This is the latest FTS of my 1 year old 500g Barebottom reeftank.
Not too bad, until you get up close. Then you see this:
and this:
and this:
It is an algae, not cyano, although there are spots where cyano grows on top of it. The algae does not brush or blow off easily. The infested rock must be removed then the surface scrubbed clean. And although I have yet to lose a coral to it, I have no doubt that left untreated, it would easily overgrow every frag I have. As it stands now, this stuff covers 90% of the rock surface of the entire tank and even some of the bare bottom (except where the encrusting living tissue of a coral will keep it at bay). Otherwise, it grows in spite of RO/DI water changes, aggressive skimming, light feeding of the fish, and PO4 test results that read everything from 0ppm (Salifert) to 0.07 (Hanna Meter). I also have a clean-up crew consisting of urchins and various snails, some of which now have the algae actually growing on their shells.
Things have been this way for several months now with absolutely no sign of slowing down. My rock is a combination of 20% old, seeded live rock (which never had this problem before), 40% BRS Pukani, 20% Premium Aquatics Cured Manado, and 20% Marco. The dry stuff was all cured for several weeks and treated with Lanthanum before introduction but, admittedly rushed into the DT before totally 'clean'.
Having reached the end of my rope, my plan is to remove and store the corals on racks in the DT, remove all the LR and bathe it in Muriatic acid. Then, once rinsed and dried, to slowly rebuild the reef scape, reattach the corals and get on with my 'life'. Going slowly, so as not to recycle the tank while the fish and corals are in it, I figure I'm looking at a 6-8 month rebuild.
Is there anything I'm overlooking before I begin this undertaking or is there another way? I'm particularly interested in what the peroxide advocates have to say about an infestation on this scale.
Oh, and does anyone know the name of this type of algae? TIA.

Not too bad, until you get up close. Then you see this:

and this:

and this:

It is an algae, not cyano, although there are spots where cyano grows on top of it. The algae does not brush or blow off easily. The infested rock must be removed then the surface scrubbed clean. And although I have yet to lose a coral to it, I have no doubt that left untreated, it would easily overgrow every frag I have. As it stands now, this stuff covers 90% of the rock surface of the entire tank and even some of the bare bottom (except where the encrusting living tissue of a coral will keep it at bay). Otherwise, it grows in spite of RO/DI water changes, aggressive skimming, light feeding of the fish, and PO4 test results that read everything from 0ppm (Salifert) to 0.07 (Hanna Meter). I also have a clean-up crew consisting of urchins and various snails, some of which now have the algae actually growing on their shells.
Things have been this way for several months now with absolutely no sign of slowing down. My rock is a combination of 20% old, seeded live rock (which never had this problem before), 40% BRS Pukani, 20% Premium Aquatics Cured Manado, and 20% Marco. The dry stuff was all cured for several weeks and treated with Lanthanum before introduction but, admittedly rushed into the DT before totally 'clean'.
Having reached the end of my rope, my plan is to remove and store the corals on racks in the DT, remove all the LR and bathe it in Muriatic acid. Then, once rinsed and dried, to slowly rebuild the reef scape, reattach the corals and get on with my 'life'. Going slowly, so as not to recycle the tank while the fish and corals are in it, I figure I'm looking at a 6-8 month rebuild.
Is there anything I'm overlooking before I begin this undertaking or is there another way? I'm particularly interested in what the peroxide advocates have to say about an infestation on this scale.
Oh, and does anyone know the name of this type of algae? TIA.