Hi Jim,
One thing I would suggest is cut down the light time to about 12 hours per day to start with. If you could furnish more details on your system, water parameters etc.. I may have more ideas.
Don ;D
I have a 90 gal. that is constantly getting algae blooms. I have a a/c 500 and 2 sponge filters in it. I also have a 59 and 30 gal. that I constantly have to scrap down every other day. The paramiters are stable so I can't figure out why this is happening. The lights are on from 8am to about 11pm. Someone suggested that I should use stronger lights.Any ideas?
Jim
Hi Jim,
One thing I would suggest is cut down the light time to about 12 hours per day to start with. If you could furnish more details on your system, water parameters etc.. I may have more ideas.
Don ;D
jim,
have you gotten the algae problem under control?
denny
Well.... What I did was give the filters a complete clean up. I squeezed the two sponge filters out and guess what? ..............The water cleaned up. I guess I had better pay closer attention to them.
Jim
Well, if you really had algae problems..it will be baccckkk. Good Luck Jim
Don ;D
Hi Jim,
What is your water source? And the water source parameters for phosphates, nitrates, organics?
sometimes the water source is high in phosphates, nitrates, organics, or even in algae, depending on the time of year.
Make sure you are doing enough wc to keep the nitrates and organics (from food and fish) in the tank low.
Hope it stays clear for you
Ardan
glad to hear jim, i got the algae in my one tank under control too and it sure is nice.
denny
I am absolutely no expert, but I did notice my sponge filters have to be cleaned gently at least once a week also or I get the algae a lot faster.
Consider working a UV sterilizer into your system. IT doesnt address the reasons you are getting algae (Don and Ardan covered some posabilities) but IME it will greatly reduce the problem. Ive seen A UV take a pond that is thick and green with alge and turn it crystal clear in two weeks. A UV eliminated a small problem I had on my Discus tank. They are used to control parasites in reef systems, an added benefit.
Ive found the small Tetra units work great. The key is the length of time the water is exposed to the bulb. The weaker the pump the better. HTH Rich
Jim -
I wonder what your stable parameters are. As an expert in growing algae, I find that a pH above 6.8 with more than 20 ppm of nitrates and lots of light, say 19 hours would be perfect to grow algae, particularly in a bare bottom tank
Suggestions:
1. Reduce your nitrates by water changes and by rinsing your sponges in waste water at least once a week,
2. Reduce your light to 10 hours per day ( I use a timer),
3. Add a bristlenose pleco or two
4. If all else fails, do the above and treat with algae-fix.
Picked up nitrate test strips at the lfs and slice them into 2 or 3 strips, I'm cheap. When I do the weekly filter maintenance, I test the water
before and after water changes to see the effect.
Hi Raw : This is the strange thing.............my nitrates are as low as they can go. What I did find however is that I may not have been cleaning the sponges enough. After I had cleaned the sponges the problem cleared up so I am doing the sponges every other day to see what happens. I have not had to scrape the tank since.
Jim
Just curious Jim! What color and texture is the algae?
Salt also helps against certain algae's!
I had a combination. It looked like an algae bloom which looked like a light green and there was also a brown film on the walls and the bottom.
Jim
Green algae is normally associated with too much natural daylight hitting the tank.
U.V. sterilizers are used to kill bacteria and some free-swimming parasites.
Just my experience, but they do not kill algae- they group it together so that a filter can more readily collect it from the water.
Hope this makes sence.
Regards
Mick M.
Jim,
A quote from http://userpages.umbc.edu/~rrhudy1/algae.htm:
Brown algae:
Brown algae are actually diatoms and not true algae. They coat ornaments, real and fake plants, glass, and gravel with a thin, dark brown layer. Brown algae prefer low light levels. They commonly grow in new tanks or those with low levels of light. Increasing the intensity or quantity of lights may decrease the growth of brown algae but in turn will increase the growth of other algae. Brown algae is easy to physically remove with an algae pad as it does not adhere as strongly as green algae. While some snails and algae-eating fish will inadvertently eat some brown algae, most algae-eating fish prefer green algae and will only eat brown algae if they have no alternative food source. Plecostomus and otocinclus are the most likely fish to eat it.
Suspended algae:
If the water itself is green, there is suspended algae. This should not occur in well-filtered aquariums. If it does occur, water changes will reduce the effects. It most often occurs if there are too many fish, too much food added, or excess light. Correcting those things should prevent a reoccurrence. UV sterilizers can be added to the setup if needed. See my pond algae page for more information on suspended algae and controlling it. In ponds, daphnia can also be added. The wood shrimp eats suspended algae in aquaria.