Phytoplankton Bloom

Genera

Blink and you're dead.
Are there any negative effects of a phytoplankton bloom other than the water turning greenish? Could this be helpful to filter feeding invertebrates?
 
get the uv ready.

Well, my tank is not exactly blooming with phyto, but if you look through it the long way, the water is greenish, but from the front, the tint isn't noticeable. There are tons of sponges and feather worms that seem to flourish for some reason. The back wall is blanketed with Pileolaria. The mollies don't seem to mind either.
 
i just had a algae bloom and was trying to fix it without having to plug in the UV and i couldn't figure it out so i plugged in the UV, CRYSTAL clear water within 24 hours.
 
Does the tank glass collect green "dust" quickly? If not then your water probably needs to have some activated carbon in it and a good water change.

Many filter feeding invertebrates will enjoy elevated levels of free floating algae but there are a lot of corals that won't.

Fish won't mind unless it continues to bloom and, as mentioned, uses up all of the oxygen.
 
Are there any negative effects of a phytoplankton bloom other than the water turning greenish? Could this be helpful to filter feeding invertebrates?
Could you talk about your tank setup and what you did to maybe trigger phytoplankton bloom?
 
Hunh. Good to know.

What UV and what tank size?

Mike

150gal DT and 15w uv, i didnt have a lower flow pump on hand other then the rio 12 i had i was afraid this was gonna be to much flow and the uv wasn't gonna work properly but i was wrong it worked great.
 
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