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-   -   What the heck is this??!! (http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=102343)

Reef Pilot 11-14-2013 03:12 PM

Can it survive any time out of water, for gluing or attachment to a rock?

thmh 11-14-2013 03:24 PM

It looks soooo Purrdy!

~Tony

Reef Pilot 11-14-2013 03:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thmh (Post 858861)
It looks soooo Purrdy!

~Tony

Yeah, weird to say, but it is probably the purdiest live thing in my tank right now. Any red algae that I have ever seen is a dull orange/red. But this one is a deep bright red.

Maybe I could give it a designer algae name... LOL.

ferret 11-14-2013 03:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Reef Pilot (Post 858856)
Can it survive any time out of water, for gluing or attachment to a rock?

No problem at all.

ferret 11-14-2013 03:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Reef Pilot (Post 858865)
Yeah, weird to say, but it is probably the purdiest live thing in my tank right now. Any red algae that I have ever seen is a dull orange/red. But this one is a deep bright red.

Maybe I could give it a designer algae name... LOL.

The algae will change to a dull orange/red color when you fail to maintain the existing combination of trace element in your water column. A lot of red algae species like Halymenia sp. ( commonly known as flame algae ) has bright orange/red color too.

Reef Pilot 11-14-2013 05:19 PM

So, what type of conditions and trace elements do these red algae prefer? My tank recently went through a phosphate spike (when I combined sumps with another tank that had higher phosphates). But that is getting back to near zero now. My nitrates remain at zero (or undetectable). And I should add that it is an SPS dominant tank.

I have not added any live rock (just some dry marco rock), and the tank is about 13 years old. I have no idea where the live rock originally came from (we bought the house 3 1/2 years ago with the tank running).

So just wondering where this red algae came from? I have never seen it before.

mrhasan 11-14-2013 05:22 PM

I want I want! Apparently, macro algaes don't have a nice market over here in Canada :( When you have enough, would you please sell me some? Those thing don't need overnight shipping, just some water to keep it wet and regular shipping does the trick :D

ferret 11-14-2013 06:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Reef Pilot (Post 858887)
So, what type of conditions and trace elements do these red algae prefer? My tank recently went through a phosphate spike (when I combined sumps with another tank that had higher phosphates). But that is getting back to near zero now. My nitrates remain at zero (or undetectable). And I should add that it is an SPS dominant tank.

I have not added any live rock (just some dry marco rock), and the tank is about 13 years old. I have no idea where the live rock originally came from (we bought the house 3 1/2 years ago with the tank running).

So just wondering where this red algae came from? I have never seen it before.

Honestly speaking I've no idea although I experienced keeping quite a various types of marine plants long ago and I'm still running 2 small systems mainly for macro algae.

I've came across this algae twice and tried to keep it without success. The very 1st time was obtained from Rene/J&L long ago and that was my fault that the small frag was not properly glued to the LR and I never found it again among the forest of marine plants. The 2nd time was I didn't even have a chance to raise the small frag since the algae had turned into 80% transparent when I received because of poor shipping and cold weather.

I've encountered some of the macro algae die off and return alive after one whole year. Some unnoticeable small frags or sprouts of algae dormant for months and start growing all of a sudden. All these may be the reason why you have this algae or the new fish/coral or even a snail you newly purchased carried the spores and introduced into your system.

Reef Pilot 11-14-2013 07:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mrhasan (Post 858888)
I want I want! Apparently, macro algaes don't have a nice market over here in Canada :( When you have enough, would you please sell me some? Those thing don't need overnight shipping, just some water to keep it wet and regular shipping does the trick :D

Well, for now it is a moot point, since my specimen is only about 1 inch across. Will see if it grows or not. And I owe ferret a frag first. I should mention though that I just saw rogair in Cgy post what looks likes the same red algae.

Quote:

Originally Posted by ferret (Post 858911)
Honestly speaking I've no idea although I experienced keeping quite a various types of marine plants long ago and I'm still running 2 small systems mainly for macro algae.

I've came across this algae twice and tried to keep it without success. The very 1st time was obtained from Rene/J&L long ago and that was my fault that the small frag was not properly glued to the LR and I never found it again among the forest of marine plants. The 2nd time was I didn't even have a chance to raise the small frag since the algae had turned into 80% transparent when I received because of poor shipping and cold weather.

I've encountered some of the macro algae die off and return alive after one whole year. Some unnoticeable small frags or sprouts of algae dormant for months and start growing all of a sudden. All these may be the reason why you have this algae or the new fish/coral or even a snail you newly purchased carried the spores and introduced into your system.

I should also mention that my recent phosphate spike brought out all types of algae in my tank, incl GHA, film algae, valonia and even a few of those long green weed type things. So, maybe it is all related. But my phosphates are subsiding, and I see the GHA starting to turn brown and letting go of their grip, so maybe this red algae might disappear, too.

Anyway, just another thing to keep this hobby interesting...

ferret 11-14-2013 07:24 PM

Don't worry for this algae seems hardy to me and I'm pretty sure that belongs to one of the slow growing species among the red macro algae.


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