i had that in my tank for awhile, but they i found out that over feeding and not enough water movement in areas caused it to appear... u can easily get rid of it by increaseing ur water flow in the areas where u c it and by feeding alittle less
If you post some of your params it would help. My suspicion is like the others posted. I might look into the phosphates and other organics feeding it. One thing that I found that helped a lot in my case was to run phosban or the like. I tried it as I had no readings of nitrates, nor any other organics including phosphates. It was a last ditch attempt and It helped. Well around the same time I also started dripping kalk so the combination could have been what kicked it.
salifert phosphate test says zero. i do have a large refugium though, so i suspect this to the causing the zero reading.
my nitrates are a steady 5.
i have tossed in 2 x Koralia 4's along with my mag24 return and sequence dart CL.
i suspect my old bulbs.
It's possible the bulbs. But, something also has to be feeding the algae / bacteria as well. I had posted about an article I read a while back in coral magazine that went pretty in depth as to the concerns surrounding cyano.
my tank is literally 6 weeks old. this is all ordinary, and expected. my question was basically about the blackish slime i've not seen before. if it's cyano, which is what i hope it is, i'm not alarmed, nor am i even concerned. i do feed very heavily and i have a good idea how to combat cyanobacteria.
i appreciate your reply. :wink:
Yes I would have to concur with the others that Yes it is cyano I've seen this particular color variation once in a while on some of the worse off tanks that I had to service. Usually I also found something dead/rotting near it... Be it food or some critter.
hmm...nothing rotting here. the thing is, it's not in any shade areas really. that's what leads me to believe it's the bulbs. it's only in the open area where i will keep my brains and things that i want on the sand bed. it's not in low flow areas behind rocks(there is also only indirect light back there).