How to fix green water in an aquarium?
#1
Posted 10 March 2023 - 05:34 PM
Sent from my 1016TPC using Tapatalk
#2
Posted 11 March 2023 - 10:38 AM
Kevin Wilson
#3
Posted 11 March 2023 - 10:38 AM
Kevin Wilson
#4
Posted 13 March 2023 - 05:12 PM
Thank you!and good luck!
Sent from my 1016TPC using Tapatalk
#5
Posted 17 March 2023 - 10:34 AM
My 75 is currently green, has been for more than a year, I turned off the lights three months ago and it is still green. I mean so green you can't see more than couple inches into the tank. I'd love to see what ever is making it green under a microscope. Now if I wanted green water to raise daphnia or fairy shrimp getting green water would be impossible.
Usually green water goes away in relatively short order, I even tried to put asian clams in the tank, didn't make a dent. I think it might be connected with fertilizer pellets i used to grow large banana plants in the tank. The plants were native to my area and grew like crazy and had leaves as big as saucers. but ultimately the water turned green and has remained so for over a year now.
I am planning on taking the tank down soon and changing to native saltwater but to be honest I did, one time, long ago have a similar problem with a marine tank. I was using saltwater I collected locally in the surf and gravel from the same source. I did get a chance to look at the water under a microscope and it was populated by featureless tiny green spheres. It took 500X to even make them visible, it took several weeks for it to go away. Only time I ever saw a marine tank go green like that.
Green water is a weird thing and sometimes partial water changes can make it worse, it did in my current case. All I can recommend is less light and less food into the tank and more plants, usually works but not always. Fast growing plants should be considered.
Life is the poetry of the universe
Love is the poetry of life
#6
Posted 19 March 2023 - 11:54 AM
Kevin Wilson
#7
Posted 19 March 2023 - 09:30 PM
I considered putting an oyster in my tank if my methods didn’t work. That definitely would do it for saltwater or brackish. For freshwater, I would’ve thought the Asian clams would’ve been a solution also. I was just thinking about what else would eat microscopic algae, maybe stocking rotifers would work? But then again, Michael, selfishly, I’m looking forward to your native saltwater build!
Do to my experiences with clams I question whether or not they really eat unicellular algae, I think they might feed on detritus instead, I'm sure the fish would eat rotifers but it's a good idea. Before I drain the water to set it up as salt water I am thinking of draining several gallons into a plastic tub to see if i can grow Daphnia magna in it.
Life is the poetry of the universe
Love is the poetry of life
#8
Posted 20 March 2023 - 12:57 PM
Sent from my 1016TPC using Tapatalk
#9
Posted 21 March 2023 - 11:44 AM
I ordered a uv sterilizer and my water turned clear in just about two days
Sent from my 1016TPC using Tapatalk
Not an option for me but I can see it working.
Life is the poetry of the universe
Love is the poetry of life
#10
Posted 21 March 2023 - 01:44 PM
I bought one too for the same reason, but my green water cleared up before mine was delivered. I'm considering using it to help control parasties, but, admittedly, have been too lazy to install it LOL. Anyway, I'm glad it worked for you.
Kevin Wilson
#11
Posted 26 March 2023 - 08:30 AM
I added the Fluval in-line UV sterilizer to help control algae growth and diseases a few months back. First time I've used one but it seems to work pretty well, at 8 hours/day it definitely slowed down the spread of algae on new hardscape, so it'd probably work for green water.
#12
Posted 28 March 2023 - 07:34 AM
In your opintion, does it seem to help control diseases?
Kevin Wilson
#13
Posted 29 March 2023 - 06:01 PM
I added the Fluval in-line UV sterilizer to help control algae growth and diseases a few months back. First time I've used one but it seems to work pretty well, at 8 hours/day it definitely slowed down the spread of algae on new hardscape, so it'd probably work for green water.
Was it expensive?
Life is the poetry of the universe
Love is the poetry of life
#14
Posted 30 March 2023 - 07:45 AM
You can get a Coralife Turbo-Twist 6x (up to 250g) like I got for half price on Amazon right now, $143. To me, expensive is relative. My wife would say it's cheap because it's 50% off and would buy it (if it was something she was interested in). I, on the other hand, view this as a major purchase, being over $100 and sometimes would be reluctant to pull the trigger and buy something like this. But, I had a need, so I did. I checked out cheaper versions and compared ratings, and figured it was a good deal after all.
Kevin Wilson
1 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users