I've had a 45 gallon tank for about two years now, and I've been neglecting it (water change once every 3 weeks to a month), with dire consequences. A while back, I started getting green hair algae all over the tank, and now it is a red slime/hair algae that just keeps coming back. I've also been getting coralline algae (the red "circular" algae that gets really hard and pink) on the glass, which I've never gotten before.
I can't add many fish or inverts to my tank because my green spotted puffer is super aggressive and has killed most fish and inverts I add to the tank. He's left my tomato clown alone since she is just as aggressive and fearless. My puffer is also a huge waste producer, which I'm sure contributes to the toxins in the tank.
I've done quite a few things: 50% water changes (got better for a day), 25% water changes biweekly (isn't lowering my nitrates by much), added PhosBan in my filter (did nothing), added activated carbon in a two little pouches into my filter (did a little but only works for about a week), and added nassarius snails and hermits to eat the detritus that's accumulated in the sand bed (they all died or are suffering in the high nitrates).
At this point, I'm scraping algae off the sides of the glass every week. At first, there started to be algae build-up on the live rock, but the live rock is clean and looks OK right now.
I'd like to move my fish into a quarantine tank, dump the substrate in the affected tank, and start anew. I'm planning on getting some sort of live sand and could use a lot of help. I don't want to be dumping a lot of money into this tank right now, but I'd like to do a few things to make it better for next time. How long will I have to cycle the tank for if I'm using wet live sand? Are there sand sifters that stay pretty much hidden in the sand that I can get to help clean the waste? I'm planning on getting a phosban reactor as well. Do you have any advice for efficiently filtering waste out of a extra-deep tank? I feel like the waste accumulates on the bottom because the eheim filter doesn't suck it off the bottom of the tank.
Please be gentle. I know I don't have a great tank like many of the ones I see on this forum. Again, I'd like to spend no more than $400 on rebuilding this tank. Thank you for your time.
My specs:
45 gallon extra-deep tank
coralife actinic/10,000K light strip
glass tank cover
2 hydor koralia circulation pumps
1 green spotted puffer fish
1 tomato clownfish
2 hermits
2 or 3 nassarius snails
crushed coral and sand mixture for substrate, about 1.5 inches deep
about 40lbs. of live rock
eheim 2213 canister filter (media: carbon pad, biological ceramic balls, filter pad, small pouch of activated carbon)
CPR bak-pak 2 protein skimmer with combo box
ball of macroalgae
seaweed
water: ammonia 0, pH8.0, nitrates about 50~80, don't have a phosphate test kit yet
I can't add many fish or inverts to my tank because my green spotted puffer is super aggressive and has killed most fish and inverts I add to the tank. He's left my tomato clown alone since she is just as aggressive and fearless. My puffer is also a huge waste producer, which I'm sure contributes to the toxins in the tank.
I've done quite a few things: 50% water changes (got better for a day), 25% water changes biweekly (isn't lowering my nitrates by much), added PhosBan in my filter (did nothing), added activated carbon in a two little pouches into my filter (did a little but only works for about a week), and added nassarius snails and hermits to eat the detritus that's accumulated in the sand bed (they all died or are suffering in the high nitrates).
At this point, I'm scraping algae off the sides of the glass every week. At first, there started to be algae build-up on the live rock, but the live rock is clean and looks OK right now.
I'd like to move my fish into a quarantine tank, dump the substrate in the affected tank, and start anew. I'm planning on getting some sort of live sand and could use a lot of help. I don't want to be dumping a lot of money into this tank right now, but I'd like to do a few things to make it better for next time. How long will I have to cycle the tank for if I'm using wet live sand? Are there sand sifters that stay pretty much hidden in the sand that I can get to help clean the waste? I'm planning on getting a phosban reactor as well. Do you have any advice for efficiently filtering waste out of a extra-deep tank? I feel like the waste accumulates on the bottom because the eheim filter doesn't suck it off the bottom of the tank.
Please be gentle. I know I don't have a great tank like many of the ones I see on this forum. Again, I'd like to spend no more than $400 on rebuilding this tank. Thank you for your time.
My specs:
45 gallon extra-deep tank
coralife actinic/10,000K light strip
glass tank cover
2 hydor koralia circulation pumps
1 green spotted puffer fish
1 tomato clownfish
2 hermits
2 or 3 nassarius snails
crushed coral and sand mixture for substrate, about 1.5 inches deep
about 40lbs. of live rock
eheim 2213 canister filter (media: carbon pad, biological ceramic balls, filter pad, small pouch of activated carbon)
CPR bak-pak 2 protein skimmer with combo box
ball of macroalgae
seaweed
water: ammonia 0, pH8.0, nitrates about 50~80, don't have a phosphate test kit yet
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