Red Slime Algae

wildjosh

Member
I just got back from a 4 day vacation to Red Slime Algae all over my subsrate and on the walls and some rock. What should I do? I was told by a friend that Red Slime Algae is real bad news, so i'm a little nervous.
All my fish seem fine and my inverts as well.
Please Help me
 

mr_x

Active Member
it's not "real bad news". it's not even algae, it's a form of bacteria usually from excessive nutrients. you should increase waterchanges and vacuum it up. did you feed heavily before you left?
 

spanko

Active Member
Here is my take on getting rid of Cyano.
Red Slime (Cyano Bacteria)
Cyano grows on top of nutrient rich areas of low flow. There are a number of things that need to be correct or possibly corrected to combat this without the use of chemical additives. The biggest thing is to get rid of the extra nutrients.
1. Evaluate your feeding. If you are feeding more than can be eaten in about 1-2 minutes it is too much and the remainder of it is falling to the rock and sand and becoming nutrient.
2. Evaluate your flow. If you have areas in the tank where there is little to no flow this can be corrected by adding power heads or repositioning the ones you already have. You don’t need to create sand storms just have water moving over the area to keep detritus suspended in the water column for removal by your filter – skimmer.
3. Evaluate your water changes. The solution to pollution is dilution! You want to continually remove unneeded nutrients as well as replace those things that are used by the system. 10% weekly is a good change schedule. Some do 20% every other week and some vary the schedule from there, but a good start is 10% per week.
4. Evaluate your lighting schedule. About 10 hours of daylight is all that is needed.
5. If you have a cyano outbreak do the above 4 items andh:
a. At water change time siphon off the cyano first. It will come up easily almost like a blanker.
b. After siphoning stir the affected areas a little to suspend any detritus for the water change and filtering - skimming removal.
c. Use a turkey baster now and at every water change in the future to again suspend the detritus for removal by the water change and your filtering – skimming.
Keeping nutrient levels low to non-existent will help to avoid cyano outbreaks and any algae outbreaks as well as keep your tank and you happy happy.
Hope that helps.

[hr]
Henry
 
U

usirchchris

Guest
I had an outbreak recently. All my LR, and the back was covered. I left my lights off for a week, and it is gone.
 

srgvigil

Member
I just got rid of my green hair algae and this stuff is starting to replace it. I'm not complaining though it looks much better than the green hair algae. I'm going to start getting rid of it tmrw.
 

wildjosh

Member
I just scooped a bunch out yesterday and I'm going to remove more today and do a water change. Would getting Nass snails help any? Someone told me to get more snails. I just figured thaty since nass snails live in the subsrate that they might help. I leave my lights on from 6am to 8pm and I feed twice a day. Once at 6:30am and once at 6:00pm.
 

mr_x

Active Member
no. snails do not eat cyanobacteria.
back your lights down to 12 hours, maybe 10 for a while. feed once a day, or every other day for a short while.
and yes. waterchanges!
 

spanko

Active Member
Snails don't eat it but they will help. Nassarius snails are sand stirrers and eat any meaty type detritus that accumulates in and on the sandbed. Stirring the sand like they do, not a lot at a time, will help to get detritus suspended into the water column so that it can be removed by filtration.
 

wildjosh

Member
I water changed yesterday and tried to remove by hand as much as I could. I also cut down on how much food I feed my fish. This morning it looked pretty good. I'll keep doing that for a few more day and see how it goes.
 
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