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Will Algae be a problem in my saltwater aquarium? [Archive] - Saltwater Aquariums - Reef Tanks Online Discussion

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matrixnyc
03-01-2003, 11:21 PM
Will Algae be a problem in my saltwater aquarium?


You should not have a problem with algae if you have followed these recommendations:

* Purify your tap water with a triple carbon prefilter and reverse osmosis or deionizer system;
* Use Kalkwasser regularly to keep the pH between 8.2 and 8.4;
* Do water changes every 2 to 3 weeks;
* With water changes, vacuum off as much as possible of the debris in the rock crevices;
* Change your prefilter pad every week;
* Have the lighting on for no more than 9 hours a day, using the wattage recommended;
* Do not use unnecessary additives;
* Employ herbivorous livestock (turbo snails, small hermit crabs, hard star fish, and algae-eating fish such as yellow tangs, blennies, angels, etc.).

By following the recommendations here, you should be able to manage the micro-algae in your tank. These procedures will ensure that your reef will not be overtaken by green, brown, or red algae that would cover desirable livestock and organisms (such as the hard pink coralline algae) that depend on water flow and light.

I cannot overemphasize the importance of following all the previous recommendations, as they will ensure that the undesirable algae do not have the conditions they need to survive, and undesirable algae are the scourge of reef keeping. Follow the suggested procedures, and the algae should be manageable!

Micro-algae will grow!

The growth of micro-algae is a natural occurrence and will happen in most healthy tanks. It is only when the algae become unmanageable that we have a problem. Managing the growth of micro-algae means (1) limiting the conditions they need to thrive, (2) having livestock that will eat most of the algae, and (3) removing the remainder by hand with magnets, blade scrapers, and brushes.

In my tanks, brown and some green algae form on the glass on a regular basis. They do not thrive for long in other areas; they are only a problem on the glass and overflow pipes.

The glass is easily cleaned with an algae glass-cleaning magnet. When buying such a magnet, purchase the largest one you can find. Usually the larger the size, the stronger the magnet and the better the cleaning capabilities (pull) it will have. The magnet does a nice job for weekly or twice-weekly cleaning. Little bright green patches will eventually form. These should be scraped off with a razor blade. You should only have to “blade” the glass about once a month at the most.

WHY REEF STORES DO NOT HAVE AN ALGAE PROBLEM

Keep in mind that algae will grow and will have to be removed by hand on a regular basis. Do not be deceived when you go into your favorite reef store and observe that their tanks have no visible algae. You may think, “My tank has algae, why doesn’t his?” The fact is that every morning someone cleans the glass and maintains the tanks so they will look absolutely pristine. This gives the impression that the people in the store know something about water quality that you don’t. In fact, all they are doing is daily maintenance, in addition to the procedures listed above.

Then of course, the remaining algae will be removed by hand, particularly from the glass and overflow pipes. By using a strong magnet or a razor blade for the glass, and a bottle brush for the overflow, it is not a problem to remove undesirable algae.

It is important to remember that we want to remove the algae, not just dislodge it. When using the magnet, after a few swipes you will feel the scrubber part of the magnet cleaner getting full of algae. Take this to the sink and rinse it off. Resume cleaning and repeat the rinsing process as often as needed. Rinse the scrubber when you are done. When using the bottle brush, swirl it to trap the algae in the bristles, and rinse it out in the sink.

A strong algae magnet and bottle brush are useful tools. Some algae, of course, will get away from you. This cannot be avoided. Remove as much as you can, within reason. Algae that are dislodged and left in the tank will either reattach elsewhere, decompose into food for other algae, or get trapped in the prefilter.

Summary of algae management:

If you follow the suggestions I have given, it can be done easily. Algae accumulation can be a serious threat to the enclosed reef system. Left unmanaged, it can become a problem that would test anyone’s patience and sanity; it is not something you want to battle with! However, if you select your livestock carefully and follow the other recommendations I have discussed, the naturally-occurring algae in your tank will be a good food source for the livestock, and what they don’t eat can be managed with regular maintenance.

By Robert M. Metelsky
Author of the book Simplified Reefkeeping, 3rd ed. available at simplifiedreefkeeping.com
Aquarticles

Samurai
03-02-2003, 12:10 AM
Great post Matrixnyc :D.

Brian T
03-02-2003, 08:33 PM
I agree, gr8 post. Thanks to these types of posts I am learning all sorts of things i did not know about keeping a SWR tank. Thanks to all.

Fishmonger
08-17-2003, 11:08 AM
What is the best way to take care of it if it does become a problem, i've seen many tanks become overrun with algae to the point where the owners just want to give up on it ? Do products like Green-X and other phosphate removers work ?

ES13Raven
10-22-2003, 05:12 PM
SeaChem's Phosguard works well for me :D

http://www.seachem.com/en_products/product_pages/018_phosguard.html

UV Sterilizers can also help prevent algae blooms

Mike O'Brien
12-09-2003, 07:44 PM
Also keep all the glass clean, so the snails dont spend all their time cleaning glass instead of the live rock.

ReefLawyer
01-08-2004, 05:45 PM
I'm just returning to the hobby after a 3 year respite, so I may not be up to date ....

Are UV sterilizer's now being used on reef systems :?: It was a big no no just a few years ago.

Tim

Chris_X
01-24-2004, 03:49 PM
A bit of background: I am really new to saltwater tanks. I have converted from fresh water to salt. I have had my tank running for over a month, and have just added two Clarkii Clown Fish. Everything seems to be fine.

Heres my concern, in the beginning I have added only a couple of pounds of live rock when a coworker of mine told me he would give me his live rock(approx 30 lbs of rock). I have added the rock but it seems there was quite a bit of algae on these rocks. I gave the rocks a scrubbing in saltwater then added them to the tank. The local pet store stated I should add the rock, that it will only help my tank. Im just concerned it may lead to a serious algae problem. The live rock is just so expensive I felt it wouldnt hurt to take it. I havent seen any real algae growth take off but now second guessing...=\

Any help or ideas would be greatly appreciated.

:D

My tank is a 55gal. long.

joanadam
02-21-2004, 02:55 AM
Im just concerned it may lead to a serious algae problem. The live rock is just so expensive I felt it wouldnt hurt to take it. I havent seen any real algae growth take off but now second guessing...

The live rock isn't really what supports the growth of algae. It is the water conditions that you maintain. Like high phospates, etc. If you use RO/DI water and maintain good water conditions. Then you shouldn't have algae problems. Any bad algae on the live rock should die off. A good cleaner crew will help as well, crabs, snails, etc.
In short, Free live rock, I'll take a couple hundred pounds...

ajensen1427
02-27-2004, 04:33 PM
That's good advice, especially RO/DI water. I have a 75-gallon display tank upstairs, and in the basement a 20-gallon caulerpa/mud central flow filter with 60-gallon sump tank. In spite of having everything else in place (and I mean everything) I skimped on the RO system and paid the price. The accumulation of hair algae increased with each weekly addition of tap water as my phosphates climbed, and my display tank scrapings became an almost daily routine. Eventually my caulerpa died off as it was choked from the light by hair algae and my live rock was coated with successive layers of slime. Get the RO... take it from me!

enzo
03-03-2004, 08:05 AM
In my fresh water tanks i had a serious algae problem but then when i moved to discus and invested with a ro unit the problem soon went and now its in pristine condition with only small amounts whcih are easily removed once or twice a week :wink:

Roscoe
03-04-2004, 01:56 AM
I was trying to decide about an Ro unit, know it seems better! Thanks

stony
04-05-2004, 11:54 PM
I use CHEMI-CLEAN stuff is the shiznit! Works good for me!

~stony~

yawny
04-29-2004, 05:58 PM
I would add one suggestion to the excellent set of guielines posted here, and that is: make sure you have adequate water circulation!

I had a green algae problem in my new (6-8 week old) tank that simply would not go away, despite using RO/DI, performing 2x/weekly water changes, vacuuming substrate, running lights just 6 hours, etc. etc.

But I only had two small (Aquaclear 301) powerheads for a 37 gal tank. Literally within ONE day of installing a MaxiJet 1200 (dual 301s at one end, the MaxiJet at the other), my algae problem went away.

The 301s are fine, just not enough horsepower.

mybubbles
05-08-2004, 06:48 AM
wow!! i learnt so much from MatrixNYC.....u post all pro reports =]