on ground-nitrifying bacteria, 2) disruption of the purification processes in treatment plants that use bacteria (e.g. methane production) caused by introduction of waste containing antibacterial drugs, 3) toxic effects on aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems and consequently interference with trophic chains.
note: "EC50" means the concentration where 50% were killed/inhibited.The tests showed effect on Chlorella sp. and Selenastrum capricornutum. 72-hr EC10 of 2.03 mg/l and 19.9 mg/l respectively and 72-hr EC50 values of 12.5 mg/l and 40.4 mg/l respectively were among the results obtained. No acute lethal effect was observed on Acartia tonsa or Brachydanio rerio.