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Green slimy alage - Help Please


Saxsena

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I have a 250L tank with medium plant and 2 42" tube on top. 1000l/h filter, DIY CO2 system with fish. Recently green slimy algae started appearing on the front side of the aquarium. where i think its more exposed to light. I have been using algae control solution that i brought from the pet shop. I am putting about 5ml every three days for last week. the green algae seem to be growing more and not stopping. Its getting more and more every day, like growing in patches and the patches and growing bigger and greener. the solution seen to do little good and i think that the algae is taking over. Please anyone out there can help me. I have check the ammonia and nitrite levels and that is normal, no reading everything is 0.

anyone out there please give me some suggestions.

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Sounds like cyanobacteria which isn't actually an algae so algae stuff won't get rid of it. I don't know how CO2 affects it. Usually I suggest blacking out tank for a few days but not sure if you can do that with CO2 running.

As a final resort you can use Erythromycin to get rid of it but it is a prescription only medicine and doesn't help if you don't know the cause so it may return.

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IME bristlenose wont touch it if its cyano. i have heaps of algae eaters and none of them touch it.

what caryl said. you really need to find the cause, i think its too much phosphate, along with either no nitrate or high nitrate. pleas correct me if im wrong.

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True.. if it's cynobacteria then the pleco wont be so interested.

But if you are setting your tank up to grow plants, well algae is a plant, some will grow no matter how well the tank is managed. A couple of little fish with built-in glass scrapers can just make life so much easier. :wink:

Cheers

Ian

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I've seen a couple of cyano blooms set off by very low nitrate and slightly high phosphate. If you can do lots of changes with water that has no phosphate (eg rain water, or deionised water) you can bring cyano under control.

It's not quick though, will take weeks at least. If you do this, maintaining your nitrate levels at 5-10ppm can help speed things up.

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some will grow no matter how well the tank is managed

Oh I'm glad you posted that...I thought anything kept under water would have some kind of algae on it, at least that's what I've been telling myself about the ornaments in the tank (have been there for awhile)...so my thinking was right then!

Caper

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So how and where do i get this stuff, erythromycin. I have called one vet, cut long story short..he said that I have to get him some of my fish and water for him to do all the research and that will take time for him to come up with how he is going to use erythromycin.

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