Garra cambodgiensis
My tank is 260litres and 4ft long. The tank had no real problem until I went away for a month, it has auto feeding and auto light, I told my daughter not to worry about water changes whilst I was away. I now have a bit of green algae but mainly black beard algae problem. I have had a tropical tank for 20+ years but never a problem with this algae, I just really need to get the balance back to pre holiday. Light ( approx 8hrs a day), fed 2 x a day has not changed. Open to suggestions.
Assuming the auto light was the same duration as previous, the issues that caused the algae were nutrient-related, and two aspects. First, the lack of water changes, I understand the reason but all I am trying to say is that substantial water changes do a lot to prevent algae issues, and not having them was one factor here. Related is the auto feeder. Fish can easily go a week, sometimes two weeks, without food. It would have been better, especially since you were not there to do the water changes or emergency ones if needed, to have pre-packaged a single feeding, and left instructions to add one of these packages twice on week, on say Monday and Thursday, or whatever. Eveen if the fish are eating normally, that is still a considerable amount of nutrients/organics entering the system unnecessarily. Something to keep in mind for the future.
Also on the feeding, twice a day for any mature fish (fry are the exception) is twice too much food. What goes in must come out, so twice daily feedings doubles the organic load. Even normally, I have two fast days for my fish every week, days on which they are not fed prepared foods (they may find natural microscopic foods). Some recommend alternate day feeding. Fish in an aquarium are not using much energy, unlike fish in their habitat, to avoid predators, etc.
To clear this up now, increase water changes, vacuum in the open areas of the substrate, clean the filter. These all reduce organics. If you add any plant additives to the water (substrate tabs do not factor in here) reducing that for a week or two should do no harm to thee plants, and it will force them to use more of the natural nutrients. Algae is always disadvantaged by these factors.
It does not take much to upset the balance of light/nutrients. After I moved to my previous house, I noticed that brush algae appeared/increased during the summer for two years. It finally dawned on me that the additional light intensity and duration from longer days entering the room might be the reason, and it turned out that was a correct assessment. Blackout drapes in every subsequent summer avoided the algae. I could do that easily enough as the tanks were in a dedicated fish room, but the point is that thee balance is sometimes a close one, and one little thing can tip it.
I would still return the fish. If it is a
Garra cambodgiensis it is not strictly herbivorous but omnivorous, and it has not been shown to be effective on problem algae anyway.