boxfishpooalot
Active member
My live rock in my tank has organics that stick to it. Upon closer look, you see short hair algae(1mm) that traps organics(POC) that look like fuzzy brown hair.
But I noticed when i do water changes the rocks suddenly start turning bright white in spots. Why is this?
Some of my ideas are:
-less humic acid in the water(yellowing compounds) allow it to unstick from the hair algae.Iv seen people with bb tanks and ozone and their rocks are organic free. Perhaps the ozone cleans the rocks off. Also i noticed organic poc piles in ozonated tanks are grey piles. And in my case they are dark brown, almost like fresh poop. Ozone could be oxidizing them in the tank too?
-Undissolved salt attaches and makes the organics heavy and float off the rocks.
- Maybee its just my sea urchin mowing it down... But i only see it after a water change. Or my blue linkia starfish.
-More effecient skimming due to fresh saltwater.
-Density of water...?
This is really driving me nuts, any ideas?
But I noticed when i do water changes the rocks suddenly start turning bright white in spots. Why is this?
Some of my ideas are:
-less humic acid in the water(yellowing compounds) allow it to unstick from the hair algae.Iv seen people with bb tanks and ozone and their rocks are organic free. Perhaps the ozone cleans the rocks off. Also i noticed organic poc piles in ozonated tanks are grey piles. And in my case they are dark brown, almost like fresh poop. Ozone could be oxidizing them in the tank too?
-Undissolved salt attaches and makes the organics heavy and float off the rocks.
- Maybee its just my sea urchin mowing it down... But i only see it after a water change. Or my blue linkia starfish.
-More effecient skimming due to fresh saltwater.
-Density of water...?
This is really driving me nuts, any ideas?