Mexican Turbos

Dave Stewart

New member
I need a few MEXICAN turbos for a 29 gal tank with a bad case of red hair algae. I read somewhere that the Mexican variety are the best solution. Any local stores have these? Thanks.
 
Mine has never touched hair algae. He'll do mats of green algae on the glass, but clumps of wavy hair on LR he doesn't seem interested in.
 
mexican turbos

mexican turbos

Mexiacn turbos do not eat cyanobacteria
nothing eats cyanobacteria except (insert something you dont like here)


stronger water circulation helps to get rid of it as well as improving your water quality. If you have sand or gravel clean it.
Once or 2x weekly manualy remove it from your system and you will be harvesting whatever it is that is making it grow well.

Greg
Aquatic Technology
 
I don't think it's cyano. Isn't cyano green? The site I looked at called it Asparagopsis taxiformis. It's red & fussy in appearance. Hairs are short & tight packed blanketing the rock. Maybe I'm wrong...
 
Cyanobacteria is red but it is a slimy red film, not a thick bushy red like the stuff you linked to. I have tons of that stuff and was going to order some Mexican turbos to attempt to clear my tank of this junk.
I found them at eTropicals.com and if you order $60 or more they ship free. If you are interested in 6 or more I would like a dozen. They are $3.50 each and 18 of them is $63 delivered.
I will definitely take 12 but don't really need 18 or more. I am about 30 minutes west of Akron and could meet you somewhere if you wanted to go in on an order or if you are going to the next meeting I could bing them there.

-- Kevin
 
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Sure, I'll buy 6 of them. I can come to the meeting if you think they'll be here by Friday. Just let me know. Thanks Kevin.
 
I went to Aquarium Adventure and bought a 40 gallon breeder tank. I looked over there live stock and did find some turbo (not
Astraea) for 4.99 each. All live stock is 50% off, so I got 4 for 10.00. Not sure if are Mexican. Some to think about if you close and want to try the turbos for your algae.
And I did not find one bit of bubble algae on any snails.
Phil
 
Phil, did they look like this guy?
p_89200_la.jpg


I would love to find them locally and not have to mailorder stuff in this cold. I can protect them on the way home but not while they are in the shipping process.
 
Well I picked up a dozen from Greg at Aquatic Technology yesterday and today when I got home I found them doing their job nicely on that nasty red cotton candy algae. Check out this trail of clean :D

p2140015az1.jpg


Dave Stewart I guess that means I won't be going to order any online. But you could get them from AT and it's worth the 45 minute drive from Kent.

-- Kevin
 
The old cotton candy algae what a pita to get rid of. My snails were from the pacific ocean and worked well.
 
If anyone is having a problem with the red cotton candy algea,
it really thrives in high silcates.

I had let my Silcate busting DI resin go WAY too long, and it was dumping a boat load of silicates back into my system via my top-off water, the cotton candy algea was going gang busters and I couldn't figure it out.

PO4 was reading .01 on a Hanna meter and nitrate was 0 with a LaMonte test kit. Like most of us, I wasn't testing for silicates, because there really isn't a reliable test.

Anyway, I figured it out and got rid of the exhausted DI, and the algea has now complete vanished with the help of some Mexican Turbos. I just wish the Mexican Turbos could handle the warm temperatures in our systems better. They really don't last very long.
 
Be careful about them starving to death: sometimes they can do their jobs a little TOO well, and they often get overstocked. You may end up having to actively feed them to keep them alive.

I have just one zebra in a 55 gal tank, and it handles most of the algae all by itself, with my few other snails handling areas it wont fit into.

It's also my understanding that Zebra Turbos in particular handle warmer reef temps much better than regular Mexican Turbos, since they come from slightly warmer waters. Is that true?
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11893127#post11893127 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Dtip
It's also my understanding that Zebra Turbos in particular handle warmer reef temps much better than regular Mexican Turbos, since they come from slightly warmer waters. Is that true?

Yes, this is my experience as well
 
Good.

When I first started, I unwittingly bought orange turbos thinking they would be good for a reef tank. They ate and ate... but didn't last more than a few months in 78degree water. I felt terrible, but it was too late by the time I realized that this was likely the problem (my nitrates are still non-zero, but this doesn't seem to have hurt my other snails).

Unfortunately, it seems like some of the snails best suited to reef tank temperatures are less available than those which aren't.
 
Thought I would update you on this situation. Here's a picture from 2/10/08. I know, I know I let it get WAY worse than I should have before doing something. I was trying to pull it as it grew but it was a losing battle.

algaerockssa5.jpg


I added 12 Mexican Turbos from Aquatic Tech ($36 + tax) and this is a picture from today. Most of the algae is wiped out and there is a pocket of it in the back they are working on. I will split them up between the 4 tanks when they are all done cleaning this one and there should be enough algae growth to sustain the 12 of them. I might even sell off a few when they aren't needed anymore.

cleanrocksfg4.jpg


Picture is kinda washed out but you should get the point. Now maybe I can get some coraline growth on those rocks :D. My other tanks are all purple but this is fairly new. (6 months or so)

-- Kevin
 
Wow Kevin that's amazing........looks great now. Is that red algae a mat with short bristles or softer like regular hair algae?

Pm me when you get a chance, I never heard back from you.
 
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