Because I cant get rid of it...Any reason why you want to keep the gha?
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Any reason why you want to keep the gha?
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Manual removal.
Where these things moving quick and bumping each other?Can anyone tell me what this is?View attachment 18989
You can pull out and brush in a bucket of tank water, or try to brush and siphon at the same time in the tank. Can zip tie a tooth brush to a siphon tube and have at it. Or pull off with your fingers or tweezers if that works.So just pull the rock out of the tank and scrub it all off?
Where these things moving quick and bumping each other?
Can’t tell from the picture. Need higher mag but they look like ostreopsis.
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Looks like dinoflagellates. Don't appear to be prorocentrum dinos. Has your CUC been dying? My best guess is ostreopsis, but if you can get a clearer focus on the front of these, I can help you narrow down what subtype you're dealing with.
Also, question: are your phosphates and/or nitrates bottomed out, and is this a new tank?
Edit: reason I'm asking is because your treatment strategy will depend on the type you have. Are they on your sand too?
Stop looking in the mirror dudeNerd alert! Nerd alert!
Looks like dinoflagellates. Don't appear to be prorocentrum dinos. Has your CUC been dying? My best guess is ostreopsis, but if you can get a clearer focus on the front of these, I can help you narrow down what subtype you're dealing with.
Also, question: are your phosphates and/or nitrates bottomed out, and is this a new tank?
Edit: reason I'm asking is because your treatment strategy will depend on the type you have. Are they on your sand too?