Kill this red cotton algea

The picture didnt open for me, but Ive killed that algae at least twenty different times in this thread

Search for

Pico reef pest algae problem challenge

Cotton candy algae is easy to kill w peroxide and it only kills that algae when applied correctly as in the thread with tons of proof pics
 
The picture didnt open for me, but Ive killed that algae at least twenty different times in this thread

Search for

Pico reef pest algae problem challenge

Cotton candy algae is easy to kill w peroxide and it only kills that algae when applied correctly as in the thread with tons of proof pics

Hi brandon
thank alot
this morning i think about H202 i think its the answer of all of algea
Am I right?
I want to use H2O2
All of my live rock have this red algea I moved all of that to another tank in the dark place but after 2 weeks there is no change
my question is can i use H2O2 on that tank? what the dose of that?and the % of H2O2?
after that the algea back or not? if i moved my rock to my main tank algea start growing or not? and how can i strillized my tank?
sorry for my poor english and thanks alot for answering my question:love2:
 
It will not sterilize the tank contrary to populat belief but thats an easy thing to type on the web to someone without proof :) but the thread should lend some proof as to what we can do with it. I can guarantee it will not hurt anything to attempt it, and the worst case outcome is that is grows back but you will see in the thread it usually does not with rhodophyta algae variants.

THe safest and most effective way to kill it from your tank is to post a full tank shot in our thread so I can see everything and I'll make a custom plan, then post a follow up shot next week when its all dead. we are approaching a thousand times in the thread having done this very approach, like clockwork.

we like to keep all treatments in one place for others to document and learn from if you would, and in the case of the chemistry forum we want a place where they can surmise negative assertions about the treatment.

I need to see what other animals are in the tank and where the growth is positioned on the rocks, and if the rocks are removable for treatment etc.

the major benefit in using peroxide is that we know how to apply it safely now so that there is zero risk to your surrounding tank, even if you have to apply it in the tank full of water. there are so many pictures of that being done in our thread it shocks me when its debated as a safe treatment. Im sure there was a time in reefkeeping where dumping vodka into ones tank seemed crazy and risky. times change.

I need to see things from your full tank picture like kinds of shrimp you have, any decorative macro algae nontargets etc, the only safe way to do it is with a few full tank shots and some closeups of the algae if you could as it exists on your rock.

the number one method we want to try first is removing a target rock as a test before you do the whole tank.

take out a rock with the growth, have a -new-, not previously used, bottle of 3%-6% medical grade peroxide (not used for growing aquaponics or hair dye etc) and just pour a very small amount on the target algae area. let the rock sit outside the tank for 3 mins cooking, it wont hurt anything on the rock. and only the algae got the peroxide...then rinse off and place rock back in tank.

dont remove the algae, it dies over a six day period when dealing with the rhydophyta groups. we track that loss, and then watch for regrowth to see if its worth doing the rest. I guarantee you it will die, we are very good in working with peroxide now against red algae targets.

please post as many good pics as you can make here before we begin:
http://reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2082359&page=50
 
The reason your algae didnt show a quick impact to light is because rhodophyta are commonly thick bodied invaders who have self sustenance abilities against nutrient controls, grazing and lighting variances. if you use clean up crews to eat it you may get lucky, but its not a biocidal kill and often comes back simply because they are adapted well.if your clean up crew remains active and on target then thats lucky and an easy control method, however that almost never happens or our thread wouldn't be so big. people want a dedicated kill.

Lights out works better for invaders like string diatoms. I have permanenly rid my tiny old pico reef of red brush algae very easily using peroxide, its the reason I like to work with it in others tanks so much.
 
Back
Top