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CancerverO

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Howard Beach NY
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I have this type of algae that is spreading out (I removed 2 rocks but there are still some few spots) .. I will try to get a pic tonight.. I read somewhere on the web that emeral crab can eat that but I cant find the website.. any website that shows all the different types of algaes in a tank????

thanks
 
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Queens
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nope.. I found this website and I saw the algae that I have and they recommend emerald crabs..

Id be warry of adding any omnivore to combat algae. Especially one as mean and unpredictable as an emerald crab. They are just as likely to attack snails and other life rather then your algae. Once they get bigger, they will go after yuo fish.
 

CancerverO

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Howard Beach NY
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here is a pic.. what type of algae is this? I removed the 2 rocks but I just saw this on another rock.. it grows like some type of leafs
 

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CancerverO

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Howard Beach NY
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Id be warry of adding any omnivore to combat algae. Especially one as mean and unpredictable as an emerald crab. They are just as likely to attack snails and other life rather then your algae. Once they get bigger, they will go after yuo fish.


no emerald crabs.. I have been removing it manually.. and put some glue on top on some rocks that I cant remove..
 

CancerverO

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Howard Beach NY
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from the web..



Description- Brown algae, has forked branches may have iridescent blue hue. Here is the thing with the dictyota sp. – there are tons and w/out a microscope the best you can get it down to is like a handful of different species. If it is a brown algae, with forked branches, is not rigid, it is probably dictyota. Some species of Dictyota are desirable, you will be able to recognize them as they grow as one plant that branches out from one distinct holdfast. Removal would be very simple. Nuisance species of Dictyota, (pretty much all the iridescent sp.) stay shorter and creep along the rock. Their branches form straight from the rock, and there is no trunk like feature to the algae, or easily discernible holdfast.
Manual Removal – Difficult. Qting the rock in an extended dark cycle is the best way. It spreads fast, you may want to jump on it. If that isn’t possible, take a dental pick and scrape off every inch of holdfast you can. Get it all the first time and be done with it. At the least get it down to its minimum so the cleaners can polish it off.
Clean Up Crew- Emerald Crabs (best bet here), Sea Hares, some Turbos, Chitons, Limpets, Tangs, Urchins, will pick at it, but it is likely to persist, but at least it will be controlled.
Why it happened – You didn’t quarantine, and you have available nutrients for it.
Starving it out – Use a phosban reactor or a macro like chaeto to take down phosphate. If you have a nitrate problem too, you can add more live rock or rubble to the tank, do some more wcs, add macro, add dsb, etc…
John’s Tip – Under the right lighting it can take on amazing bright blue and green colors. It is a matter of light refraction, more than the health of the species.
 

Dre

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Location
NY/NJ
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The pic from the web looks like Dictyota but what did the web say?Does it glow under actinics?Can you remove it by hand ?
 

jrobbins

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New York
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i had a big problem with it for a while. most of the species of it are pretty toxic to fish and inverts. best bet for control of it (or at least what worked for me) was to remove the rock from the tank (this is really important, you will spread it everywhere if you try this while it is in the tank) and have at it with a toothbrush. rinse the rock well and replace it.

i also ran a ton of phosban and used some of the xxl mex. turbos and blue legged hermits. you can also try a two-barred rabbitfish but I have never used one myself and they aren't exactly reefsafe.
 

CancerverO

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Location
Howard Beach NY
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i had a big problem with it for a while. most of the species of it are pretty toxic to fish and inverts. best bet for control of it (or at least what worked for me) was to remove the rock from the tank (this is really important, you will spread it everywhere if you try this while it is in the tank) and have at it with a toothbrush. rinse the rock well and replace it.

i also ran a ton of phosban and used some of the xxl mex. turbos and blue legged hermits. you can also try a two-barred rabbitfish but I have never used one myself and they aren't exactly reefsafe.

I believe that is what happened.. I was removing by hand.. and I?m afraid a little pieces escaped from my fingers and that is how it spread.. that is what actually did yesterday.. I removed some others rock and I left them died.. the rock is dead but the algae is still there.. Unbelievable!!!...oh man.. what a pain!!! so what I am doing is taking every infected rock out and clean them well and back to the tank.. and I?m covering some algae with glue on rocks that I can take them out... this algae almost kill my rasta colony? grrrr :irked:
 

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