Rploaded
New member
I recently had a small breakout of dino's "the dreaded brown bubbly strings" brought on from an outside acquisition, that I did not follow my own procedures on. I ignored it for 2 weeks and finally after they were hanging off my Xenia and the back glass was covered in it I had to make a drastic move.
I was able to kill this by running my tank at an ORP level of 400-415. For 72 hours.
I am not sure why this worked as rapidly as it did but I was a shocked it went away so easily.
Is ozone that effective at clearing up Dino's. I know they plague many hobbyists and I was shocked that I was able to keep my lighting in place and kill it off.
I was wondering if anyone knows why ozone is so effective? Or was I just lucky?
This is not a level I would ever run my aquarium at normally but all corals and fish came out fine in the nano tank, although they looked a bit stressed for the duration at that high level. All corals stayed closed except for my SPS! Go figure on that.
I run GFO so phosphate is 0
No other detectable issues.
PH 8.25-8.45 daily cycle
Alk 3.30 meql
Ca 428
Mag 1420
Thoughts? As of today they have been gone for over a week.
I was able to kill this by running my tank at an ORP level of 400-415. For 72 hours.
I am not sure why this worked as rapidly as it did but I was a shocked it went away so easily.
Is ozone that effective at clearing up Dino's. I know they plague many hobbyists and I was shocked that I was able to keep my lighting in place and kill it off.
I was wondering if anyone knows why ozone is so effective? Or was I just lucky?
This is not a level I would ever run my aquarium at normally but all corals and fish came out fine in the nano tank, although they looked a bit stressed for the duration at that high level. All corals stayed closed except for my SPS! Go figure on that.
I run GFO so phosphate is 0
No other detectable issues.
PH 8.25-8.45 daily cycle
Alk 3.30 meql
Ca 428
Mag 1420
Thoughts? As of today they have been gone for over a week.
Last edited: