zachxlutz
New member
You have a beautiful tank
Thanks! I'm hoping I can get it back to healthy once again!
Agreed..
Glad to hear you've stepped back a bit and will let things settle down on heir own..
Careful with the acropower right now.. it'll probably do more for the nuisance algae than the corals.
This is a tricky time for the corals because they are stressed (drop in ca/alk demand) and the algea is happy. Happy things will consume the food more readily than the stressed things..
Be prepared to have some unhappy corals.
I hope the non-intervention intervention helps!
Hmm... Maybe I'll scrap the aminos idea and hold off until this passes. I know nothing happens over night but damn... I want this stuff gone!
Sorry about your troubles, zachxlutz. I was so psyched that you were able to avoid a big algae bloom, in the earlier phase of your tank. With this outbreak, I'm now wondering if it was a mistake to suppress algae during the formative stage. The maturation process may need to progress 'unchecked', so Mother Nature can do her thing, with bacteria and algae. The use of Vibrant may have just kicked the can down the road. I wholeheartedly agree. I'm not sure
Have you confirmed dinoflagellates?
One thing that puzzles me is your contention that phosphate has declined in your tank. You feed your fish well and you weren't running phosphate media, so how can it be that your tank is doing the opposite of everyone else's? Could it be that this brown stuff is the CAUSE of declining levels, rather than the RESULT? It's quite normal for phosphate levels to be near zero during an algae bloom. The phosphate is IN the algae.
This brings to mind an old point I made about the challenges of testing. I was in the middle of a three month cyano battle, and I didn't bother testing, to a lot of guys' consternation. My point was that I could test my water and it very well could show very low phosphate, so from testing alone, I would conclude that I needed to dose phosphate. Two years later and here you are in exactly that situation!
I seriously doubt you need to dose phosphate, unless you are trying to establish a diverse algae population, which may be a good idea, come to think of it. But your liberal feeding should do the trick. The only thing out of whack is the algae-feeding nutrients, I think. Ironic that your excellent control of parameters could hurt you-not cool! What a bummer if Vibrant is the cause. Maybe it's better for a mature tank that gets a bloom, rather than a young tank, still maturing.
I think you've got the right strategy to step back and see what nature wants to do for a while. Bring in some new crew members to fill out your ecosystem and things should settle down.
Best of luck, Buddy!
I'm leaning towards thinking this all stems from the strongest algae/bacteria that the Vibrant couldn't combat and it's now taken the low phosphate situation in the tank and taken off with it. I believe it probably would have laid dormant if it was being outcompeted by other more controllable algaes.
I stripped the water in the tank bare from the get go. I was running GFO and changing it out constantly, targeting that 0 phosphate... and succeeding. The tank was a barren wasteland for the first 4 months of the tank. I haven't run any since November. The tank was started in September. I started the KNO3 dosing in early December and the Vibrant shortly after that, as I was dealing with some GHA on the back glass and plastic bits in the tank. If I could go back again and start over, I never would have used the Vibrant or only used it to get it under control and then backed off but I continued dosing as I saw no ill effects until this started popping up.
For the record, I was asked to take some of the stuff out of the tank and swirl it around in a container to see if it reconstituted. It seems like it did. It seemed to form pillar like structures within the container within the first 10 minutes or so.
Immediately after swirling the water around and agitating it with a baster:
10 minutes or so later, you can see how it's reconstituted and formed pillars and stringy sections:
Between seeing the stuff reconstitute and seeing how it covers everything and talking with some knowledgeable people, I believe I have a form of dinoflagellate ostreopsis which I should be able to knock out with a nice small increase in phosphates and allowing some other more controllable algaes to overtake and outcompete.