Green Water...What to do?

Civicman86

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Jan 31, 2005
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OK well Im pretty new to aquariums. I have a small 15g tank that look perfect. I have revently got a 25 gallon tank and put some chilchlids in it. Im getting a bad case of green water. I can't seem to get rid of it. My setup:

Sand
8 chilchlids (I didnt want that many but my buddy had to give me two more or else..)
Some rock i found in a stream taht i boiled to make sure they were sanatized.
And I had some plants that the fish ate. I just took them out yesterday thinking that maybe the plants had something to do with it.

I have done research on the net about this and people say it will go away with reduced light, blah blah.

Nothing seems to work. Someone please help me :)
 
how long are you leaving the light on? If the tank is no longer planted, only turn on the lights when you want to look at it. You can do regular water changes for a short-term fix.
 
Over feeding is a possibility. I would start out with a 50% water change, making sure that I vacuumed the gravel well. You may have to do 2-3 water changes to reduce any excess nutrients in the tank. Feed sparingly, maybe every other day instead of daily, until you see some improvements.

With no plants to worry about, 8-10 hours of light a day is fine. Is your tank near a window? Even indirect sunlight can induce an algae bloom.
 
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A UV sterilizer would fix the problem emidiately, but its quite expensive and you still have to get down to the roots of the problem.

Ive never experienced this, but i would do daily water changes until it goes down. Also, cut down on feeding for a while.......
 
OK well the tank has sand at the bottom. Im new to sand and have no idea how to clean it out. I really am thinking of going back to gravel, even though I think sand looks really nice.

I leave the light on for exactly 8 hours a day. I feed the fish daily but i watch and most never touches the bottom of the tank. I will try to feed less and see if that helps.

I did a 50% water chance and do about 20% daily and it just slowely comes back. So irritating.

Do you all think the rocks I put in the tank might have something to do with it?
 
gsk177 said:
Is the tank sitting near a window?

Nope it is by itself in my room (which is dark most of the day while im in classes).

I dont know what kind of light it is. It came in the hood of my tank when I purchased it. How do I go about finding out what kind it is? Im guessing it probally says somewhere or has some sort of symbol for the type of light?
 
OK I took all plants and rocks out of my tank for a few days to see if this helps. Its really annoying me.

Do you think that the gravel (not cleanred :() could be the cause of the green?

I have chilchlids and I know they like to hide, will they be ok for a few days without rocks and plants to hide behind?
 
Well, no one has asked, but what are your water parameters? Do you happen to have a phosphate testing kit? Algae cannot grow, and I can't stress this enough, cannot grow without nutrients. It's using something in your tank as a food source. Usually green water is a unicellular bloom and can be cleaned with a diatom filter. They are expensive, but someone once mentioned on here that shops will somtimes rent them. That would clean it up short term, but you still have to get to the root problem: excess nutrients in the water. It might just have been dead plant matter (you said the fish ate them, then said you pulled them out, so I assume there was some plant matter floating around for a bit?) Also, a total blackout will kill algae, and since you no longer have plants, I would say go for it. Here's how I would do it:

Do a 50% water change. Vacuum the sand. I use sand as a substrate too, the sand isn't the problem. You can hold a gravel vac over the sand at an angle and "skim" the sands' surface to pick up waste and such. You pulled the rocks, but I do not know why. If they have algae on them, clean them, then rinse in dechlorinated water and put them back in. Make sure there is no sunlight coming into that tank at any time. Now, here's what should help a bunch; fast the fish for a few days. Don't feed them anything for 4 days. After that, don't overcompensate and feed them a bunch thinking they must be hungry. Feed them normally after that. During the fasting period, cover the tank so no light gets in. After two days, do another 50% water change. At the end of the four days, do another water change. This period of fasting and no light should clear it up.

Always remember, algae needs two things to live: light and food. I would also suggest you re-examine your feeding habits. If the fish use all of the food you feed them, the algae could never grow. Fish are opportunistic feeders. They will eat whenever you feed them. Have you ever noticed as well, that when you feed your fish, they poop? Mine do this. So as something goes in, something else moves out and makes room for it. Sometimes fish waste has undigested food in it. That could very well be feeding your algae. I never feed my fish more than they can consume in one minute. This way, they use what they eat. Also, I do not know what your maintenance shcedule was like before, but aim for 50% water changes once per week. This keeps the bad stuff down at lower levels. HTH.
 
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