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#1
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![]() with that stuff it raise the ph during the day. At least that's what I did and only to 8.4 and amazingly it did the job fast and for good.
I am not sure if this stuff was able to keep the ph at 8.4 at night but at night I think the dino does not multiply. I also used a little hang on tank Marinland filter with a micron cartridge. That was to catch any free swimming dino. I did not need to use a lot of that stuff to raise my ph in my 75 gallons. I was going to raise it to 8.5 but when I saw the dino disapearing I just kept the ph at that. |
#2
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![]() In the life Kingdoms, dinoflagellates don't fall into any of the four typical Kingdoms (animal, plant, fungi, bacteria), they are of a weird Kingdom called Protist. This group isn't well defined, and I would have a tough time describing. There are many different types of dinos from parasitic to symbiotic. In fact, zooxanthallae are a type of dino. Most of the time in our reefs the nuisance dinos we get feed off nutrients and light and most of them release toxins as they reproduce to impede or kill corals and invertebrates.
Essentially, dinos are treated like hair algae, diatoms, and cyano primarily (but not solely) by nutrient reduction. Elevating pH is another stab to take at it, but can be risky and often ends up with dinos coming back when the pH is again lowered if the nutrient issue hasn't been resolved. Quote:
Last edited by Myka; 11-09-2010 at 11:49 AM. |
#3
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![]() Raising the PH with mecanical filtration with one micro cartridge was all I did to get rid of mine 100% and it never came back.
No nutriment reduction was done since I had a few non-photosynthetic gorgonian in my tank that required regular feeding. I don,t think that reducing the nutriment (dissolved organic or nitrates, phosphates) is enough to get rid of dinoflagellates alone. Why is elevating the PH to 8.4 or 8.5 be risky? It's only a few degree off the regular PH which is 8.3? Quote:
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#4
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![]() I added dinos Daniella, not much more info than we already discussed in our many posts here though. We covered a lot of it!
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