Well, a lot has happened since my contest entry. The first thing to report is that I won the North American Division of the contest. It was quite an honor just to be part of it. I never thought that I'd win, so that was a nice surprise. I have to thank the BAP, the judges, and my fellow contestants. If you haven't visited their YT channel or web page, I highly encourage it. There are tons of cool biotopes and biotope tanks, and lots of species of fish that I never knew existed, and many of those are quite beautiful and/or interesting. So much talent too, that it blows me away how good they all are. I can't believe that I was able to compete with that. To get there, just go to the last video that I posted and you can see links and stuff, or at least check out their YT channel.
I will shoot a video soon to show how the tank has matured. I added a new species since the last videos that was in QT during that time, and I think they really add to the tank. The bad news was that my Ulva died back almost all the way, and a bacterial bloom, followed by a green water algae bloom took place. All of the inverts and fish are all fine though, but it was ugly. I didn't even want to go down and look at it. I bought a UV sterilizer but never set it up. My first attempt to fix the problem worked. I turned off the lights for a full week, only turning them on for 20 minutes for fish feeding time, and I cut back feeding fish to every other day. About 10 days ago, I set my photoperiod to 4 hours daily, and the water is clear again. I resumed daily feedings too. I plan to increase the photoperiod to 8 hours, adding an hour per week starting next week. My fuge light, where the Ulva still resides, hanging on, goes for about 6 hours at night. During my lights out period, I cut it out the whole time too.
The good news is that there is a small spot of Ulva clinging to the rock in the display, so it might come back. If it doesn't come back into the disply, that's not a big deal, because it breaks loose and clogs the overflow, and I'm tired of cleaning and worrying about that. But, it can grow in the fuge all it wants. The Gracilaria is growing like mad and looks fantastic. It really accentuates the overhang and cavern of the tank. The fish are all doing very well too. The tank looks great. So, stay tuned for another video update soon!