Ok, so I'm finally setting out to try eliminate my green hair algae. I know all the standard stuff, like keep phosphates and nitrates down down, keep lighting hours to 8-9 hours/day, etc. I stay within those parameters, but my 10 gallon is, admitedly, a bit overstocked (see my signature). My water parameters as of this AM are:
Tank age: 8-9 months
Temp: 78F
Ph: 8.2
Salinity: 32PPT or 1.02375 SG
Alk: "normal" (Red Sea test, stupid thing has no #s)
KH: 10
NO2: 0
NO3: 0
PO4: 0
CA2+: 370 (raising it to 400)
Iodide: 0
Iodine: 0.10 (too high, lowering to 0.06) - new salt mix in water change
Fe: 0
My questions:
1) I am keeping the iron (Fe) low intentionally to starve the algae, but my plants are suffering because of it. I have read that if I feed the plants they will consume tha algae's nutrients and starve them, but when I've tried this it has not worked...the algae seems to grow at the same rate no matter what, but my plants get very lush and I have to trim them back to keep my corals in the light.
2) I had one red legged hermit and a blue legged hermit that did not do a thing about green hair. In fact, I suspect they starved to death in a tank full of the stuff most websites say they like to eat! Red-legged Mexican hermits are reputed to be herviborous, yet one of my books claims this is not true, just a ploy to sell them. In a tank as small as mine I don't want them competing/killing my nassarius snails, who are hardworking and valuable cuc members. Are red-legged Mexican hermits effective against green hair algae or not?
3) I need to let my Yellow-tailed Blue Damsel rule his 10 gal tank. As aggressive as he is, introducing a Lawnmower Blennie or any other fish would be bad, plus I don't want the bio-load. Other than fish, is there anything beyond a red-legged hermit I could introduce that eats green hair?
I know that eventually I will move up to a larger tank. I am not ready to do it now, even though I understand that most of my problems would be more easily cured with additional capacity. In fact, it is these challenges with a small tank that make the hobby interesting to me, including the one I'm asking about here. Although you may be tempted to suggest I go larger, that is not something I want to do at this time (I started with a 1 gal nano - and I still have the same fish, my only SW fish ever, in the 10!). Any help is appreciated.
Tank age: 8-9 months
Temp: 78F
Ph: 8.2
Salinity: 32PPT or 1.02375 SG
Alk: "normal" (Red Sea test, stupid thing has no #s)
KH: 10
NO2: 0
NO3: 0
PO4: 0
CA2+: 370 (raising it to 400)
Iodide: 0
Iodine: 0.10 (too high, lowering to 0.06) - new salt mix in water change
Fe: 0
My questions:
1) I am keeping the iron (Fe) low intentionally to starve the algae, but my plants are suffering because of it. I have read that if I feed the plants they will consume tha algae's nutrients and starve them, but when I've tried this it has not worked...the algae seems to grow at the same rate no matter what, but my plants get very lush and I have to trim them back to keep my corals in the light.
2) I had one red legged hermit and a blue legged hermit that did not do a thing about green hair. In fact, I suspect they starved to death in a tank full of the stuff most websites say they like to eat! Red-legged Mexican hermits are reputed to be herviborous, yet one of my books claims this is not true, just a ploy to sell them. In a tank as small as mine I don't want them competing/killing my nassarius snails, who are hardworking and valuable cuc members. Are red-legged Mexican hermits effective against green hair algae or not?
3) I need to let my Yellow-tailed Blue Damsel rule his 10 gal tank. As aggressive as he is, introducing a Lawnmower Blennie or any other fish would be bad, plus I don't want the bio-load. Other than fish, is there anything beyond a red-legged hermit I could introduce that eats green hair?
I know that eventually I will move up to a larger tank. I am not ready to do it now, even though I understand that most of my problems would be more easily cured with additional capacity. In fact, it is these challenges with a small tank that make the hobby interesting to me, including the one I'm asking about here. Although you may be tempted to suggest I go larger, that is not something I want to do at this time (I started with a 1 gal nano - and I still have the same fish, my only SW fish ever, in the 10!). Any help is appreciated.
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