Unsure what to do.

DeBuGti

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Hi all,

Firstly thanks for the great welcomes againā€¦ I wanted to ask your advise on what I should start doing with some dragon rock I bought which has grown algae on itā€¦ I have a Plecoā€¦ but he only really cleans the bog wood upā€¦ Iā€™m also due to buying a vac for the tank soon to clear all the dirt up as well.

My questions should I do a rock at a time when changing the water? Obviously scrubbing the algae off the rock with water from the tank? Or will it remove health elements of the tank?

Secondly should I add more plants? Will they be a good combat against slightly higher nitrates Iā€™ve been getting and algae?

Please ignore the childā€¦ he wouldnā€™t move for the photo haha
 

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1. I would not advise cleaning the rock at all. Algae growing on rock and wood is not harmful to anything, in fact it is beneficial because fish love to graze/browse surfaces aand find microscopic food (live) in such mats. It also looks better, though that is a subjective aethestic point. The areas of substrate under rock should never be disturbed; they may be anaerobic to some extent, and this is part of a healthy biological system. You can poke into the substrate with the water changer, aruond the rock, but do not disturb it by moving it.

2. The plants are a very different issue. They are becoming covered in algae, this is not good for the plants. You will not have much (if any) luck removing algae from plant leaves, especially if it is black brush algae which seems to be present here. Algae in planted tanks is controlled by establishing or re-establishing the balance of light and nutrients. Light involves intensity and spectrum, and the nutrients must be sufficient in balance for the plants to use but no further. This takes a bit of juggling sometimes, but we need to know more about the light, and are you using any plant fertilizers.

The duration of the light can be adjusted, provided the initial balance involving intensity and spectrum are OK. Any data on the light will help us, and the duration it is on.

The pleco by the way will not eat "problem" algae such as what I see here. Nothing really will, though snails and some say shrimp can help. But this is minimal so the balance is the way to deal with this.
 
1. I would not advise cleaning the rock at all. Algae growing on rock and wood is not harmful to anything, in fact it is beneficial because fish love to graze/browse surfaces aand find microscopic food (live) in such mats. It also looks better, though that is a subjective aethestic point. The areas of substrate under rock should never be disturbed; they may be anaerobic to some extent, and this is part of a healthy biological system. You can poke into the substrate with the water changer, aruond the rock, but do not disturb it by moving it.

2. The plants are a very different issue. They are becoming covered in algae, this is not good for the plants. You will not have much (if any) luck removing algae from plant leaves, especially if it is black brush algae which seems to be present here. Algae in planted tanks is controlled by establishing or re-establishing the balance of light and nutrients. Light involves intensity and spectrum, and the nutrients must be sufficient in balance for the plants to use but no further. This takes a bit of juggling sometimes, but we need to know more about the light, and are you using any plant fertilizers.

The duration of the light can be adjusted, provided the initial balance involving intensity and spectrum are OK. Any data on the light will help us, and the duration it is on.

The pleco by the way will not eat "problem" algae such as what I see here. Nothing really will, though snails and some say shrimp can help. But this is minimal so the balance is the way to deal with this.
Byron,

Thank you so much for this reply, absolutely awesome advice!

So Iā€™ve attached the light settings on the FluvalSmart light settingsā€¦ originally the lights were set to come on at 06am but weā€™ve adjusted the times. Please let me know if this is wrong or needs tweaking. I originally read in another article about light times in the tanksā€¦ also when I got the tank in summer last year, it had a lot of direct sunlight on it. We recently got blinds for the double doors which Iā€™m going to use next year to stop the light hitting the tank in the afternoon as much.

Regarding the current plants in the tank. Is it worth removing a lot of the ones with algae growth and starting again? Iā€™m hesitant to get shrimp as the clown loaches have been known to peck? I was tempted to get some new plants to place at the front mid and back?
 

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OK, first the light. This looks like a good unit, I believe other members have liked it, so that leads us to the duration. It seems the "daylight" period (full light) is now 8:30 am to 5 pm (1700 hr). That is a very long period, 9 hours, considering the minimal plant load, so algae will be encouraged and get worse. I would reduce this daylight to 7 hours. Have it so it is on when you are most often home to enjoy the aquarium.

As for the sunrise and sunset periods, shorten these to no more than an hour, or a bit less. These periods will not provide sufficient light for plants, but algae is not so fussy and it will benefit some. Even just 30 minutes would be fine.

Daylight does indeed play a significant role in this. I had my photoperiod worked out to 7 hours each day, and all was well except the black brush algae took off in the summer. The second year that this occurred I finally realized that it was the longer and brighter days with more light entering the room that was upsetting the balance. The tanks were in a fish room so it was no issue to completely block all daylight by covering the windows with aluminum foil. It worked. For the seven years since, no more problem algae.

The times are relative to the light intensity I used. With brighter light this would not have worked without tweaking it further. Duration does not make up for intensity, the intensity must be sufficient for the plants, and then you can tweak the duration and fertilizers. I think there is no issue with intensity or spectrum here. And the plant fertilizers I used factored in, so let's look at this aspect.

Plants need nutrients. These come from the fish being fed and water changes. Each species of plant do not have equal requirements when it comes to both light and nutrients. Slow growers need less of both, fast growers need more of both. I see Anubias I think, which are slow growing plants, another reason they are prone to algae because they need less light. I would get some more plants, especially floating like Water Sprite, Water Lettuce, Frogbit; some stem plants (these are fast growers) do well floating, like the pennyworts. These are not only incredibly fast growing, they also shade the tank, and use a lot of nutrients.

As for fertilizers, you only want to use a balanced comprehensive one. The goal is to supplement what may be lacking, not add everything including what is already there. This will feed algae. I have had brush algae appear and increase from too long a light period, from not using supplements, and from using too much of the supplement. You are in the UK so look for TNC Lite. A very small bottle, you do not use much. Once you have the light reduced, and some floating plants, this fertilizer should be all you need.
 
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OK, first the light. This looks like a good unit, I believe other members have liked it, so that leads us to the duration. It seems the "daylight" period (full light) is now 8:30 am to 5 pm (1700 hr). That is a very long period, 9 hours, considering the minimal plant load, so algae will be encouraged and get worse. I would reduce this daylight to 7 hours. Have it so it is on hen you are most often home to enjoy the aquarium.

As for the sunrise and sunset periods, shorten these to no more than an hour, or a bit less. These periods will not provide sufficient light for plants, but algae is not so fussy and it will benefit some. Even just 30 minutes would be fine.

Daylight does indeed play a significant role in this. I had my photoperiod worked out to 7 hours each day, and all was well except the black brush algae took off in the summer. The second year that this occurred I finally realized that it was the longer and brighter days with more light entering the room that was upsetting the balance. The tanks were in a fish room so it was no issue to completely block all daylight by covering the windows with aluminum foil. It worked. For the seven years since, no more problem algae.

The times are relative to the light intensity I used. With brighter light this would not have worked without tweaking it further. Duration does not make up for intensity, the intensity must be sufficient for the plants, and then you can tweak the duration and fertilizers. I think there is no issue with intensity or spectrum here. And the plant fertilizers I used factored in, so let's look at this aspect.

Plants need nutrients. These come from the fish being fed and water changes. Each species of plant do not have equal requirements when it comes to both light and nutrients. Slow growers need less of both, fast growers need more of both. I see Anubias I think, which are slow growing plants, another reason they are prone to algae because they need less light. I would get some more plants, especially floating like Water Sprite, Water Lettuce, Frogbit; some stem plants (these are fast growers) do well floating, like the pennyworts. These are not only incredibly fast growing, they also shade the tank, and use a lot of nutrients.

As for fertilizers, you only want to use a balanced comprehensive one. The goal is to supplement what may be lacking, not add everything including what is already there. This will feed algae. I have had brush algae appear and increase from too long a light period, from not using supplements, and from using too much of the supplement. You are in the UK so look for TNC Lite. A very small bottle, you do not use much. Once you have the light reduced, and some floating plants, this fertilizer should be all you need.
Morning Byron,

Apologies I didn't get back to you any sooner, I was celebrating the dreaded 14th February with the Mrs yesterday haha!

So the lighting has been adjusted today to come on around 10am and shut off around 17:00 so that's reduced it to 7 hours, thank you for that information, I'm starting to learn now that the world of fish keeping really is a hobby and interesting one and not just about things looking pretty and leaving it without care. I bought a Fluval Gravel vacuum today and gave the gravel a really good cleanout.. Shocking how much muck was in areas I before couldn't reach...

Also this afternoon I'm off out to buy some more plants for the tank. Will update on the plants and tank view once I'm back!
 
Just an update on new plants I gotā€¦ unfortunately they had no top plants. But I will be looking.
 

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unfortunately they had no top plants
If you mean plants to float on the surface, in my experience most 'real' shops don't sell them. The nearest to a floating plant I've seen is stem plants like hornwort and elodea which can be left on the water surface.
However, on-line shops usually sell several species of floating plants :)
 
If you mean plants to float on the surface, in my experience most 'real' shops don't sell them. The nearest to a floating plant I've seen is stem plants like hornwort and elodea which can be left on the water surface.
However, on-line shops usually sell several species of floating plants :)
Ah that would make senseā€¦ Maidenhead Aquatics said they usually stock someā€¦ but they were really low on stock!
 

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