iiinadav
Member
Travis
Diatoms thrive on silicates and light. Cutting back on the light may slightly stop them from spreading, but they still remain until all of the silicate in your system has been absorbed. Silicates can enter an established aquarium through food and bad RO/DI filters, but in a new system the main source of silicates are fresh saltwater and new sand. Give it time and they will go away. In my 29 gallon tank it over 2 months before the diatoms went away, but my 72 gallon was diatom free in one month.
The hair algae and red slime algae were probably thriving off of high phosphate levels or the high nitrate levels you had. Since you have gotten you nitrate level down, you should also test for phosphates. To get rid of the red and hair algae you should cut back on the lights little, lightly feed you livestock, implement an aggressive water change schedule until you see the algae is gone.
Diatoms thrive on silicates and light. Cutting back on the light may slightly stop them from spreading, but they still remain until all of the silicate in your system has been absorbed. Silicates can enter an established aquarium through food and bad RO/DI filters, but in a new system the main source of silicates are fresh saltwater and new sand. Give it time and they will go away. In my 29 gallon tank it over 2 months before the diatoms went away, but my 72 gallon was diatom free in one month.
The hair algae and red slime algae were probably thriving off of high phosphate levels or the high nitrate levels you had. Since you have gotten you nitrate level down, you should also test for phosphates. To get rid of the red and hair algae you should cut back on the lights little, lightly feed you livestock, implement an aggressive water change schedule until you see the algae is gone.