HAH! Defeated the algae beast without a blackout :dance:
Background:
On Dec 25th I got my 75g up and running with 3.2 wpg. This is my Papua New Guinea "biotope" tank. Because of the theme, I had a devil of a time finding the plants for it. They were VERY slow in arriving since I had to order them from 10???? different places. To boot, my CO2 tanks were also late in arriving.
So, from 12/25 to 1/5 my tank sat with no CO2 and not enough plants.
I started getting hair algae. With the advice of everyone here, I threw plants in the tank. Some planted, some floating in their little pots. The algae would not abate. I threw in my son's candy-striped pleco. He did an AWESOME job, but there was too much algae for him to handle.
The CO2 arrived and being an utter novice and worried about my Boesemani (who are very O2 intensive fish) I was hesitant to jack the gas past 15ppm.
The algae flourished.
I threw in 2 SAEs. After a day of being utter pains in the butt to the inhabitants of the tank, they started eating algae. Not fast enough
I upped the CO2 to 20ppm and the hair algae started to go away. Instead, I had diatoms and what looked like the beginnings of staghorn (but I could be wrong. It WAS black on the ends).
Then, my water turned green. ARGH!
Did a lot of reading here. Did more reading here. Tested my tap and tank. PO4 ran from the tap at 2.0ppm and in the tank after a couple of days 1-1.5ppm. Nitrates ZERO.
IMBALANCE!!!! You guys said 10:1 ratio, so my goal was to get the nitrates to 10-20ppm. So I bought potassium nitrate from Greg Watson and started dosing.
Every time I added 10ppm, by the end of the day it would be gone. I finally got it steady at 5ppm and the algae is gone! No green water, no brown crap, no hair algae. NICE!
I'm still working on getting the total up to at least 10ppm, but I want to thank everyone here for helping out. Every post that had to do with macros and micros and algae was a big help and I think I read them all.
So,
Thank you!
Roan
Background:
On Dec 25th I got my 75g up and running with 3.2 wpg. This is my Papua New Guinea "biotope" tank. Because of the theme, I had a devil of a time finding the plants for it. They were VERY slow in arriving since I had to order them from 10???? different places. To boot, my CO2 tanks were also late in arriving.
So, from 12/25 to 1/5 my tank sat with no CO2 and not enough plants.
I started getting hair algae. With the advice of everyone here, I threw plants in the tank. Some planted, some floating in their little pots. The algae would not abate. I threw in my son's candy-striped pleco. He did an AWESOME job, but there was too much algae for him to handle.
The CO2 arrived and being an utter novice and worried about my Boesemani (who are very O2 intensive fish) I was hesitant to jack the gas past 15ppm.
The algae flourished.
I threw in 2 SAEs. After a day of being utter pains in the butt to the inhabitants of the tank, they started eating algae. Not fast enough
I upped the CO2 to 20ppm and the hair algae started to go away. Instead, I had diatoms and what looked like the beginnings of staghorn (but I could be wrong. It WAS black on the ends).
Then, my water turned green. ARGH!
Did a lot of reading here. Did more reading here. Tested my tap and tank. PO4 ran from the tap at 2.0ppm and in the tank after a couple of days 1-1.5ppm. Nitrates ZERO.
IMBALANCE!!!! You guys said 10:1 ratio, so my goal was to get the nitrates to 10-20ppm. So I bought potassium nitrate from Greg Watson and started dosing.
Every time I added 10ppm, by the end of the day it would be gone. I finally got it steady at 5ppm and the algae is gone! No green water, no brown crap, no hair algae. NICE!
I'm still working on getting the total up to at least 10ppm, but I want to thank everyone here for helping out. Every post that had to do with macros and micros and algae was a big help and I think I read them all.
So,
Thank you!
Roan