At what point during the maturing process of a tank should I begin to worry about Green Hair Algae?
110 gallon tank has been up and running since late September. It contains 100 lbs of "live" (i.e. uncooked rock direct from a supplier) and 50 lbs of "dry" rock from reefcleaners.
For the past week or two I've noticed an outbreak of GHA on the uppermost rocks in the tank (the ones that get the most light). I haven't really done much about it yet because it's serving as great breeding ground for copepods.
My levels are "normal" except for high nitrate levels. Phosphate doesn't register at all via a Sailfert test. Nitrates sit around 40 ppm. Nitrite and Ammonia are zero.
I do weekly 20 gallon water changes with RODI water and have dosed NoPOX since day one because I used Red Sea's "Reef Mature" kit to cycle my tank.
I don't think I overfeed (nori sheet daily for the Tang). Pellets and LRS Reef Frenzy nightly.
I've always assumed that the high nitrate levels were caused by die off on the live rock and that they would eventually come down as all of the biological material on the rock decomposed.
So...
How long should rock die off take in a scenario like this?
and
Should I worry about the GHA or just let things run it course? It doesn't seem to be spreading that much. Just my top layers of rocks.
110 gallon tank has been up and running since late September. It contains 100 lbs of "live" (i.e. uncooked rock direct from a supplier) and 50 lbs of "dry" rock from reefcleaners.
For the past week or two I've noticed an outbreak of GHA on the uppermost rocks in the tank (the ones that get the most light). I haven't really done much about it yet because it's serving as great breeding ground for copepods.
My levels are "normal" except for high nitrate levels. Phosphate doesn't register at all via a Sailfert test. Nitrates sit around 40 ppm. Nitrite and Ammonia are zero.
I do weekly 20 gallon water changes with RODI water and have dosed NoPOX since day one because I used Red Sea's "Reef Mature" kit to cycle my tank.
I don't think I overfeed (nori sheet daily for the Tang). Pellets and LRS Reef Frenzy nightly.
I've always assumed that the high nitrate levels were caused by die off on the live rock and that they would eventually come down as all of the biological material on the rock decomposed.
So...
How long should rock die off take in a scenario like this?
and
Should I worry about the GHA or just let things run it course? It doesn't seem to be spreading that much. Just my top layers of rocks.