NEED HELP!: Best CUC for Hair Algae?

DustinS85

New member
I am getting a boom of hair algae (some longer too), and I was wondering what a good CUC to keep it in check would be? I have a 20 gallon high with no corals.
 
Astreas or trochus snails are usually pretty good...also sea hares can be helpful but they tend to starve out and die so IMO they're not worth it. I'd try those snails.
 
people say seahares eat hair algae pretty good. but they'll starve when there're no more algae. i've never owned one. in my experience, turbo snails and longspine urchins eat hair algae. urchins also eat coralline though. btw, my kole tang and onespot foxface also eat hair algae.
 
Turbo snail's cleaned up mine
6a9d646d228a7be8a8d28e850ab1c148.jpg
4057e28689688ce34d579599a09d38b9.jpg
before and after
 
I wouldn't put a sea hare or sea apple in a 20 gallon. They will rapidly starve. They can nuke your tank (although that really isn't as prevalent as people often make it out to be).

Most hermit crabs, trochus snails are the best grazers for that size tank. Honestly, the easiest thing to do is use a toothbrush and twist it in the strings of the algae. They get tangled up and rip off.

Are your rocks fairly new? Once newer rocks fully saturate they often dump phosphate until everything levels off, which causes an algae bloom. If it's any comfort, I'm fighting the same issue in my 155 gallon right now.
 
These are good solutions for helping to get rid of it, but hair algae is a symptom of something else, and unless you cure what is wrong, you will keep battling it. Can you tell us more about your tank? Nitrate and phosphate levels? Do you use RO water? What kind of flow do you have? What do you have in the tank? Skimmer? Type of filtration? Refugium? How old is it? etc. Knowledge is power :)
 
As I just spent an hour getting one of two emerald crabs out of my display tank I would stay away from them. I put them in a few weeks ago to help with algae (and they did) and put my first fish in today. One of them immediately went after the fish. This video is his second attempt to get them and not nearly as exciting as his first:
https://vimeo.com/123475380
The crab is no in my refugium.
 
If the crabs are going after your fish it's possible that there isn't enough to eat in the tank. It's easy to put in way too many crabs/snails and when they eventually start to go hungry the crabs will start killing the snails/fish and each other. CUCs are honestly not the most ideal solution for a major algae problem. Good husbandry is far more effective in the long run. CUCs remove a little detritus here and there but they aren't going to solve the algae problem at its core: excess nutrients. I'm not saying a CUC won't help, but they shouldn't be plan A, just a supplementary aid to algae control.
 
i agree with nmotz. find a way to limit and export nutrients out of your system. that'll solve the algae problem. in the mean time, take out the rocks and brush the algae off at every water change, rinse the rocks in the old water, and put them back in. it's only 20G so i believe manual removal alone will suffice.
 
If you are counting on a CUC to get keep your hair algae in check then your in for a long wait. The CUC main job is to eat leftover food and detritus.

Why do you have hair algae?

New tank

Over feeding

Phosphates leaching out of the rocks.

Lights on to long

Poor nutrient export

Figure out what is causing it then act accordingly. Just my 2 cents
 
If you are counting on a CUC to get keep your hair algae in check then your in for a long wait. The CUC main job is to eat leftover food and detritus.

Why do you have hair algae?

New tank

Over feeding

Phosphates leaching out of the rocks.

Lights on to long

Poor nutrient export

Figure out what is causing it then act accordingly. Just my 2 cents

I agree. Usually it is over feeding, but the use of "base rock" often leeches phosphate.
 
To get rid of phosphate, run a GFO reactor. May take a few months.

Yup...totally works. I run detectable nitrates and have a hefty CUC coupled with GFO and it works great. I have blue legs, red leg, thin line hermit, cerith, dwarf cerith, NERITE and nassarius snails to manage detritus, diatoms and algae.

Truth be told when the GHA gets too long nothing will touch it but a lawn mower blenny, so I just get the toothbrush out.
 
These are good solutions for helping to get rid of it, but hair algae is a symptom of something else, and unless you cure what is wrong, you will keep battling it. Can you tell us more about your tank? Nitrate and phosphate levels? Do you use RO water? What kind of flow do you have? What do you have in the tank? Skimmer? Type of filtration? Refugium? How old is it? etc. Knowledge is power :)
Can't afford RO/DI, and I live in an apartment so it isn't feasible, because you have to make alterations to plumbing to install one.
Nitrates are fairly low. I have no way to test phosphates (I got Reef master kit, and Saltwater Master kit from API). I have a Hydor 35 gal wave maker, a Aquaclear 30 (with sponge, charcoal, and biomax), and a nano protein skimmer.
 
Can't afford RO/DI, and I live in an apartment so it isn't feasible, because you have to make alterations to plumbing to install one.

Nitrates are fairly low. I have no way to test phosphates (I got Reef master kit, and Saltwater Master kit from API). I have a Hydor 35 gal wave maker, a Aquaclear 30 (with sponge, charcoal, and biomax), and a nano protein skimmer.


I rent also. I've had my RO/DI unit hooked up to my kitchen tap for 5yrs. It just snaps right onto the spigot.
 
I rent also. I've had my RO/DI unit hooked up to my kitchen tap for 5yrs. It just snaps right onto the spigot.
I thought they had to be installed to the water line heading to the sink. What unit do you have? What does it look like connected?
 
My RO/DI system has a water supply that taps from cold water supply under kitchen sink. Will very easily be removed when you move out, would take 10 minutes to put it back into original shape.
 
rent a seahare.. go to your LFS and ask if they have one that you can rent and return in a week.. most places buy fish back at half price. So you can buy a seahare for $20 use him for a week and when all your algae is gone sell him back for $10.. Then focus on resolving the issue full time moving forward..
 
GFO!! My cleanup crew didn't really make a dent in my green hair algae. However they did wonder for the diatoms and short brown hair on my sand and rocks after it cycled. Took me about a month and a half of running GFO before it was gone. You can check out my videos for a before and after.
 
Back
Top