to remind everyone.....
20g long tank
med-heavy planting
sand substrait
40% TWICE a week water changes
hard water from an aquifer
dose half a capful flourish excel twice a week, no other ferts
2.5wpg light
one red honey gourami
6 glowlight tetras,
5 blue tetras,
3 otos,
MTS
tank has been running for about 6 months, but i tore all the plants up to rearange them about a month ago.
well, for the past few weeks, everything has been getting covered with green hair algae. i also have a small amount of staghorn algae around the roots of my java fern (i think that's where it came from in the first place)
i have tried scrubbing it off, and i get it off the glass, but its impossible to get it off the plants because i have a lot of plants with small, delicate leaves (wisteria, myrio, rotalia indica, etc.) the otos don't seem to be doing much for it either, since they only eat softer algaes. the fish nibble at it, but they don't make a dent
what can i do to balance out the nutrients so the plants can out-compete the algae? i have very nutrient rich water with a lot of trace minerals in it, including iron and calcium, which is why i haven't been dosing other ferts. i was thinking of doing a blackout, but i want to try other methods first
20g long tank
med-heavy planting
sand substrait
40% TWICE a week water changes
hard water from an aquifer
dose half a capful flourish excel twice a week, no other ferts
2.5wpg light
one red honey gourami
6 glowlight tetras,
5 blue tetras,
3 otos,
MTS
tank has been running for about 6 months, but i tore all the plants up to rearange them about a month ago.
well, for the past few weeks, everything has been getting covered with green hair algae. i also have a small amount of staghorn algae around the roots of my java fern (i think that's where it came from in the first place)
i have tried scrubbing it off, and i get it off the glass, but its impossible to get it off the plants because i have a lot of plants with small, delicate leaves (wisteria, myrio, rotalia indica, etc.) the otos don't seem to be doing much for it either, since they only eat softer algaes. the fish nibble at it, but they don't make a dent
what can i do to balance out the nutrients so the plants can out-compete the algae? i have very nutrient rich water with a lot of trace minerals in it, including iron and calcium, which is why i haven't been dosing other ferts. i was thinking of doing a blackout, but i want to try other methods first