Hello All,
A few months ago I started up my 150 again. I decided to go with a sand substrate (playsand from HomeDepot), three large pieces of Malaysian driftwood, and lots of fake, but natural looking, plants. I think the aquascape turned out great, with one major problem...algae. This tank is home to two breeding convicts(2-3"), three of their young (1/2" ea which won't let any other broods survive), two zebra loaches, and a large common pleco (about 12"...he out grew my father-in-law's tank). As you can see, the tank isn't over stalked, and I don't overfeed. FWIW, I've got a 30 gallon sump with 9 gallons of bioballs for filtration under my tank.
I assumed my problem had to do with my lighting as this tank used to be home to a live planted tank and had 300 watts, 6500K, of PC lighting over it. The algae was going nuts...covering everything...glass, plants, rocks, driftwood, and sand. From what I can tell, it's just regular ol' green algae, the kind that normally would grow on your glass...but on steroids. It stays close to the surface of what it grows on and starts out as a thin film and over time will get thicker. If I let it go too long it actually will get thick enough to look like spinach when I remove it. In order to clean the tank to a respectable level, I pulled everything out, hosed it down, cleaned the glass, and put everything back in. My Python has a hard time with the sand since it will vaccuum up the sand along with any debris. This is an all day affair. In hopes to reduce algal growth, I disconnected two of my bulbs, knocking down my wattage to 150 watts.
Well, the algae still flourished, I tried to keep up with it but ultimately I had to do the big breakdown again. After another all day affair, I changed my lighting completely. I went to HomeDepot, got a workshop light kit, 80 watts of T12 bulbs, 3000K, and waited to see. Well, upon inspection of the sand, it seemed the algae was still growing. The problem with this algae is that I can get it off my galss and decorations...but when I try to remove it from the sand, it just breaks up and ends up spreading out more. I decided to black the tank out for a week and see if the algae in the sand kicks the bucket. I am currently on day 3.
Now after this long winded senario...does anyone have any input for my situation. I know algae needs both light and nutrients. My water is clean and now I am cutting off the light completely. I just can't get rid of the algae that grows on the sand...any suggestions? Could the sand itself be the culprit?
A few months ago I started up my 150 again. I decided to go with a sand substrate (playsand from HomeDepot), three large pieces of Malaysian driftwood, and lots of fake, but natural looking, plants. I think the aquascape turned out great, with one major problem...algae. This tank is home to two breeding convicts(2-3"), three of their young (1/2" ea which won't let any other broods survive), two zebra loaches, and a large common pleco (about 12"...he out grew my father-in-law's tank). As you can see, the tank isn't over stalked, and I don't overfeed. FWIW, I've got a 30 gallon sump with 9 gallons of bioballs for filtration under my tank.
I assumed my problem had to do with my lighting as this tank used to be home to a live planted tank and had 300 watts, 6500K, of PC lighting over it. The algae was going nuts...covering everything...glass, plants, rocks, driftwood, and sand. From what I can tell, it's just regular ol' green algae, the kind that normally would grow on your glass...but on steroids. It stays close to the surface of what it grows on and starts out as a thin film and over time will get thicker. If I let it go too long it actually will get thick enough to look like spinach when I remove it. In order to clean the tank to a respectable level, I pulled everything out, hosed it down, cleaned the glass, and put everything back in. My Python has a hard time with the sand since it will vaccuum up the sand along with any debris. This is an all day affair. In hopes to reduce algal growth, I disconnected two of my bulbs, knocking down my wattage to 150 watts.
Well, the algae still flourished, I tried to keep up with it but ultimately I had to do the big breakdown again. After another all day affair, I changed my lighting completely. I went to HomeDepot, got a workshop light kit, 80 watts of T12 bulbs, 3000K, and waited to see. Well, upon inspection of the sand, it seemed the algae was still growing. The problem with this algae is that I can get it off my galss and decorations...but when I try to remove it from the sand, it just breaks up and ends up spreading out more. I decided to black the tank out for a week and see if the algae in the sand kicks the bucket. I am currently on day 3.
Now after this long winded senario...does anyone have any input for my situation. I know algae needs both light and nutrients. My water is clean and now I am cutting off the light completely. I just can't get rid of the algae that grows on the sand...any suggestions? Could the sand itself be the culprit?