Hair Algae Predators

Reefer07

New member
I just got over months worth of battling bryopsis and it is finally gone. However, I now have hair algae growing in slowly. What would be some good ways to maybe stop this growth. Or perhaps some inverts that would eat the algae?
I have a very low nutrient system and I am currently dosing prodibio.
 
sea hare and mexican turbos worked for me but I also realised I had bio balls that might be causing the issue in the system so removed them and within 2 months the tank has been cleared of this 2 year long nightmare.
 
mexican turbos will eat almost 100% of the crap algea. In a 29 gallon tank I would just like 3 of them and sit back and be patient. If you get too many they will literally eat it all then starve to death (and immediately start rotting).
 
Reefer07,

How did you defeat the Bryopsis? I'm currently battling a batch trying the Tech-M method. I'd figure compared to that algae, the other varities wouldn't be so hard to get rid of.
 
Re: Hair Algae Predators

<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14720134#post14720134 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Reefer07
I just got over months worth of battling bryopsis and it is finally gone. However, I now have hair algae growing in slowly. What would be some good ways to maybe stop this growth. Or perhaps some inverts that would eat the algae?
I have a very low nutrient system and I am currently dosing prodibio.

I don't think your system is as low on nutrients as you may think -- the nutrients are the "fuel" that the "fires" of bryopsis and hair algae feed on. Your bryopsis was eating the phosphates and nitrates and growing -- now that it's gone the nutrients are fueling the hair algae outbreak, although it's growing slowly b/c you have gotten rid of most of the nutrients but there is still some to fuel the growth.

If you just get a critter that eats hair algae, those nutrients will still be there to fuel the next pest that comes to your system.

I would up the water changes, the skimming power of your system, and maybe supplement the prodibio with a stronger form of carbon dosing.

It's all about the nutrients -- as soon as I got my carbon dosing regime going well (I was very careful so I started very slowly) , my hair algae and bubble algae growth stopped in its tracks and the existing hair algae started turning white and dying.

"remote deep sandbeds" (in your sump or somewhere else) can also help.
 
definately get the parameters in check. I also do not recommend the mexican turbo snails because from what I've experienced, normal reef temperatures are just too high and they don't last long, and as mentioned prior, they often starve, die, and then rot in the tank. They are sold everywhere, but personally I feel that the mexican turbo snails are not a good invert for a tank unless it's a cooler temp. tank.
 
mollies will adapt to SW and eat hair algae, but something that eats algae does not remove the nutrients
 
Nitrates < 5 on salifert
Phosphates I have never measured but I only have 4 fish and I feed half cube a day.
I skim real wet. I don't see how I could get my nutrients down any lower.

Chuck, I have no clue how I got the bryopsis to disappear but I tried just about every method out there.
 
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