fishmad135
Fishaholic
I'll start with 3ml tomorrow then! How do you guys add it? directly to the water or do you dilute it in water and then pour it over the plants? Thanks again!
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Far_King said:
Once I got my phosphates under control in my tank the algae stopped growing and then my Amano shrimp clean it up. the algae had completely covered a plant and some of the leaves were dead. After I came back from vacation the plant was gone. Apparently the algae had killed it and then the Amano consumed the dead plant and algae that covered it. if you don't have a tank large enough for SAEs, Amano shrimp will do it.
my SAE's are a good 6 inches long now and fat as well. I'd read that they got big but I wasn't fully prepared for how big. They do okay in my 4ft (I have 3) but as I said in my OP they really need another foot. They do bicker (mostly over food) but they are a shoaling species and so your tank isn't really big enough for them.
What maintenance was done when you were gone? If someone didn't continue your regular water changes phosphates would build up. If the fish were fed more food than you gave them, again phosphate would build up.
I have a 140litre planted tank and whilst away at university it acquired what looks like Black beard algae and stag horn algae!
when i got home for christmas I started by systematically removing any leave with algae on and scrubbing my red moor wood however it has come back! I've had this tank up and running for over 8 years now and never had algae like this before!
Byron said:
There is a story to this you may be interested in. The fish in your photo is probably Crossochielus langei, which is actually the so-called "Siamese Algae Eater" in the hobby. The following except from a profile I authored for another site should explain this:
The common name Siamese Algae Eater is regularly applied to several related but distinct species. The subject species [Crossocheilus langei] is the one most often encountered in the hobby as the Siamese Algae Eater [SAE] and is the best at eating black brush [aka red beard] algae. The "true" SAE is actually Crossocheilus siamensis, a species initially described by H.M. Smith in 1931 as Epalzeorhynchus siamensis and moved by Banarescu into the genus Crossocheilus in 1986, and which has probably never been seen by hobbyists since the holotype [the specimen collected and used for the description] is the only one known. To further confuse, the fish described as C. siamensis by Smith was subsequently determined to be conspecific with a prior described species, Crossocheilus oblongus, so in fact there never was a C. siamensis as a distinct species, and the name now is a synonym for C. oblongus. The subject species was first described in 1860 by P. Bleeker, though the genus name was incorrectly given as Crossocheilos (Crossocheilichthys).
Byron.
What maintenance was done when you were gone? If someone didn't continue your regular water changes phosphates would build up. If the fish were fed more food than you gave them, again phosphate would build up.StevenF said:
Once I got my phosphates under control in my tank the algae stopped growing and then my Amano shrimp clean it up. the algae had completely covered a plant and some of the leaves were dead. After I came back from vacation the plant was gone. Apparently the algae had killed it and then the Amano consumed the dead plant and algae that covered it. if you don't have a tank large enough for SAEs, Amano shrimp will do it.
my SAE's are a good 6 inches long now and fat as well. I'd read that they got big but I wasn't fully prepared for how big. They do okay in my 4ft (I have 3) but as I said in my OP they really need another foot. They do bicker (mostly over food) but they are a shoaling species and so your tank isn't really big enough for them.
I have a 140litre planted tank and whilst away at university it acquired what looks like Black beard algae and stag horn algae!
when i got home for christmas I started by systematically removing any leave with algae on and scrubbing my red moor wood however it has come back! I've had this tank up and running for over 8 years now and never had algae like this before!