ashkan
Member
I am not a beginner but I don;t understand some of the water parameter issues involved with having a saltwater aquarium. I have a 55 gallon tank with a Magnum 350 Canister filter with reef carbon. I have two 58 watt T-5 bulbs, one is a 10,000K bulb and the other is an Actinic. I have a really good protein skimmer and one powerjet.
I have a 3.5 inch sand bed and over 90 pounds of live rock. Recently red slime algae has been growing on the sand and I treated it with red slime remover and I did a 50% water change. That got rid of the slime algae but my nitrates just won't go down! Now for the past few days my glass is full of greenish-brown algae and my sand has a little bit of green slime algae. I have also nitced little pockets of air in my sand bed that weren't there before. I have a good cleanup crew but I don't know what to do. I have heard of products that trun nitrates into a harmless gas but are those safe? Are they effective? Shouldn't I tackle the cause of the high nitrates instead of just masking it? I have heard that a thick sand bed (maybe 6 inches) is a good method for eliminating nitrates. Is this true?
I have a 3.5 inch sand bed and over 90 pounds of live rock. Recently red slime algae has been growing on the sand and I treated it with red slime remover and I did a 50% water change. That got rid of the slime algae but my nitrates just won't go down! Now for the past few days my glass is full of greenish-brown algae and my sand has a little bit of green slime algae. I have also nitced little pockets of air in my sand bed that weren't there before. I have a good cleanup crew but I don't know what to do. I have heard of products that trun nitrates into a harmless gas but are those safe? Are they effective? Shouldn't I tackle the cause of the high nitrates instead of just masking it? I have heard that a thick sand bed (maybe 6 inches) is a good method for eliminating nitrates. Is this true?