eagalldo
New Member
This is my first post, so go easy on me! We have 4 aquariums: 1 freshwater and 3 saltwater (3 reef and 1 FOWLR). We have been having a problem with red algae covering everything, including the sand, in our FOWLR tank. I know that this can be due to high nitrates, but although our nitrates aren't non-existent, they are always in the 5-10 range. All other parameters are always at zero. We have done several water changes, but this algae issue persists.... for months, really. We've also tried shortening the amount of time we have the lights on. All of the inhabitants are thriving, eating well, and look healthy. This will be a 2 part question:
1) Any further recommendations about the red algae? It's pretty bad. It seems to be worse in certain areas of the tank, one side worse than the other.
2) We've been trying to find something to sift or stir up the sand a bit in this tank, which is difficult because it's a "predator tank", of sorts. We've tried small-ish horseshoe crabs, but honestly, I've never even seen the things since they were put into the tank. I'm not sure if they made it or not. We tried that twice. We've tried really large turbo snails, which survive for a while, but then I think they eventually get picked off. I was wondering if a flounder could serve this purpose and survive this tank. What are your thoughts?
The tank in question is a 180-gal FOWLR with approx. 1- 1 1/2 inch fine sand bed and lots of live rock. It's been up and running fine for about 1 1/2 years. If you need to know further details about all of the "technical" equipment, let me know. I'll have to consult my husband on that part. But I do know in rough terms that it does have a sump with refugium (live rock and macro algae in it), a carbon reactor, and a protein skimmer. The inhabitants include:
Miniatus Grouper - ~6 inches
Humu Picasso Trigger - ~4 inches
Lunare Wrasse - ~6 inches
Dogface Puffer - ~5 inches
Snowflake Eel - ~12 inches
Panther Grouper - ~8 inches
(yes, we know he will need a bigger tank soon)
THANK YOU for any and all help!
~Beth
1) Any further recommendations about the red algae? It's pretty bad. It seems to be worse in certain areas of the tank, one side worse than the other.
2) We've been trying to find something to sift or stir up the sand a bit in this tank, which is difficult because it's a "predator tank", of sorts. We've tried small-ish horseshoe crabs, but honestly, I've never even seen the things since they were put into the tank. I'm not sure if they made it or not. We tried that twice. We've tried really large turbo snails, which survive for a while, but then I think they eventually get picked off. I was wondering if a flounder could serve this purpose and survive this tank. What are your thoughts?
The tank in question is a 180-gal FOWLR with approx. 1- 1 1/2 inch fine sand bed and lots of live rock. It's been up and running fine for about 1 1/2 years. If you need to know further details about all of the "technical" equipment, let me know. I'll have to consult my husband on that part. But I do know in rough terms that it does have a sump with refugium (live rock and macro algae in it), a carbon reactor, and a protein skimmer. The inhabitants include:
Miniatus Grouper - ~6 inches
Humu Picasso Trigger - ~4 inches
Lunare Wrasse - ~6 inches
Dogface Puffer - ~5 inches
Snowflake Eel - ~12 inches
Panther Grouper - ~8 inches
(yes, we know he will need a bigger tank soon)
THANK YOU for any and all help!
~Beth