OK, this is going to be long...
Tank started Oct 2011. ~150 l, SG ~1.002 @ 25 C, pH ~8.2, NH3&4 0 mg/l, NH2 0 mg/l, NH3 50-100 mg/l (tap 40), sand bottom. Population as per below.
July 2012: added 10 Vallisneria and 6 Boesemani Rainbowfishes.
November 2012-now: bloom of diatoms. I always had them, but until then, I was keeping them at bay with 8 Nerites, who were doing a great job, but all of a sudden the snails disappeared, went totally nocturnal (after happy months wandering day & night and eating their way around the tank), and staying totally frozen for the entire day. Two of them died soon after this change of behaviour.
Present: Lost 7 Vallis. Diatoms all over the place. Sand terribly dirty. I vac at every water change (30% weekly), but now I can't cope with this: every time I stir the sand, an incredible cloud of dust fills the tank. The removed water is brownish-black.
The fish appear to be doing fine (didn't really ask their opinion, though...)
So far I assumed that the high level of NO3 is responsible for the behaviour of the nerites, and consequently the diatoms going out of control (it was lower before), polluting the tank. So far I have:
- reduced the photoperiod from 8 to 6 h (at least 6 months ago), not sure it helped much
- tried Tetra Minus Pearls
- changed part of the Eheim biofilter with Symbiont filter pallets
- switched to 2 x 20% water changes per week, with perhaps some improvement.
Last week I noticed a sudden bloom the day after a salt water change (I usually change with salt water every second or third WC), so I though it could also be the salt?? I use Tropic Marin sea salt, and they clearly state it's NO3-free.
My understanding is, diatoms need silicates, AND nitrates (like most other algae). Starving them by only cutting the silicates may lead to blooms of more annoying algae, so ideally you just want them under control, rather than starving. But surely reducing NO3 would help?
So, briefly:
1) What's going on in there?
2) Should I really check for and react to silicates, as a trigger of diatoms?
3) I read about Seachem Purigen and De-nitrate. But starting with tap at 40 mg/l...???
I'm soooo tired of this, it just looks awful and hopeless.
Pleeease advise!
Tank started Oct 2011. ~150 l, SG ~1.002 @ 25 C, pH ~8.2, NH3&4 0 mg/l, NH2 0 mg/l, NH3 50-100 mg/l (tap 40), sand bottom. Population as per below.
July 2012: added 10 Vallisneria and 6 Boesemani Rainbowfishes.
November 2012-now: bloom of diatoms. I always had them, but until then, I was keeping them at bay with 8 Nerites, who were doing a great job, but all of a sudden the snails disappeared, went totally nocturnal (after happy months wandering day & night and eating their way around the tank), and staying totally frozen for the entire day. Two of them died soon after this change of behaviour.
Present: Lost 7 Vallis. Diatoms all over the place. Sand terribly dirty. I vac at every water change (30% weekly), but now I can't cope with this: every time I stir the sand, an incredible cloud of dust fills the tank. The removed water is brownish-black.
The fish appear to be doing fine (didn't really ask their opinion, though...)
So far I assumed that the high level of NO3 is responsible for the behaviour of the nerites, and consequently the diatoms going out of control (it was lower before), polluting the tank. So far I have:
- reduced the photoperiod from 8 to 6 h (at least 6 months ago), not sure it helped much
- tried Tetra Minus Pearls
- changed part of the Eheim biofilter with Symbiont filter pallets
- switched to 2 x 20% water changes per week, with perhaps some improvement.
Last week I noticed a sudden bloom the day after a salt water change (I usually change with salt water every second or third WC), so I though it could also be the salt?? I use Tropic Marin sea salt, and they clearly state it's NO3-free.
My understanding is, diatoms need silicates, AND nitrates (like most other algae). Starving them by only cutting the silicates may lead to blooms of more annoying algae, so ideally you just want them under control, rather than starving. But surely reducing NO3 would help?
So, briefly:
1) What's going on in there?
2) Should I really check for and react to silicates, as a trigger of diatoms?
3) I read about Seachem Purigen and De-nitrate. But starting with tap at 40 mg/l...???
I'm soooo tired of this, it just looks awful and hopeless.
Pleeease advise!