tsquad
Premium Member
Re: seanT
Re: seanT
You had a nutrient problem. Xenia and other such softies rely strongly on nutrients, which is why they grow so well in "dirty" water. That's why they don't grow very well in primarily SPS tanks, tanks with no nutrients. The corals were more numerous than the HA, and absorbed all the nutrients to grow, causing the HA to die off.
Re: seanT
DitchPlains2 said:Hey I don't know the first thing about cooking anything, much less rocks! I have to say however, I had a similar hair algae problem, I find that adding corals to your tank, and I dont mean one or two babies like I saw in your pics. I mean your rock had no coral whatsoever on it, around it or afixed to it. I found that adding large colonies of corals and especially xenids, and soft corals will absorb the nutrients at least in my tank it did, for whatever whacky reason it completely stopped my hair algae, and I did the same things you did, sea hare, turbos, emeralds, tang, etc... didnt do crap. I first scrubbed the rock, did a massive water change (changed my di resin, and sediment filters) stil had hair algae, then I added large colonies of xenia, zoos, etc... alage disappeared nearly next two or three days.
Just a observation, million factors could have been the cause, maybe I switched my aftershave that week, and my tankmates loved it.... no clue, not a scientist but common sense and what I've read tells me the coral were competing with hair for nutrients.
interesting concept though
You had a nutrient problem. Xenia and other such softies rely strongly on nutrients, which is why they grow so well in "dirty" water. That's why they don't grow very well in primarily SPS tanks, tanks with no nutrients. The corals were more numerous than the HA, and absorbed all the nutrients to grow, causing the HA to die off.