hair algea problem

ric maniac

Active Member
i have hair algea in my tank
what can i do to get rid of it without crunching my light time? all of my perameters are fine. i was using tap water for top offs and water changes but started usind ro water not long ago. i was thinking a sea hare?
 

rcdude1990

Active Member
im not an expert on algea but ill give u some advise
try to get a cleaning crew, meaning, some hermit crabs, snails, andything, also try to get some sand sifting fish like diamond gobys so u wont get diatoms on ur sand
 

ineedhelp

New Member
i goby is for the sand bed it will turn over the sand so the diatoms wont bloom and the blenny is for the alge on the rocks and glass i had a blenny but it didn't realy eat the hair algae the only bad thing with gobys are they will cover corals and rock with sand and im not sure correct me if im wrong but wont they deplet all the life in your sand bed and in some cases die?
 

ric maniac

Active Member
well i have a brain coral on my sand bed so a goby is out but a lawn mower blenny and water changes will work i guess.
 

ineedhelp

New Member
but the blenny wont do anything for your sand bed u need some hermet crabs or some nassurie snails something 2 work the sand bed and don't go off of what i siad about the goby they are really cool fish see what more ppl have 2 say about them even if they cover stuff with sand all u have 2 do is get a turkey baster and blow the sand off
 
P

pokey

Guest
When you say your parameters are "fine"- what are your nitrate and phosphate levels? Do you have a refugium/macroalgae? The RO water should definitely help. When you say you don't want to cut your light time, how long do you keep them on?
 

reefreak29

Active Member
heres an article i wrote a while ago
algea control in the reef tank by:reefreak29

[hr]
one of the most annoying problems in the home reef tank is endesirable algea.three major problem algeas that ive incuontered in my reef are green hair algea,brown diotoms and red slime algea aka cyono bacteria.
BROWN DIATOM ALGEA: usually accurs in newer reef tanks. mostly because of the introduction of live rock, wich introduces silicates and nutrients to your tank.
a brown film soon coats your sand bed.The control of diotoms is fairly easy.u first need a benificial cleen up crew trochus and astraea snails eagerly consume the brown diotoms. The second thing u want to do is perform regular water changes to remove access nutrients.
CYANO BACTERIA: red slime algea has to be one of the most frustrating for new reefers.It usually breaks out on the surface of the sand substrate.2 ways that i know to remove the cyano is to first increase your water flow u want to remove any stagnent areas by the substate. Two remove excess nutrient, I prefer to do a 10 percent weekly water change with ro di water or di water. (do not use tap water) while doing a water change syphon out as much red algea as possible,also dont be afraid to cut your light back and your feeding, I leeve my light on for 10 hrs a day in my 90 gal tank its ok to cut back to 5 hrs for a couple of weeks.
GREEN HAIR ALGEA: who hasnt experienced this.this algea loves bright light and astablished reef tanks. Green hair algea consumes excess nutrients faster then any other algea.Below are measures and steps of riding this FOREVER
1.-make sure u have a protien skimmer and its suitible for your size tank, for proper working conditions make sure u clean out skimmer cup every other day to have 100 percent working capability also make sure your pump stays clean for maximum flow
2. decrease lighting just like with the cyono cut your light in half
3. perform regular water changes again i like 10 percent weekly, when doing a water change suck out as much algea as possible, use only di water or rodi.
never use tap , tap water has high nitrates, phosphates and nitrites.
4.phisicly remove the algea by riping it of the rock,keep a cup of di water next to u to rinse your fingers each time u put your hands back in the tank to insure all spores are off and your not reintroducing the algea to your water,after about 20 hrs of manually removing the algea your inverts aka cleanup crew should keep it under control.
in colclusion please do regular water changes, feed small amounts every other day, only use rodi or di water and dont keep your lights on for more then 10 hrs a day. everyone experiences algea blooms in there tank i hope this help in managing the problem algeas
 

ineedhelp

New Member
i would seerch on here see if anyone here has done it im sure they have but if u do besure 2 use a drip 2 acclamate i would do it for a few hours so it gets use 2 the salenity i have herd good things about the algea eating abilitys
 

ci11337

Active Member
Originally Posted by ric maniac
would the molly help? i have 4 and i could acclimate one of them slowly to marine
I tried this and he did fine but never touched the algea.
 

mcbdz

Active Member
Originally Posted by reefreak29
heres an article i wrote a while ago
algea control in the reef tank by:reefreak29

[hr]
one of the most annoying problems in the home reef tank is endesirable algea.three major problem algeas that ive incuontered in my reef are green hair algea,brown diotoms and red slime algea aka cyono bacteria.
BROWN DIATOM ALGEA: usually accurs in newer reef tanks. mostly because of the introduction of live rock, wich introduces silicates and nutrients to your tank.
a brown film soon coats your sand bed.The control of diotoms is fairly easy.u first need a benificial cleen up crew trochus and astraea snails eagerly consume the brown diotoms. The second thing u want to do is perform regular water changes to remove access nutrients.
CYANO BACTERIA: red slime algea has to be one of the most frustrating for new reefers.It usually breaks out on the surface of the sand substrate.2 ways that i know to remove the cyano is to first increase your water flow u want to remove any stagnent areas by the substate. Two remove excess nutrient, I prefer to do a 10 percent weekly water change with ro di water or di water. (do not use tap water) while doing a water change syphon out as much red algea as possible,also dont be afraid to cut your light back and your feeding, I leeve my light on for 10 hrs a day in my 90 gal tank its ok to cut back to 5 hrs for a couple of weeks.
GREEN HAIR ALGEA: who hasnt experienced this.this algea loves bright light and astablished reef tanks. Green hair algea consumes excess nutrients faster then any other algea.Below are measures and steps of riding this FOREVER
1.-make sure u have a protien skimmer and its suitible for your size tank, for proper working conditions make sure u clean out skimmer cup every other day to have 100 percent working capability also make sure your pump stays clean for maximum flow
2. decrease lighting just like with the cyono cut your light in half
3. perform regular water changes again i like 10 percent weekly, when doing a water change suck out as much algea as possible, use only di water or rodi.
never use tap , tap water has high nitrates, phosphates and nitrites.
4.phisicly remove the algea by riping it of the rock,keep a cup of di water next to u to rinse your fingers each time u put your hands back in the tank to insure all spores are off and your not reintroducing the algea to your water,after about 20 hrs of manually removing the algea your inverts aka cleanup crew should keep it under control.
in colclusion please do regular water changes, feed small amounts every other day, only use rodi or di water and dont keep your lights on for more then 10 hrs a day. everyone experiences algea blooms in there tank i hope this help in managing the problem algeas

This is going to be your only surefireway to improve your algea problem. What is in your tank that you don't want to decrease your lights? Do the rest of the stuff if you can't turn down lights. What are your NO3 and phos.?
If need use a nitrate or phosphate sponge to help decrease your levels. If you use an animal it will just release the nutrient back in the water to start the cycle all over again. Need to fix it first. you need an export.
 

paintballer768

Active Member
I used tap water, dechlorinated, to initially fill my tank 3 months ago. Cyano just bloomed, and realized I had a ton of phosphates in my water, and thanks to the phosphate remover sponger Ive almost eliminated the cyano. Youre using it for top offs, I recommend you have a phosphate sponge in there 99% of the time and the algae will go away I bet.
 

snakeblitz33

Well-Known Member
If you need a quick fix to a hair algae problem and you don't want to spend the time and energy picking all of the rocks etc... Buy a few sally light foot crabs.
Sally light foots have purportidly eaten small fish and overturned rocks etc. Pretty distructive little creatures, but they eat the crap out of hair algae.
Main thing though is getting your nitrates and phosphates down to 0. Get a very efficiant protein skimmer and maintain it. Also, run a nitrate and phosphate sponge immediately.
Good luck!
 
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