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  #11  
Old 06-01-2006, 10:17 PM
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Well you're getting into semantics now. Obviously you dont want to reduce your lighting to say 1hr/day. But light does "attribute" to HA, in a system that has nutrients.

I stick by my equation of: Nutrients + Light = Algae.

Reduce either Nutrients or Light and the Algae will not grow as profusely.

But I totally agree that the ultimate goal is Nutrients = 0. No question. (BTW, feel free to include Phosphates as part of the problem as well).
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It just sounds like Jaws is a busy guy, sometimes leaving his actinics on from 9am-12am over his nutrient filled tank. In the short term, he definitely doesnt need to leave the actinics on for 15hrs/day. So by getting a timer to automate and reduce the lighting period, he should see some immediate results. The reduction of nitrates is usually a long term process.



Quote:
Originally Posted by TheReefGeek
His question was actually:

And my answer is no, not any more than lighting in general.
Nutrients are the problem, not the actinics. If you want to solve hair algae with lighting reduction, you will have to kill all your corals to do it.
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  #12  
Old 06-01-2006, 10:40 PM
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The problem is that I'm struggling to find the source of the hair algae growth. I feed twice a day but not very much. The MH's are on for about 10 hours and the actinics for about 14. I switched to RODI water about a month and a half ago but didn't notice a change. I know other people in my area that don't bother with RO water at all and they don't have algae problems to my extent. I use a Euroreef CS8-3+ that pulls a ton of thick black gunk out. I'm not sure how much it should be pulling out on a regular basis though since I have nothing to compare it to. I'm running a Phosban reactor with Rowaphos, a 200mg ozonizer and not to mention manually picking the algae off the rocks. I've even got cyano on top of the hair algae that doesn't help the situation either. I'm performing 20% (40G) water changes weekly too and still no end in sight. Not to mention my polyps have terrible extension unless the MH's have turned off. Even my millis barely have any polyp extension which is not a good sign. I'm not losing any corals yet and the colors still look great on all but a few. Temperature stays at 78 unless it's really hot out then it might jump to 80. I feel like I'm doing everything right. It's not a matter of neglect. I'm working on it for a half hour to an hour a night and then probably 2 to 3 hours each day on the weekend. It's just kind of frustrating is all. I'm not worried. I'm just waiting for the reef gods to say "Ok, I think he's had enough. Now let's show him what a real reef tank looks like".
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  #13  
Old 06-01-2006, 11:39 PM
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What are you using for substrate? How are you maintaining the substrate? How old is the substrate? I'm not saying that it IS the substrate, but it's most likely a factor. Also, how old are your bulbs? Could they have shifted to a more yellow spectrum now which is causing the algae growth?
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  #14  
Old 06-01-2006, 11:41 PM
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How old is the tank?
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  #15  
Old 06-02-2006, 01:51 AM
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nothing to do with actinic, while they will cause growth in algae as SAM noted it is a very slow growth as a rapid growth will raise O2 levels. your MH would contribute more in 2 hours than actinic would in 14.

you have a good skimmer and it sounds like it is working so the only thing left is that big nutrient sink we call a sand bed, HA, then Cyno, ect.. sounds like the problems I had due to my sand bed, and a familiar story among people who have removed there bed because of algae issues.

my theory is that they trap nutrients, and the algae gains a foot hold by utilizing the nutrients in the sand bed, then as the algae spreads it itself traps junk and causes more available nutrients and so on and so on.

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  #16  
Old 06-02-2006, 04:11 AM
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The tank's not even a year old yet. The sandbed is about an inch to two inches deep of sugar sand and was half new sand and half established sand from the local fish store. The bulbs are all about three months old so almost brand new.
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  #17  
Old 06-02-2006, 09:48 AM
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How much flow have you got? I can't use sugar sand because it would blow around. You may have some dead spots where gunk accumulates. Consider siphoning out some of the sand and changing your flow patterns.
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  #18  
Old 06-02-2006, 01:41 PM
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I am fighting the same thing you are. My tank has only been up for 6 months though. Everything is brand new in mine. I contribute my problem to my crappy skimmer, but thats a whole diff. story. You might wanna try purchasing or even a DIY project and make a H.O.B fuge for your tank. Throw some mud, or sand, or whatever floats your boat in there along with your choice of macroalgae. Put a little light on top and watch the nutrient struggle begin. Although I have yet to do this I have done alot of research on it, and am getting a sump with fuge next month.
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  #19  
Old 06-02-2006, 01:49 PM
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Last night I also sucked the layer of cyano with a 1/2 plastic hose. The gravel cleaner thign that I had was to wide and wouldn't suck the cyano up only the finer sand. But the smaller dia. hose worked well. I figure if you keep sucking it out it may come back but will eventually use up all the nutrients in the tank, and slowly go away. Thats if your not putting excess nutrients in the tank ofcourse.
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  #20  
Old 06-02-2006, 01:57 PM
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Sometimes that stuff gets a foothold in your tank and it seems you battle it forever. A couple of things that I might try if you can is to turkey baste the bejeezus out of your rock - even every couple of days and see what your skimmer can pull out. I would also be tempted to do a 50% water change after basting. If you can pull out the rocks that are the worst and take a scrub brush to them in a bucket of change water. I would also cut back on lighting to say 5-6 hours/day on MH. I know I have cut mine back for the summer because of heat and also because of the amount of ambient light there is in the house. Also try cutting out one feeding a day if you can - not sure what critters you have so don't know if this is possible.
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