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#1
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![]() Wow, cool. Cool observation and awesome video. What are you using for a microscope and how do you capture video through it?
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-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
#2
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![]() I'm using an Omax with 4 stages (4x, 10x, 40x and 100x) that came with digital USB camera you can put in to one of the eye pieces. I took the video at 40x
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#3
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![]() Very interesting video. I don't know if those diatoms have anything to do with the cyano but I would bet they are just living in the same type of environment that has beneficial conditions for both.
I had cyano growing in my tank and after getting my new skimmer it all went away in less than a week. No more cyano, gone, totally. I think the most important factor for cyanobacteria to thrive is dissolved organics (DOC). Even if you have low nitrates and low phosphates you still can have cyano if you have any DOC in the water. I don't think there is a way to mesure the amount of DOC In the water...maybe with an ORP probe? not sure. My new skimmer is pulling the same amount of skimmate in one day that the other was pulling in weeks. So now my water is deprived of DOC and the cyano simply died. I beleive that if someone has a cyanobacteria problem then it probably is due to the skimmer not being efficient enough for the bioload. In my case it could be a coincidence but I have not change anything else and my nitrates and phosphates are still quite high, so that's not it either. ---------------- http://netclub.athiel.com/cyano/cyanos2.htm
The key then, is to keep this amount low. This is achieved through skimming but may need to be supplemented by other means, especially if you have red slime algae present in the tank already. ------------------
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_________________________ More fish die from human stupidity than any other disease... Last edited by daniella3d; 04-14-2013 at 12:32 AM. |
#4
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![]() For some reason your posts always seem to get me searching through mad PDF files
![]() I found a paper detailing Cyanobacterial aggregates in the Adriatic Sea that might reveal some answers for you. Unfortunately you can only view it through the academic MRU search. Here's the citation, if you can't access it through the fancy UoC PhD resources you covet shoot me a PM and I will give you my log in information. Quote:
![]() ![]() I think you might be onto something here Adam, keep up the good work! |
#5
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![]() Great video, I think your on to something here, I think cyano is way more opportunistic than we know, it defies logic and everything we think we know about it. Sometimes it doesn't matter how diligent we are with our husbandry and nutrient control and cyano still rears its ugly head.
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Crap happens, that's why they sell toilet paper in 48 roll packs! |