realgwyneth
Fish Fanatic
Hi again,
I recently splurged on a fancy Fluval AquaSky 27 watt light to replace an old light hood that was getting dimmer by the day. Wow, I can see my plants and fish now! But now, 3 weeks or so later, I can also see my anubias is just covered with dark algae of some sort I've never had before. It's hard to get it off the leaves, even with a soft toothbrush. I keep turning the light level down (and making "sunrise" and "sunset" periods longer), but the algae is getting worse. (Pictures below, I hope). I've got a total of about 8 hours now, including lengthy sunrise and sunset time with the white, red, and green light at 70% and the blue light at 10%.
It's a well-established 65-gallon tank with a good amount of plants, mostly anubias and java fern. There's also a lot of java moss. Current occupants include 1 kribensis, 3 Schwartz corys (want more!), 10ish cherry barbs, 7 red eye tetras, and 1 ancient ghost shrimp left over from a group. (I'm planning to add 3 more corys, a few more cherry barbs, and to replace the red eye tetras with ... something more interesting ... as they age out.) The tank has been running for several years, and the only thing that's really changed in the last two years is the light.
pH = 7 - 7.5
ammonia = 0
nitrites = 0
nitrates ~ 10 - 20
tap water source is quite hard, but there's a huge log to soften naturally.
25% WC weekly
Capful of Flourish weekly
Should I keep reducing the light level or time? Should I add more plants to consume nutrients now that I have better light? Should I stop fertilizing? Will amano shrimp eat this brown algae or will my female krib eat the amano? She doesn't bother the ghost shrimp, but he was bigger than her when she came into the tank. Can you even find amano shrimp in Texas? Is there some other fish (in small quantities) that would do a better job of eating this stuff on the anubias? I'm not sure I want a plec@. Insight greatly appreciated!
I recently splurged on a fancy Fluval AquaSky 27 watt light to replace an old light hood that was getting dimmer by the day. Wow, I can see my plants and fish now! But now, 3 weeks or so later, I can also see my anubias is just covered with dark algae of some sort I've never had before. It's hard to get it off the leaves, even with a soft toothbrush. I keep turning the light level down (and making "sunrise" and "sunset" periods longer), but the algae is getting worse. (Pictures below, I hope). I've got a total of about 8 hours now, including lengthy sunrise and sunset time with the white, red, and green light at 70% and the blue light at 10%.
It's a well-established 65-gallon tank with a good amount of plants, mostly anubias and java fern. There's also a lot of java moss. Current occupants include 1 kribensis, 3 Schwartz corys (want more!), 10ish cherry barbs, 7 red eye tetras, and 1 ancient ghost shrimp left over from a group. (I'm planning to add 3 more corys, a few more cherry barbs, and to replace the red eye tetras with ... something more interesting ... as they age out.) The tank has been running for several years, and the only thing that's really changed in the last two years is the light.
pH = 7 - 7.5
ammonia = 0
nitrites = 0
nitrates ~ 10 - 20
tap water source is quite hard, but there's a huge log to soften naturally.
25% WC weekly
Capful of Flourish weekly
Should I keep reducing the light level or time? Should I add more plants to consume nutrients now that I have better light? Should I stop fertilizing? Will amano shrimp eat this brown algae or will my female krib eat the amano? She doesn't bother the ghost shrimp, but he was bigger than her when she came into the tank. Can you even find amano shrimp in Texas? Is there some other fish (in small quantities) that would do a better job of eating this stuff on the anubias? I'm not sure I want a plec@. Insight greatly appreciated!