Yes, I guess I mean safer for your livestock. I have heard many people use chemiclean and say it does not harm their livestock. It also says that it will not harm any beneficial bacteria or livestock right on the box of chemiclean. So is it really that harmful to inhabitants? Can it kill them off or just stress them out?define better?
better as in potentially "safer" for the inhabitants of the tank? Then siphon is better..
or better as in more likely to work right away/faster? Then chemiclean might be the better option..
I will always recommend you "try" siphon/3 day blackout first and see how it goes..
When doing a 3 day lights out do I need to cover the tank completely so absolutely no light gets in or do I not turn on the tank lights for 3 days?Having been dealing with cyanobacteria for the last couple of months, I think I may have finally broken the back of the outbreak after doing a water change, where I syphoned the majority of the slime, followed immediately by three days of a blackout. I am now using reduced hours with the blues and I'm going to gradually build back from there but after 48 hours with no cyano return, so far so good.
Yes, I guess I mean safer for your livestock. I have heard many people use chemiclean and say it does not harm their livestock. It also says that it will not harm any beneficial bacteria or livestock right on the box of chemiclean. So is it really that harmful to inhabitants? Can it kill them off or just stress them out?
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Why? Does chemiclean need to be skimmed out?THe main question with chemiclean is how good is your skimmer.
Thanks for your feed back. Makes a lot of sense to only use chemiclean as a last resort.My tank is a 60g with quite a few soft and LPS with only one SPS. Also have two fish and inverts in a clean up crew. I dosed the prescribed amount of chemiclean, 3 days of no light, and a 30% waterchange. It didn't appear to stress any of my corals or livestock. My pop population was fine. The cyano is gone and most of my algae was stunted. My tanks perameters remained stable which lead me to believe my beneficial bacteria was fine. I had a great experience with the stuff but your mileage may vary. If your outbreak isn't overbearing, just try to siphon, water change, and cut lights. Go ahead and grab some chemiclean to keep in your arsenal in case you don't win or have a battle to fight later.
When doing a 3 day lights out do I need to cover the tank completely so absolutely no light gets in or do I not turn on the tank lights for 3 days?
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I'm not sure any of the above are cyano cures. I struggled for years off and on with cyano until I started a DIY algae turf scrubber on my 60 cube. PO4 and NO3 levels went to almost undetectable levels. Poof, cyano gradually disappeared not to return. My guess, nutrient control may be a cure. My story anyway.