Which is the BEST Algae Eater Tankmate?

raymondevil

Still Learning...
Apr 3, 2005
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I'm having 2 adult balloon mollies, 15-20 molly fry and 2 albino/chinese algae eater. Somehow this algae eater is not doing a very good job in clearing all the algae. I guess I need to get a good algae eater for my 10gal tank. Best of all, the algae eater mustn't grow much in size.. any idea? :huh:
 
Rather than adding a fish, up your maintenance--algae grows when there are too many nutrients in the water. Adding plants will also help--they compete for the nutrients. More fish in a 10 will probably just increase the problem--and those CAE will need a bigger tank as they mature. What type of algae is becoming a problem?
 
i didn't add any fish into it.. my mollies just breed alot of them.. plus, i did change water every 3 days because the water turns yellow due to the driftwood. these algae only grow on my live plant's leaves. some says it's red algae but it looks like brown to me and it's not those hairy type of algae.. it's just brown patches all over the leaves..
 
What are the nitrates, in both the tank and the source water? Phosphates? Silica? Lighting (type, wattage, and time)? What type of plants? Sounds mostly like diatoms--does it peel off easily? With live plants already in there, I'd guess there's an imbalance in nutrients or light--meaning more nutrients than the light will support the plants into using, or else a shortage in a specific nutrient the plants need to really grow well, or third, that you have slow growing, low light plants that won't be able to outcompete the diatoms. In any case, adding more fish won't be the solution.

I understand that you are not adding more fish, but with livebearers, you either have to remove the fry to another tank, or add something that will consume the fry to avoid overstocking.
 
the best algie cleaner is yourself, if you dont want it, just rub/scrape it off the glass and rub it off the plants.
the best algie eaters are snails, they reproduce rapidly when there is lots of food, and then reduce in numbers until it comes back again, i like ramshorn snails
 
I would not use snails. I would think twice about adding an organism that the industry has actually developed a product to erradicate. Otos are very hard working algea eaters that only get about 1-11/2 inches long. They are especially good at keeping the brown algea off my plants.
 
A product developed to remove something that is misunderstood and indicative of other problems...Surely that can't be a good guideline. Look at Smokey the Bear--50 years ago, he was the solution to the 'problem' of forest fires, but now we realize the fire is a normal, healthy part of these systems and the results of years of suppression are a bigger problem than seasonal fires ever were.
 
Fair enough orion girl, so what is the cause of the much bemoaned snail take overs that show up in threads from time to time. I've got no personal experience, just an irrational fear that it will happen to me. What can raymondevil do to keep that from happening in his tank if snails are what he goes with....cough....otos...cough...cough. :cool2:
 
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