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#1
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Live rock changing colors?
So i picked up live rock almost 2 weeks ago and within the first 2 days I started to see white form on it.
Its slowly turning green now. PH - 8.2 nitrate - 0 nitrite - 0 ammonia - 0.25 gravity - 1.024 I am going to pick up a calcium test tonight and check out where i am at I read once that this happened to someone as well, turned white and than turned green later but i never found an explaination. To my understanding white in a sw tank = bad |
#2
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Not sure what the white stuff would be but I would recommend getting a quality Ca test kit as I have seen one brand test about 50ppm off what it really should have read.
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#3
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When coraline algae is exposed to air for any length of time it turns white. The green is probably just film algae that everyone gets while cycling a tank. Once ammonia and nitrites have gone down a big water change will help get cal/alk back in line and then you can add a few snails to get rid of the film algae
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#4
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The tank has been running for 4 weeks. In the first week I filled the tank with water and than added sand a week later. Than added the live rock a week after that and it went was only out of the water for 30min. The only thing my tank has that is exposing the rock to air is where the fuge is. That is also where it is mostly white. The rock was also covered in feather dusters and now there seems to be none. hope this helps out a bit more
I also have snails and 10 hermits in the tank already |
#5
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Taken from a member off nano-reef
"Coraline algae can also be green! It probably started to die off when you first brought it home and now is coming back! The back tank of my tank has as much green coraline as pink! The key is to feel it if its hard not soft and doesnt come off easily its probably coraline!" So i guess it was coraline algae and for search referance for other begginners http://www.algone.com/coralline_algae.php |
#6
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I doubt it's green coralline algae for many reasons, but mostly because your tank is new. My guess is exactly what Marie said...but got a pic??
You've already jumped the gun by adding a cleanup crew too early. SLOW DOWN! You're going to get yourself into costly trouble. Remember, nothing good ever happens fast in a reef aquarium. You have no need for a calcium test kit until you start adding corals or if your pH drops. As suggested, spend the money and buy quality calcium, alkalinity, and magnesium test kits when the time comes. Cheap ones are inaccurate, and aren't worth the cardboard they're packaged in. Try Elos or Salifert. |