Red Algae (not Cyano) Taking Over Tank

saw some margaritas at lombards tropiquatics. Also saw one in my hand last night during the MSU/NC game, but that is another story.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9508571#post9508571 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Pufferpunk
Adam, Where do you see cyano? I don't see any slime algae at all in my tank. I have all the above creatures in my tank & it's still there (just added 2 turbos today though).

Original post, second picture, there is cyano present there.

Carlos
 
Algae thrives in low-quality high-nutrient water. You can put all the snails and crabs in the world but if your water is not up to par, the algae will keep coming up or something else will take over. Nutrients have to be consumed somehow when they are not being taken out via skimmer or water changes.

I would make more frequent (smaller) water changes and also make sure the skimmer is working well.... as well as adding some snails and crabs.

Attack the problem but dont forget to tackle the cause as well...

Carlos
 
I assure you, that is not cyano. That flat, shiny stuff in the 2nd pic, has more of a plastic consistancy, than slimey.
 
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Jeni, I agree with you. I've had this turf algae for a while now, that's how it looks as it spreads. May look like cyno but is just the turf branching out.
This red turf is coming in on the base of a lot of aqua cultured corals lately.
I know sallylightfoot crabs eat it, will try some of the others mentioned.
 
The red turf algae I had had an almost brittle consistency to it. When you tried to remove it by hand, it would separate and almost sorta crumble. That's what made it so tough to get out. Every attempt at manual removal necessarily meant a significant amount was going to break off and re-attach somewhere else. I assure you that turbo fluctuosas eradicated this stuff everywhere I had it.

That urchin looks like a blue tuxedo. I have been looking for this particular urchin for some time. If anyone has one they don't want, please let me know. Thanks!

Also, I don't completely buy the nutrient argument for two reasons
1. Different algaes thrive in different environments
2. I don't believe we fully understand algae growth. My reasoning for this is all the anecdotal evidence of people having "perfect" tanks with algae problems. Certainly some of them don't actually have "perfect" tanks, and some of them have perfect test readings because the algae is consuming nutrients. However, it does not follow that all people with clean water and an algae problem have a nutrient problem. I believe that some people really do have perfect water (measured by our standards) and still have algae issues because we don't know all the reasons why algae grows.
 
Yes, this turf algae was described to me as a "clean water" algae. I never fully bought that before but now I do. Because of other situations -- gracilaria won't grow ("your water isn't dirty enough"), even chaeto won't grow.

The pincushion urchins work well. Try the ones at Coral Reef ... doesn't have to be a blue tuxedo to work. They have these cool looking pink ones they may call "rock urchins" or just pincushion urchins.

Mex turbos, Striped Pacific Turbos, Indonesian turbos ... none touch the stuff. Astraeas are useless on it. Even trochus avoid it. I'm also convinced this stuff killed a lawnmower blenny, a sailfin tang, and perhaps 2 Atlantic Blues. In each case, 2 days after I witnessed these fish eating the stuff, they were gasping and then dead. All with same appearing symptoms of red gills, etc.

All my margaritas ate it (just bought 2 dozen at Deep Reef ... but can't get more there) and some nerites ate it ... the good nerites that stay in the tank. The others didn't go near it.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9514301#post9514301 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by ostrow

In each case, 2 days after I witnessed these fish eating the stuff, they were gasping and then dead. All with same appearing symptoms of red gills, etc.


Sounds like fauchea to me - can be quite noxious
 
Just an fyi, ocean design has margarita snails from time to time. I got some there about a week ago. I didnt know about the temperature issue, mine seem fine so far at 80 degrees.
 
If it was a nutrient issue, I would think my fuge woudl take care of that. So can I go back to feeding my tank now? I think they're hungry.
 
Jeni, I don't think your feeding habits have anything to do with it.
So go ahead and feed as you normally do.
 
Whoa! Don't you have like a 90gal tank? That's gonna be a lot of dead margaritas.

FYI I used 24 in a 150. They did just fine.
 
Not all for me, silly! Just got a break at that price. I ordered thru a friend & he'll sell the rest. Everyone also forgets, I have 4 SW tanks.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9528784#post9528784 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Pufferpunk
I'm getting them from the cheapest supplier around. ;)

Nice! then set me down for 10-20 snails
 
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