fishwarrior
Mostly New Member
eaglesaquarium said:I'd be very interested to see that study, if you can find it again, please post here.
Here you go
http/www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=1943735
eaglesaquarium said:I'd be very interested to see that study, if you can find it again, please post here.
TrickySpot said:I use common household bleach (sodium hydroxide), which will kill the algae, but it basically turns it from green algae to white algae, its still really hard to get off. If I'm doing all my plastic plants and ornaments, say every 3 months, I get 1L of vinegar and dump the plants in it to neutralize the excess bleach (they fizz slightly as one would expect), then wash them under hot water. If Hydrogen Peroxide helps to remove the algae as well then that's a bonus and I'll definitely try that in the future!
BTW, was just wondering where one gets Hydrogen Peroxide, but I see its the main ingredient formed in water (plus sodium carbonate - harmless) when VANISH is added to water.
eaglesaquarium said:
Personally, I'd go the bleach route, but the H2O2 will work too. You CAN do it in the tank as well, but I'd not take that chance if you don't have to.
fishwarrior said:I've used the bleach method, but think Hydrogen Peroxide would be cheaper and easier on the plants. Bleach only makes things look clean while the peroxide actually cleans it and don't have to worry about the fumes. Soak in hot water too can help.
TrickySpot said:
Personally, I'd go the bleach route, but the H2O2 will work too. You CAN do it in the tank as well, but I'd not take that chance if you don't have to.
If you did go straight into the tank, I assume it would still have its cleaning and killing small things property, with it breaking down to water and oxygen - especially at high temperature and high pH (your average non-expert fish keepers tank). Wouldn't this be the perfect treatment for a bacterial bloom? It'll kill the bacteria and oxygenate the water so your fish don't suffocate? Or is it more of a cleaner rather than a killer?
Just realized though it could affect your bacterial colonies in your filter and substrate, so that's not so good.