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Filamentous Green Algae

This is a discussion on Filamentous Green Algae within the Plants/Algae/Ferts/EI/CO2/Lighting forums, part of the Aquarium Related Chat category; I went away for a couple of weeks, and I came back to a tank over-run with filamentous green algae. ...

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    timbit1985 is offline Member
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    Default Filamentous Green Algae

    I went away for a couple of weeks, and I came back to a tank over-run with filamentous green algae. It has totally clogged up all of my moss, elodea and swords I don't want to dose with chemicals, are there any snails or fish that would eat the algae? I currently have the tank stocked with zebra danios and a bunch of tiny little snails. Should I increase circulation? I have reduced the photo period from 8 hours to a split-photo period. 4 on, 4 off, 4 on. Should I reduce it to 4 on 20 off?

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    Ursus sapien's Avatar
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    Isn't that funny, I was just going to post some for free in the classifieds. Great stuff, in the right place.

    It only grows for me in my window plants - cutting the light will kill it off.
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    BelieveInBlue is offline Forum Resident
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    And if that doesn't work, there's always amano shrimp or true SAEs

    I recommend the shrimp though; SAE's get nasty when they get bigger.

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    ^^amanos love the stuff
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    Hmm, amano shrimp you say? Anyone know where I could get me some of those?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Ursus sapien View Post
    Isn't that funny, I was just going to post some for free in the classifieds. Great stuff, in the right place.

    It only grows for me in my window plants - cutting the light will kill it off.
    Why would you WANT that stuff???

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    Quote Originally Posted by timbit1985 View Post
    Hmm, amano shrimp you say? Anyone know where I could get me some of those?
    Patrick (mykiss on the forum) at Canadian Aquatics has them. They're on sale, too, I think.
    Last edited by Ursus sapien; 09-25-2011 at 10:41 PM.
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    Quote Originally Posted by timbit1985 View Post
    Why would you WANT that stuff???

    That's the reaction I typically get:-) but if you reconsider and would like more, I'm giving away a big piece here:-)>

    Hair algae is a wickedly efficient nitrate sink, making it useful in the bio-filtering of aquariums. It's also a very nutritious food for herbivorous fish and inverts. It makes an excellent spawning medium for small egg layers, and even hosts large numbers of micro crustaceans and rotifers, making it a valuable feeding ground for newly hatched fish fry.

    It's great stuff, except when it grows where you don't want it.
    Last edited by Ursus sapien; 09-25-2011 at 10:41 PM.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ursus sapien View Post
    That the reaction I typically get:-) but if you reconsider and would like more, I'm giving away a big piece here:-)>

    Hair algae is a wickedly efficient nitrate sink, making it useful in the bio-filtering of aquariums. It's also a very nutritious food for herbivorous fish and inverts. It makes an excellent spawning medium for small egg layers, and even hosts large numbers of micro crustaceans and rotifers, making it a valuable feeding ground for newly hatched fish fry.

    It's great stuff, except when it grows where you don't want it.

    Excellent. I knew that it was a great nitrate sink, didn't realize it would host micro crustaceans and rotifers, i'll keep that in mind for fish fry if I ever try breeding. In the mean time...Amano shrimps here I come.

 

 

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