if we discuss about hair algae, so hair algae can be an infestation in a reef aquarium that can lead some to turn to tearing their tanks down, cooking rocks and spending enough money leading to divorce and car repossessions. For some, hair algae can be a quick fix that leads them to wondering what all the hype and struggle is about for others. And for many, hair algae can be a problem where there seems to be no end.
Those that have followed my reef threads may remember or reflect upon the fact that I have had wave after wave of poor luck. Energy consumption, medical issues, vermetid snail explosions and then hair algae have all taken a toll on my tanks through the years. It led me to think that maybe I was destined for bonsai plants, rather than reef tanks. But, I love this hobby so much that I refuse to give it up.
So after I set up my current 300-gallon system, everything was going well until one day a little hair algae presented itself on a few small areas of rock in my tank. I quickly implemented typical and common recommended techniques to rid algae and was met with a hair algae explosion that quickly over ran the entire tank and led to losses of two fish and one coral fragment. Within this time frame I elected to try to find out why the tank succumbed to such a widespread infestation, what caused it, what made it spread, what I did that worked, what didn't work and how I eventually beat the infestation.
Within this article I want to stress once again that I am not a chemist nor a biologist. I am a hobbyist who has a desire to know why things happen, which leads me to research things as they present themselves. I recently began taking various biology classes in college to supplement my reef tank addiction, but still I consider myself a hobbyist who wishes to spread knowledge that common hobbyists can learn from and understand without a dictionary in hand.