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Okay will do!Do not use Excel for algae. The ingredient in Excel is glutaraldehyde, just look that up. At recommended doses it will kill some plant species and bacteria.
Having said that, I am not suggesting the holes are due to Excel. And there are members here with more experience than I have that will recommend it as a so-called "carbon" additive. Enough said.
In a planted tank, "problem" algae is caused by an imbalance of light and nutrients, and it is eliminated by re-establishing or establishing the balance. If you want to pursue this, please provide data on the light and any fertilizers. Also a photo of the entire tank will give us an idea of what may be needed.
Okay will do!
I will send a picture of the tank when I get home.
The fertilizer I use 2 times a week is flourish and I use to recommended amount.
My light runs from 10am to 8pm. The light is part of the top-fin 37 gallon starter Kit
Premium Nutrition has all the required micro nutrients and is recommended for all plant aquariums. Specialised Nutrition further has macro nutrients and is suitable for aquariums with many plants.
Light is likely between 6600k to 9000k. Variable results with light meter.
Do not use Excel for algae. The ingredient in Excel is glutaraldehyde, just look that up. At recommended doses it will kill some plant species and bacteria.
Having said that, I am not suggesting the holes are due to Excel. And there are members here with more experience than I have that will recommend it as a so-called "carbon" additive. Enough said.
In a planted tank, "problem" algae is caused by an imbalance of light and nutrients, and it is eliminated by re-establishing or establishing the balance. If you want to pursue this, please provide data on the light and any fertilizers. Also a photo of the entire tank will give us an idea of what may be needed.
Thanks for the help and I will follow ur advice!Are you using any plant fertilizers? Which if yes.
The light is a bit on the cool (blue) side if the K numbers are accurate. Plants need red and blue but primarily red to photosynthesize; adding green does improve plant response. This is likely because this light is closest to natural sunlight under which the plants evolved. Having used several tubes over the last 12+ years, I found the best results unquestionably from light in the 5000K-6500K range. I had dual tubes over a 90g for one year with a 6500K and a 10,000K and this resulted in poor plant response, and some algae. Blue is known to encourage problem algae.
I would also get some floating plants; the shade these provide will discourage algae below. And I would reduce the photoperiod maybe to 8 hours.
I answered that before I believe. I just use seachem flourish 2 times a week!You missed the question on plant fertilizer, this can cause algae too, both by using too much or by not using enough.
I answered that before I believe. I just use seachem flourish 2 times a week!