SRC Member Seafront Posted June 23, 2015 SRC Member Share Posted June 23, 2015 Dear all, I am facing heavy red algae development in my system and I am using GoodBye PO4 everyday and considerable reduced. Did alomst 40% water change till date. Will keeping refugium will help in my case? Any other root cause I can think of for this? Regards, Sam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
patricklhc Posted June 23, 2015 Share Posted June 23, 2015 Possible for take a pic of the red algae? If I didn't guess wrongly it should be red slime algae aka cyano bacterial. These are actually bacterials that looks like algae. It's cause by large number of bacterials die off due to lack of bacterial food usually carbon. Do a search on the net would give you a lot of information and treatment methods Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
leejwa Posted June 23, 2015 Share Posted June 23, 2015 Try sucking the cyno out during u our next water change. Cut down on your feeding and lighting time if possible, it will help a lot ! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SRC Member Seafront Posted June 25, 2015 Author SRC Member Share Posted June 25, 2015 Possible for take a pic of the red algae? If I didn't guess wrongly it should be red slime algae aka cyano bacterial. These are actually bacterials that looks like algae. It's cause by large number of bacterials die off due to lack of bacterial food usually carbon. Do a search on the net would give you a lot of information and treatment methods Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Dear Patrick, Yes its Cyano bacterial infection. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SRC Member Seafront Posted June 25, 2015 Author SRC Member Share Posted June 25, 2015 Thanks Patrick and copepod I reduced my PO4 with great success by tackling Cyano bacteria with Aquarium-Munster Bakto produc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
patricklhc Posted June 25, 2015 Share Posted June 25, 2015 Thanks Patrick and copepod I reduced my PO4 with great success by tackling Cyano bacteria with Aquarium-Munster Bakto produc Nice to hear your issue is improving most importantly u learn a new method to handle "algae" which will help u better understand the hobby and enjoy it more. Future cyano outbreak will be no longer be much of an issue to your already. Congrats Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SRC Member Damianiac Posted June 25, 2015 SRC Member Share Posted June 25, 2015 is it a necessary to dose food for bacteria? i tot their food is ammonia. lol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
acidjc Posted June 25, 2015 Share Posted June 25, 2015 reduce your light duration shorter by 2hr. dose Mg up to 1700ppm, inc 100ppm each day until 1700ppm, maintain there until all algae die off, then stop dosing Mg and do regular WC as usual. go goggle on how Mg remove algae and read more and understand before dosing if you are not confident. Quote Current Tank(s) : 2 x 1 x 1 mixed reef tank What in my mind now (future tanks) 4 x 2.5 x 1.5 low profile coral tank 3 x 2.5 x 1.5 low profile reef tank Decommissioned Tanks : 2 ft seahorse tank back in the 1990s' 2.5 ft cube mixed reef tank in 2007 to 2008 JBJ 28g Tank . Maxspect G1 110W + 12W DIY LED . Tunze 9002 Skimmer . Vortech MP10w ES . SPS only Tank . Picasso Clown Fish (2009 to 2011) 2 x 1 x 1 puffer-fishes, box-fishes & Frog-fish tank (2015) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SRC Member Seafront Posted June 25, 2015 Author SRC Member Share Posted June 25, 2015 Thanks for all answers all brothers. Some showing extraordinary response and saving our hobby :-) I am feeling blessed with all ur help. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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