Hi,
I have a 25 gallon that I had to abandon for 3 months. I took all the fish back to the fish store, but left the plants. A friend came over and filled the tank weekly for evaporation purposes, but nothing else for maintenance.
When I arrived last weekend, many of the plants were still alive, although not thriving. A good 2/3rds of the tank had a cyano outbreak, and now I am considering my options. For now, I don't want to add any fish, but would like to get the tank clean and save as many of the plants as possible.
My first thought was to take all the plants out, and try and clean them off, throw away the substrate, and scrub the glass. I also considered just blacking out the tank with a garbage bag for a week and seeing what I had after that, but I didn't want to kill off the plants.
Will cyano, being a bacteria, be on the plants and embedded in the glass? What would you use to clean the glass, bleach followed by a thorough washing out and drying? I'd hate to scrub it all down and then just have cyano resurrect itself. I could just chuck the plants too and start all over again, but that wouldn't be my first preference.
I only light the tank for 8 hours a day, and there is no exposure to direct sunlight, if anyone thinks it is a lighting problem. There was no food or ferts added while I was gone, and I just ran a sponge filter 24/7. PH is a little over 7 and alkalinity and General hardness are low.
Any thoughts or suggestions?
Thanks
Drew
I have a 25 gallon that I had to abandon for 3 months. I took all the fish back to the fish store, but left the plants. A friend came over and filled the tank weekly for evaporation purposes, but nothing else for maintenance.
When I arrived last weekend, many of the plants were still alive, although not thriving. A good 2/3rds of the tank had a cyano outbreak, and now I am considering my options. For now, I don't want to add any fish, but would like to get the tank clean and save as many of the plants as possible.
My first thought was to take all the plants out, and try and clean them off, throw away the substrate, and scrub the glass. I also considered just blacking out the tank with a garbage bag for a week and seeing what I had after that, but I didn't want to kill off the plants.
Will cyano, being a bacteria, be on the plants and embedded in the glass? What would you use to clean the glass, bleach followed by a thorough washing out and drying? I'd hate to scrub it all down and then just have cyano resurrect itself. I could just chuck the plants too and start all over again, but that wouldn't be my first preference.
I only light the tank for 8 hours a day, and there is no exposure to direct sunlight, if anyone thinks it is a lighting problem. There was no food or ferts added while I was gone, and I just ran a sponge filter 24/7. PH is a little over 7 and alkalinity and General hardness are low.
Any thoughts or suggestions?
Thanks
Drew