TMy thought was, go natural go natural go natural. It is just algae, deprive it of its fuel and it will die off much like regualr HA and Cyano. But, man, this stuff is stubborn!
So you say that I should stop treatment when the bryopsis is almost gone, I will try that and hope that it doesn't return.
I bleached my entire system (twice) 6 months ago to get rid of the Bryopsis. I did it with everything in the tank. I restarted it 6 months ago and to date, have no green algaes in it. Not even on the glass. Everything now goes through a QT process. So far, so good.
No. I was re-doing a bathroom and painted the drywall with a sealer/primer. I had the bathroom fan running so I thought I'd be okay. I wasn't. The fumes got into the water and killed the entire tank. The only things that survived were one dendrophyllia and, the Bryopsis.Rick, did you pull out all your coral?
Be careful here. Stability didn't do for me what I expected it to. It's going to take quite awhile for sterilized rock to develope a bacterial bed. Keep a very close eye on your ammonia when you start putting fish in (both your temporary tank and your main tank).I've been fragging out all my corals, and have removed about 1/3 of my rock.
I'm bleaching the rock for a few days. I'll cycle the rock using household ammonia (and Seachem Stability) in buckets.
Once I get about 2/3 of my rockwork removed, bleached/sterilized, and cycled with ammonia (roughly 3-4 weeks time) I will then pull out my coral and remaining rock to a separate tank and my fish into a bucket (not many fish)
I'll bleach the WHOLE TANK SYSTEM for a day or so. Empty, fill with AGED saltwater.
Add in the freshly cycled rockwork and all my coral/animals. The rock will have a bioload capability that's actually more than it was to begin with.
I'll be ONLY putting freshly cycled rock that has been previously bleached.
Any coral that has even a hint of bryopsis will be destroyed (fortunately this is only a couple small zoanthid colonies).
Be careful here. Stability didn't do for me what I expected it to. It's going to take quite awhile for sterilized rock to develope a bacterial bed. Keep a very close eye on your ammonia when you start putting fish in (both your temporary tank and your main tank).
I'm wiped BRYOPIS by BRIOPSIS of each coral .... and putting it in a separate aquarium (observation), I believe that completely reset the nutrients from the water they will disappear altogether, this aquarium'm injecting BALLING + VODKA + Biotype / biodigester, zeroing definitely nutrients from water.