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01/21/2012, 10:57 AM | #1 |
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Posts: 9
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Maroon Algae
I have a maroon colored algae spreading on my live rock. It is similar in color to cyano, but it is probably 1/4" thick and more white colored underneath. It is velvety to the touch and very difficult to remove. It won't come off with a turkey baster and I can not siphon it out. I can get some of it out with a toothbrush, but I can't reach in the nooks and crevices and it grows back rather quickly.
The tank is a 65 gallon reef with a 1" sand bed and 75lbs. of live rock. It has a finger leather, a frogspawn, some button polyps, and 6 fish. Nitrates are less than 5 and phosphates are .02. Thanks in advance for the help! |
01/21/2012, 01:54 PM | #2 |
Where's The Reef?
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Southaven, Ms
Posts: 2,098
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What you may have here is Gracilaria algae, Cotton Candy Algae, or Cyano.From what you described, I am leaning towards Gracilaria, because when I had Cyano, It came off with ease, and Gracilaria has the tendencies of what your describing.
Can you get a Picture of it?
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I'd rather Die on my feet, than Live on my Knees. Current Tank Info: 150g SPS Reef, 2x250w 14k Pheonix Metal Halides w/T-5 Actinics, 2 Tunze 6095's, Tunze 7096 controller, Ozone, Precision Marine Skimmer, Reef Octopus Bio-Churn Bio Pellet Reactor, GFO & Carbon Reactor, Ozone Reactor, ATO, Reef Keeper. |
01/21/2012, 02:03 PM | #3 |
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Join Date: Feb 2002
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your algae is very easy to beat with this method
http://web4.reefcentral.com/forums/s...2082359&page=4 post before and after pics I am certain it will kill all of it. |
01/21/2012, 02:08 PM | #4 | |
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Quote:
Sorry, I don't have access to a camera. I looked up Gracilaria algae and Cotton Candy Algae, and it is not either one of those. I have had cyano outbreaks before, and it's not that either unless there is a form I am not familiar with. It has the same color as cyano, but it is at least a 1/4" thick and feels like a piece of velvet. |
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01/21/2012, 02:15 PM | #5 |
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I bet this is close?
look at the red algae surrounding the corals http://www.advancedaquarist.com/2010/4/aquarium a spot treatment with peroxide will wipe it clean off the rocks, making look like it was never in the tank in just a few days. |
01/21/2012, 02:19 PM | #6 |
Where's The Reef?
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Southaven, Ms
Posts: 2,098
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Alright that's fine, I can work without photos.You say it feels like velvet, It may be a Fungus.
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I'd rather Die on my feet, than Live on my Knees. Current Tank Info: 150g SPS Reef, 2x250w 14k Pheonix Metal Halides w/T-5 Actinics, 2 Tunze 6095's, Tunze 7096 controller, Ozone, Precision Marine Skimmer, Reef Octopus Bio-Churn Bio Pellet Reactor, GFO & Carbon Reactor, Ozone Reactor, ATO, Reef Keeper. |
01/21/2012, 02:20 PM | #7 |
Where's The Reef?
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Southaven, Ms
Posts: 2,098
|
Try Algaebase.org they can identify just about any kind of algae.
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I'd rather Die on my feet, than Live on my Knees. Current Tank Info: 150g SPS Reef, 2x250w 14k Pheonix Metal Halides w/T-5 Actinics, 2 Tunze 6095's, Tunze 7096 controller, Ozone, Precision Marine Skimmer, Reef Octopus Bio-Churn Bio Pellet Reactor, GFO & Carbon Reactor, Ozone Reactor, ATO, Reef Keeper. |
01/25/2012, 09:13 PM | #8 |
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Join Date: Feb 2002
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I would like to know how the identification went and how the outcome is going. It is impotant to know that if you used the peroxide method as a spot treatment the area of algae growth would be totally gone at this time.
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