asylumdown
New member
I know there are threads on this topic lurking around here somewhere, I may even have contributed to some of them. However, I've had recent anecdotal experience that has strongly supported a suspicion I've had for a while now and I am hoping someone who knows more about chemistry and cyanobacterial metabolism will eventually see this thread and offer input.
The question is simple: Can cyanobacteria use the form of iron that is found in granulated ferric hydroxide (AKA GFO)? Are they able to take it up and convert it to whatever form they require to build their photosynthetic structures?
Like many people, I've struggled with cyanobacteria for as long as I've been a reefer. In my current tank, I only started struggling with it when I switched from PO4x4, which is a form of GFO that is encapsulated in some sort of polymer (also expensive and hard to get in Canada) to the more standard granulated forms like bulk reef supply GFO or rowaphos. I started this tank with biopellets, so I chalked it up to them, but the kicker is that my tank ran for 8 months with biopellets with no cyano, and only came down with it when I switched to the kind of GFO that releases large (compared to not using it at all) quantities of iron hydroxide dust in to the tank every time you change the media out. I haven't been using biopellets for most of 2014, and while my tank has faced challenges I'm still not able to completely explain, cyano has been a constant, damaging nuisance.
My recent experience - my house was being renovated for most of August and a good chunk of September. Long story short I couldn't really access the tank beyond feeding the fish and it was exposed to large quantities of porcelain tile and self levelling cement dust. Unsurprisingly, big dollars in coral died. Unknown to me, the pump that drove my GFO reactor also died during that time.
When I was able to get back in my house and start rescue procedures for what survived, I was rather surprised to find no trace of cyano. Not a speck, not a slightly red hue, nothing. Not even on coral skeleton that had been dead long enough to start growing coraline algae (and we all know how cyano LOVES freshly dead coral skeleton). I fixed the GFO reactor and replaced the media... BAM! 24 hours later, traces of cyano on almost everything. Two weeks later, it's a serious problem again.
I know from the scientific literature that cyano, of all the auto-trophs, has a particularly high demand for iron to construct it's photosynthetic structures. I also know that recent research on to 'black reefs' has pretty much confirmed that iron hulled ships wrecking on iron limited reefs can turn vast swaths of previously pristine surrounding area in to dead, black reefs smothered in carpets of cyanobacteria. I also know that the usual advice for people who get cyano is to ramp up GFO use, but I have yet to find a thread anywhere on the internet where that seems to have helped, and have found several threads where people have commented on cyano first appearing immediately after starting GFO for the first time. I have also never really found a serious discussion about the possibility that the iron in GFO, under the right tank conditions, might itself be feeding the growth of cyano problems. In the absence of GFO or intentional dosing, iron limited but "high" nutrient (relative to the ocean anyway) seem to be the default condition for most reef tanks, which are exactly the kinds of reefs that seem to be most damaged by the sinking of iron hulled ships.
However, all this hinges one whether or not the "F" in GFO is in a form that cyanobacteria can do anything with metabolically, which is what I'm hoping someone on here can answer.
The question is simple: Can cyanobacteria use the form of iron that is found in granulated ferric hydroxide (AKA GFO)? Are they able to take it up and convert it to whatever form they require to build their photosynthetic structures?
Like many people, I've struggled with cyanobacteria for as long as I've been a reefer. In my current tank, I only started struggling with it when I switched from PO4x4, which is a form of GFO that is encapsulated in some sort of polymer (also expensive and hard to get in Canada) to the more standard granulated forms like bulk reef supply GFO or rowaphos. I started this tank with biopellets, so I chalked it up to them, but the kicker is that my tank ran for 8 months with biopellets with no cyano, and only came down with it when I switched to the kind of GFO that releases large (compared to not using it at all) quantities of iron hydroxide dust in to the tank every time you change the media out. I haven't been using biopellets for most of 2014, and while my tank has faced challenges I'm still not able to completely explain, cyano has been a constant, damaging nuisance.
My recent experience - my house was being renovated for most of August and a good chunk of September. Long story short I couldn't really access the tank beyond feeding the fish and it was exposed to large quantities of porcelain tile and self levelling cement dust. Unsurprisingly, big dollars in coral died. Unknown to me, the pump that drove my GFO reactor also died during that time.
When I was able to get back in my house and start rescue procedures for what survived, I was rather surprised to find no trace of cyano. Not a speck, not a slightly red hue, nothing. Not even on coral skeleton that had been dead long enough to start growing coraline algae (and we all know how cyano LOVES freshly dead coral skeleton). I fixed the GFO reactor and replaced the media... BAM! 24 hours later, traces of cyano on almost everything. Two weeks later, it's a serious problem again.
I know from the scientific literature that cyano, of all the auto-trophs, has a particularly high demand for iron to construct it's photosynthetic structures. I also know that recent research on to 'black reefs' has pretty much confirmed that iron hulled ships wrecking on iron limited reefs can turn vast swaths of previously pristine surrounding area in to dead, black reefs smothered in carpets of cyanobacteria. I also know that the usual advice for people who get cyano is to ramp up GFO use, but I have yet to find a thread anywhere on the internet where that seems to have helped, and have found several threads where people have commented on cyano first appearing immediately after starting GFO for the first time. I have also never really found a serious discussion about the possibility that the iron in GFO, under the right tank conditions, might itself be feeding the growth of cyano problems. In the absence of GFO or intentional dosing, iron limited but "high" nutrient (relative to the ocean anyway) seem to be the default condition for most reef tanks, which are exactly the kinds of reefs that seem to be most damaged by the sinking of iron hulled ships.
However, all this hinges one whether or not the "F" in GFO is in a form that cyanobacteria can do anything with metabolically, which is what I'm hoping someone on here can answer.