Current plan is to stir only the top 0.5 inch - but still a little nervous. Did you blackout the sides of the tank too?I considered doing this but chickened out - didn’t want to make a sandy mess. Instead, I left the lights off for three whole days. This killed all the cyano and it never came back. Corals and nems were ok.
No blackout.Current plan is to stir only the top 0.5 inch - but still a little nervous. Did you blackout the sides of the tank too?
Good idea, thanks!Siphon is better than just stirring, that way you catch all the junk that comes out. You can siphon into a sock in your sump rather than having to throw out the water if you aren’t due for a water change.
I don't quite follow - are you talking about N/P Redfield ratio type of nutrient imbalance, or just not enough nutrient (Nitrate and phosphate levels)?In my experience stirring, blowing, siphoning really does nothing to fix cyano.. at all.
The wrapped tank lights out for a few days can definitely kill it off.
But for me, it's almost always been caused by a nutrient imbalance.
Most recently I was running biopellets on my tank without enough nutrient load to really need bio pellets.
Mild cyano for months. Removed bio pellets & increased bio load.. cyano gone within a week or two.
Any tips on selective N/P correction? Would prefer "ecosystem friendly" ones, i.e. not a huge fan of phosphate precipitating chems.Tip: Use turkey baster jet to clean rocks, wait for crud to settle, THEN siphon sand.
Siphoning sand is far better than stirring.
Truly removes detritus/cyano, instead of just moving it around.
Protein skimmers only remove certain types of crud.
Plus it encourages water changes, always a good thing.
+1 that it will not fix Cyano.
My typical Cyano fight:
First, you need to reduce it down to reasonable levels.
1) Siphon out as much as possible.
2) Hit it with chemiclean one time.
3) Lots of large water changes.
Then, you need to keep it from coming back.
1) Maintain sand bed. Critters, siphoning.
2) Maintain correct N / P ratio. Raise N, lower P.
3) Get a large clean up crew.
All that said, recurring Cyano fights were one of the reasons I ended up going bare bottom.
Perhaps that's why chaeto's been helping. Any major differences in phos. content between frozen foods?Many things absorb phosphate. Algae, GFO. I recently used PhosGuard to quickly reduce my phosphate with good success against GHA.
Also, limiting phosphate addition is good. Pellets are notorious sources.
Frozen foods contribute less phos if you thaw them and rinse them - not adding the liquid to the tank, but pellets tend to contribute a ton more.
Great resource. Looks like frozen mysis is the way to go, protein to phosphate wise.Phosphates from rinsing frozen food is negligible and probably not worth the time.
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Aquarium Chemistry: Phosphate And Math: Yes You Need To Understand Both
Foods are by far the most important source of phosphate in most aquariums. In considering whether sources of phosphate other than foods are important, one must carefully look to the actual amounts involved to determine whether other sources are even worth trying to minimize.reefs.com
I don't quite follow - are you talking about N/P Redfield ratio type of nutrient imbalance, or just not enough nutrient (Nitrate and phosphate levels)?
Anecdotally, my N/P is 16:0.24 - far from the NSW 16:1. I've also noticed that adding chaeto (Thanks Ashburn!) has reduced the issue - I wonder whether it's soaking up something that I'm not testing for.