How do I get rid of this now?!

ilovehorses52

New Member
Joined
Nov 9, 2021
Messages
59
Reaction score
24
Location
Chaska
I have this green hair algae I just can’t seem to get rid of any types of algae
 

Attachments

  • 1BE1B219-B4D0-43D4-8255-46B64C15776D.jpeg
    1BE1B219-B4D0-43D4-8255-46B64C15776D.jpeg
    229.2 KB · Views: 74
  • A90436FC-5C5F-4235-93C8-11FCAEC56F0C.jpeg
    A90436FC-5C5F-4235-93C8-11FCAEC56F0C.jpeg
    365 KB · Views: 75
  • 8F7BD45A-7B76-489D-A591-E7826695314E.jpeg
    8F7BD45A-7B76-489D-A591-E7826695314E.jpeg
    276.2 KB · Views: 72
Common algae is natural and present in all our tanks (if they are healthy bio-systems), but "problem" algae which is what you have here is not something we want. The cause is always the same for any "problem" algae, an imbalance of light and nutrients. With plants in the tank, the aim is to provide adequate light (this involves intensity, spectrum and the duration) for the plants, and at the same time adequate nutrients. As soon as one of these factors is out of sync, algae is able to take advantage.

We will need to know data on your lighting. What type, the spectrum (Kelvin or CRI number), and how long it is on daily.

Nutrients include natural organics from the fish being fed, water changes, and any fertilizers. Information on the fertilizer(s) if any.
 
How about throwing the plants away, changing the water and cleaning everything?
 
do some water changes, add some floating plants and some shrimp, see what happens
 
do some water changes, add some floating plants and some shrimp, see what happens
tried shrimp cant seem to keep them alive
Common algae is natural and present in all our tanks (if they are healthy bio-systems), but "problem" algae which is what you have here is not something we want. The cause is always the same for any "problem" algae, an imbalance of light and nutrients. With plants in the tank, the aim is to provide adequate light (this involves intensity, spectrum and the duration) for the plants, and at the same time adequate nutrients. As soon as one of these factors is out of sync, algae is able to take advantage.

We will need to know data on your lighting. What type, the spectrum (Kelvin or CRI number), and how long it is on daily.

Nutrients include natural organics from the fish being fed, water changes, and any fertilizers. Information on the fertilizer(s) if any.
this is the light here
its on for 10-12 hours a day
 
Floating plants or reduce lighting by 1 hour a day. Monitor the algae over the next few weeks and if it's still a problem, reduce lighting time by another hour. Monitor for a couple more weeks and see how it goes.
 
The link to the light recognized I am in Canada, and sent me off to different Petco sites, so I couldn't find anything on the light. Do you know the spectrum? I agree with Colin that reducing the duration is probably a good thing, 10-12 hours is a lot without floating plants to reduce some of it.

You also didn't respond on the fertilizer question. Substrate tabs like Seachem's Flourish Tabs will benefit the sword plants immensely, without leeching nutrients into the water to feed algae.
 
The link to the light recognized I am in Canada, and sent me off to different Petco sites, so I couldn't find anything on the light. Do you know the spectrum? I agree with Colin that reducing the duration is probably a good thing, 10-12 hours is a lot without floating plants to reduce some of it.

You also didn't respond on the fertilizer question. Substrate tabs like Seachem's Flourish Tabs will benefit the sword plants immensely, without leeching nutrients into the water to feed algae.
The only thing I put into my water for plants is aqueon plant food or it’s called something similar to that
 

Most reactions

Back
Top