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11/08/2013, 10:27 AM | #76 |
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I keep seeing water changes mentioned, although I also have read, and experienced, that water changes only fuel the Dino's... Thoughts anyone?
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Zoas & Palys |
11/08/2013, 01:33 PM | #77 |
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Sometimes, water changes seem to fuel dinoflagellate growth, possibly by adding trace elements. I think the effect on any given tank is hard to predict, though.
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Jonathan Bertoni |
11/08/2013, 02:14 PM | #78 |
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I want to submit this thread over to a blog that RC is friendly with I bet they would do a neat workup/writeup using that awesome picture, with perm of course from DNA>
advancedaquarist is friendly w rc right? |
11/08/2013, 03:02 PM | #79 |
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I love this hobby more than any other hobby... But friggen Dino's really put a dampener on it... I haven't been able to pinpoint the cause, but it really brings me down and makes me frustrated, lol... Flippen things... So far in my new setup, about 7 to 8 weeks in, I haven't seen anything... But I know that means nothing as I've added nothing else outside yet, like frags etc... Again, I really feel my problem starts with certain tiles I've used, but too hard to know for sure...
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Zoas & Palys |
11/09/2013, 05:27 AM | #80 |
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Brandon, I allow free use of my photographs for educational purposes, but I sell for commercial use.
Each case is viewed and permitted or agreed upon. - - - - - I'm really getting hit with lack of resources, bureaucrats, microscopic local market and not being able to do what I need to. The eradication process has taken a lot of work and time. There is no import in fresh live rock or hard corals, but I have a good friend in the hobby and we back each other up. I know he has dinos in almost invisible amounts and had no other option, but to ask for help starting over. I kept 60 pounds (30kg) of dry rocks in his system for two weeks and moved it over to mine last Monday. It only took 3 days for something brown to show up on those rocks, even though I'm currently only lighting with 10% of what l used to, and it really looks like dinos. This was expected, but no so fast. I had to go with the theory that dinos are in most tanks, but kept in check with competition and bio diversity. |
11/09/2013, 03:52 PM | #81 |
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I got rid of them by doing a series of massive water changes . 3 in one week. Now I do a twenty percent water every 2 weeks. I started running double amounts of carbon; and added more flow. Adding more flow really seemed to help.
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11/09/2013, 04:19 PM | #82 |
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I have been battling Dinoflagellates for some months now and have tried lots of methods to eradicate them in conjunction with lights out, with each only providing a Dino. free reef for several seconds after lights back on.
Recently, I invested in a 24 watt UV sterilizer for my 30 gallon reef and installed it on my tank. I turned off my lights and covered the aquarium for 3 days. During the 3 days of darkness, I continued to dose H2O2. 1ml of 35% H2O2 per day. The results are spectacular! Once lights were resumed, no Dino bloom and any remaining Dinos. have slowly disappeared. The skimmer went nuts for the 3 days the lights were off and after the 3rd day, the skimmer collection jug overflown. I have been Dino. free now for 3 almost 4 days now and have done my first water change in almost a month and still no Dinos. bloom as a WC always promoted. For me, even a week free from Dinoflagellates is worth anything as it is the most problem free the tank has been for months. I am a very happy chap. |
11/09/2013, 04:27 PM | #83 |
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Thank you for the update
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11/09/2013, 04:35 PM | #84 |
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11/12/2013, 09:02 AM | #85 |
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11/12/2013, 02:54 PM | #86 |
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11/12/2013, 09:43 PM | #87 |
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My guess for the first image would be a bacterial bloom of some sort.
I can't tell much from the second picture, but that's a likely place for hair algae to grow, IME.
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Jonathan Bertoni |
11/14/2013, 11:10 AM | #88 |
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It's been 10 days now.
Dinos are on most surfaces and have multiplied at least thousand times. They do prefer some light, but they seem to be fine with almost no light at all. It was a fresh start with 60 pounds of introduced rocks and my 10 fish. I'm lighting with 2*80W actinics for 6 hours instead of my usual 1070W plus 250W in the sump at night. This can be seen as an indicator of how little they need to thrive. - - - I had previously identified my dinoflagellates as Ostreopsis sp. One reefers success story in not certain to work for the next one without indentification. There are up to 2000 different kinds and they are not all the same. |
11/14/2013, 11:18 AM | #89 |
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do we agree the fish brought the new batch in to the new tank, amazing pic of 2013.
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11/14/2013, 11:32 AM | #90 |
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I have almost gotten mine under control. I went 2 weeks of actinic only after a 3 day lights out. Lots of carbon and lots of scrubbing helped. I have also started dosing more Alk as that seemed to be depleted rapidly during the worst of the outbreak.
I was using Kalkwasser before but did not seem to be maintaining the ALK properly. So many different kinds out there but PM me if you need a detailed rundown of the fight. 100 gallon setup with 432 watts of T-5 lighting. Good luck to anyone fighting this aggravation.
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--MARK-- Excels at mediocrity Current Tank Info: Tanks are GONE!! |
11/14/2013, 02:09 PM | #91 | |
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Quote:
He's had them for years, but didn't realize it until I pointed it out. There is so little of them in his display tank that I had a hard time finding them. A few weeks ago he added a connected frag tank to the system where they took off and it became apparent we had the same problem. I found it interesting how huge a role, the slightly different conditions can play, within the same system, on the growth. What is keeping them in check in the display tank is not having any effect in the bare frag tank. |
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11/17/2013, 08:41 AM | #92 |
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What is the dosage for H2O2 treatment? I am trying to find a new bulb for my UV sterilizer and hoping to knock this completely out hopefully.
Also, has anyone else noticed a severe decline in their alkalinity during a Dino problem? My parameters from yesterday: pH 8 temp 76 Cal 500+ Mag 1500+ Alk 8 Phosphate .07 Nitrate 0 I only dose "part 2" and do water changes about once a month due to the fact that the water changes tend to fuel the Dino's. Using Kent salt. Was using a kalkwasser drip and was not elevating the alk at all. Softies and some LPS are doing fine. Lost a fairly large frogspawn. Any thoughts on this?
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--MARK-- Excels at mediocrity Current Tank Info: Tanks are GONE!! |
11/17/2013, 08:55 AM | #93 |
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I have a kind of odd question for you guys... And I could be completely foolish for asking, but does anyone have any thoughts, that the use of DI filtering could help motivate the Dino's to grow? I only ask, but two out of the 3 times I've had issues with these, it coincides with the recent application of DI'ing my RO water... It may or may not have anything to do with it, but this was an observation I made... Could definately be coincidental...
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Zoas & Palys |
11/17/2013, 05:49 PM | #94 |
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Well, that'd depend on what the DI is removing, which will vary from place to place, but I don't think RO/DI is a problem in general. Lots of people have problems with dinoflagellates, and I haven't seen any evidence that suggests that tap water contaminants on average inhibit dinoflagellate growth.
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Jonathan Bertoni |
11/18/2013, 04:40 AM | #95 |
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Hi I've tested a product named Dinoxal. Used it on my very infested tank for about 14 days: the first 5 days dinos looked like they've been dried out, in the following days they disappeared. Now it's nearly two months and no signs of dinos again.
I've had no damage to corals (lps,sps), fishes, shrimps and snails. My dinos were brown, created long filaments with air bubbles trapped in them, and incredibly stinking.
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Massimiliano |
11/18/2013, 07:36 AM | #96 |
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I started the UV sterilizer and H2O2 treatment yesterday. Will post as things happen (good and bad). Mine were also the brown with air bubbles and very smelly.
I got most of it under control from scrubbing and 4 day lights out / 14 day actinic only. Good luck to everyone fighting this.
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--MARK-- Excels at mediocrity Current Tank Info: Tanks are GONE!! |
11/18/2013, 04:35 PM | #97 |
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I had a very bad dinos outbreak but it was cured
Try Fauna Marine Algae X or something like that. It worked well with my tank |
11/18/2013, 04:49 PM | #98 |
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AlgaeX is the only thing I had 100% luck with, it over took my tank and killed a bunch of stuff. After several lights out periods, manual removal, water changes, GFO, GAC, etc, AlgaeX killed it in 4 days and it's been almost a year after I fought it for many, many months.
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Thank You, Justin Grant Current Tank Info: Reef:75 Gallon, 90# LR, SSB, 2x AI SOL Blues Managed by Neptune's Apex, Inland Aquatics Dump Style ATS, 2 Koralia on wave maker, and MP 10 on custom wave. |
11/19/2013, 11:08 AM | #99 |
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I literally just beat Dino's in my tank. Here is how it is done:
stop doing water changes (Dino's are fueled by trace elements) Cover your display and do a blackout for 4 days Run a filter sock if possible because the Dino's are going to be melting away Skim very heavy to the point you will be changing the collection cup 2 times a day Run carbon to help absorb the melted away Dino's Dose hydrogen peroxide 3% (the generic hydrogen peroxide that is sold everywhere. I picked it up at Walgreens for 99 cents) at 1 ml per 10 gallons of water. I have a 90 gallon system so I dosed 9 ml a day. After the blackout, immediately do a water change and change the carbon. Continue doing everything except for the blackout for the next 2 days. This is how you will win. If not, algea X or micro faunas version of algea X can also do the trick. Good luck and you can beat this! |
12/08/2013, 03:25 AM | #100 | |
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Quote:
Dinos can't be seen any more. Nothing was done. I have yet to start up the calcium reactor and halides in a few weeks. If I had to bet, I'd be confident the dinos would reappear. It would be all in. If I lost I'd still be happy. |
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