r.w.girard
Fish Crazy
Hey all,
I'm still having staghorn algae problems in my planted tank and I am not sure what I should do about it. Everything that I have read seems to indicate a lack of CO2 but I have been dosing considerably higher than recommended for quite a while and so I am not sure what is going on... I am not sure if dry fertilizers are more effective than Seachem products, but I have been using bottled fertilizers as I have slowly been using a wider array with time. Any the tank description:
20 gallon long planted pretty heavily with Cryptocoryne wendtii and Sagittaria subulata with two 17W T5 bulbs that are on around 8 hours a day filtered by an Eheim 2217 canister at full capacity [which I cleaned out - with tank water - a week ago].
I have been dosing according to the Seachem website although I have recently tried to increase the CO2 in order to better stimulate growth and to get rid of the algae. This has not worked.
Two other notes that may be helpful: 1) I had had green spot algae but scraped it off and it has not come back, 2) my Elocharis acicularis has not grown in at all over the past couple of months, it is not dead, it simply does not grown, even when pruned.
I do a 50% water change every week and I have been pruning very heavily over the past few weeks to remove affected leaves but none of this seems to be working. So I am wondering, could it be that I need to dose more nutrients? Do I need to dose more CO2? I cannot add pressurized CO2 because I am leaving the country for two months and I really want to find any answer before I leave [that gives me two weeks]. Any advice and comments would be greatly appreciated. If anyone could recommend a dosing regime, I would greatly appreciate it. If anyone has any advice on fighting stag horn algae, that would be greatly appreciated as well.
I'm still having staghorn algae problems in my planted tank and I am not sure what I should do about it. Everything that I have read seems to indicate a lack of CO2 but I have been dosing considerably higher than recommended for quite a while and so I am not sure what is going on... I am not sure if dry fertilizers are more effective than Seachem products, but I have been using bottled fertilizers as I have slowly been using a wider array with time. Any the tank description:
20 gallon long planted pretty heavily with Cryptocoryne wendtii and Sagittaria subulata with two 17W T5 bulbs that are on around 8 hours a day filtered by an Eheim 2217 canister at full capacity [which I cleaned out - with tank water - a week ago].
I have been dosing according to the Seachem website although I have recently tried to increase the CO2 in order to better stimulate growth and to get rid of the algae. This has not worked.
Two other notes that may be helpful: 1) I had had green spot algae but scraped it off and it has not come back, 2) my Elocharis acicularis has not grown in at all over the past couple of months, it is not dead, it simply does not grown, even when pruned.
I do a 50% water change every week and I have been pruning very heavily over the past few weeks to remove affected leaves but none of this seems to be working. So I am wondering, could it be that I need to dose more nutrients? Do I need to dose more CO2? I cannot add pressurized CO2 because I am leaving the country for two months and I really want to find any answer before I leave [that gives me two weeks]. Any advice and comments would be greatly appreciated. If anyone could recommend a dosing regime, I would greatly appreciate it. If anyone has any advice on fighting stag horn algae, that would be greatly appreciated as well.