Hi Steve,
Many thanks for your advice. In your experience, have you found that one
type of lighting tube is better than another for reducing this type of
Algae? Also would it be beneficial to increase the lighting before dealing
with more planting? I am going on Holiday in a week, and was planning on
replanting and extra yearly maintenance when we return. We do not have many
fish at the moment, some Lemon Tetras and Neons, 2 Cory's (my favourites) 2
Plecs,and babies which will go to the LFS when they are a little larger. I
have learnt the hard way that it is imperative to use a quarantine tank when
buying new fish!!!
Kind regards,
Jan
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 2
Date: Sat, 23 Sep 2006 11:55:48 +0100 (BST)
From: steve shepherd <steve53549@...>
Subject: Re: Black(Brown?) Algae
Hi Jan,
The hardest of all algaes I'm afraid, the stuff is a real pain. The idea
of increasing the planting is probably the best way to go as it will
hopefully steal any nutrients. I never use any chemicals for my tanks, I am
from a time when there were few on the market so we had to use natural
methods to resolve problems. I would suggest though that when you do plant
up the tank INCREASE the lighting to say, about 10-12 huors a day and make
sure that the tubes are good, preferably fairly new, this will stimulate
vigourous growth in the plant and thereby help kill off the algae. I hope
this is of some help to you, let me know how yuo get on. By the way if you
can read back through the messages here you will find lots of queries and
suggestions about this problem.
regards,
Steve
jeanette5058 <janmalkin@...> wrote:
Hi,
I have had my Aquarium for 11 months, just recently I have had a
Black/Brown (not quite sure which)algae growing on several of the
plants. I have two adult Ansistrus (also loads of tiny babies)but
they only eat the Green Algae.
I do not have excessive levels of nitrate, and the lighting is on 7
hours per day, I am planning on increasing the planting and I want to
prevent the problem naturally (no chemicals) but web searches are
coming up with conflicting opinions. Any tips welcomed. TIA
Jan
The greatest rewards are those least likely to make you rich
---------------------------------
The all-new Yahoo! Mail goes wherever you go - free your email address
from your Internet provider.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
tropicalaquaria-unsubscribe@...
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]