Alex T.
Active member
My SPS tank has gone through the normal cycles over the last two years. I've battled my share of hair algae and cyano issues as well. One observation I've made is that my SPS never seem to stress over the presence of hair algae. It's never gotten to a plague level and I've always been able to siphon it out and do some extra water changes to keep it in check.
We always talk about the pristine water quality and absent levels of nutrients on natural reefs. I've dove and snorkeled some of the Caribbean and Indo Pacific rim reefs and I can tell you flat out....there's some hair algae there. In fact...quite a bit. Even with low nutrients in the water, there it is waving with the tide. Is it really all that bad? Is it always a sign of nutrients in the water or can it simply be a shift in the color spectrum of our bulbs just like the light intensity of the sun is different every single day?
I would like to hear some thoughts. My nitrate is .02 and phosphate measures .03 on Hanna. Still, there it is here and there. I'm perplexed as to why we immediately rush to assume that the oldest and most resilient life form on Earth is such a horrible thing in our tanks.
We always talk about the pristine water quality and absent levels of nutrients on natural reefs. I've dove and snorkeled some of the Caribbean and Indo Pacific rim reefs and I can tell you flat out....there's some hair algae there. In fact...quite a bit. Even with low nutrients in the water, there it is waving with the tide. Is it really all that bad? Is it always a sign of nutrients in the water or can it simply be a shift in the color spectrum of our bulbs just like the light intensity of the sun is different every single day?
I would like to hear some thoughts. My nitrate is .02 and phosphate measures .03 on Hanna. Still, there it is here and there. I'm perplexed as to why we immediately rush to assume that the oldest and most resilient life form on Earth is such a horrible thing in our tanks.