FishForums.com  

Go Back   FishForums.com > Saltwater > General Saltwater
User Name
Password
Register FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read


Members currently in the Chat:0
members chatting

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 02-05-2006, 11:20 AM   #1
dixiechicken82
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Georgia
Age: 25
Posts: 4
Send a message via Yahoo to dixiechicken82
Question Please Help! Neon Green Water!?

Please help! No one seems to know what this is!

We just bought power compact lights with the white lights & blue light. Not sure of par value or anything. Soon after setting up the lights (at Christmas), there was a "bloom" of algae (or so I'm guessing) all over the walls of the tank. After cleaning it off the walls, it came right back within hours. This lasted for days. The LFS said this was normal with the addition of brighter lights and said to leave it alone. After about a week it stopped. Weeks later we woke up to find the water was a light neon green, but you could still see pretty well. After a day it was harder to see. It lasted several days and got murkier each day, and then finally went away. 2-3 weeks later, It has happened again. The live rock is barely visible now, shadowy looking. The only time I can see the animals is when they are right next to the glass. I put some water in a test tube to check the water quality, and the color was a faint green in the tube. Na:20 Ni:0 Am:0 pH:8.2. The only thing we've done different besides setting up the new lights, is put PurpleUp in the water. This neon green water doesn't seem to be algae to me. I can't see any textured stuff in the water. It's just green! As if I put bright green food coloring in it! =0) What is going on!?!

Also,
I noticed something on the glass a week & a half ago. There were these tiny, clear, oval sacs or pouches with 20 or more white dots in them. Each sac was separate from the rest but seemed to form a small trail. A week later the sacs were empty. So what happened to the white things in the sac? Were they eggs? I just got 4 new big snails, and I have about 10 nassarius snails. I assumed they were snail eggs since they were high up on the glass, but I thought the "eggs" would mature into snails before hatching. I don't know anything about snail hatchlings so I could be way off in my assumptions. Any ideas?
dixiechicken82 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-05-2006, 12:54 PM   #2
MaryPa
Senior Member
 
MaryPa's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Glenville,Pa.
Age: 58
Posts: 272
Default

Put a HOB filter on the tank with polyfiber in it. That`ll clear the water,then you can remove the filter. A Sailfin Blenny will keep the LR clean. The white things on the glass just snails most likely hitchhikers from the LR. Scrape them off.
__________________
125 gal.
5 Clown Loaches
4 Phantom Tetras
8 Hyphessobrycon vilmae tetras
1 SAE
1 ABN Pleco
5 Bronze Cory
9 Gold barbs
55gal
1 Angelicus
1 Clown Pleco
1 ABN Pleco
12 cories
2 Discus
55 gal
Severum,
Blood Parrot
55
1 Threadfin Rainbow
4 cherry Barbs
CT Betta
2 Bumble Bee Catfish1
Swordtail Guppy Male
29 gal
Platies
29gal
Cories
29gal
Endlers and RCS
10
Swordtail guppy females and fry

Last edited by MaryPa; 02-05-2006 at 12:57 PM.
MaryPa is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-05-2006, 04:50 PM   #3
TheOldSalt
Darth Ichthyos
 
TheOldSalt's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 4,343
Default

Dumb question time:

Are you leaving the lights on all the time?

Do you have any 'ick' or fungus medicine in the house, and if so, how many people could have access to it? Some of that stuff turns the water very neon day-glo green indeed.

I haven't heard of Purple-up causing any problems like this, but maybe something is wrong which is making it cause it. Do you have a skimmer?
TheOldSalt is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-05-2006, 07:36 PM   #4
dixiechicken82
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Georgia
Age: 25
Posts: 4
Send a message via Yahoo to dixiechicken82
Default

Thanks for the replies!

No the lights are on for 12hrs, off for 12hrs. We haven't had any problems with ich or anything like that, so we haven't bought any medicines to treat the water. No skimmer either.


Whats an HOB filter??
dixiechicken82 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-05-2006, 10:46 PM   #5
leveldrummer
something like a pimp
 
leveldrummer's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2005
Location: atlanta
Age: 29
Posts: 1,933
Default

hob= hang on the back, what kind of filter do you have with no skimmer?
leveldrummer is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-06-2006, 07:06 AM   #6
MaryPa
Senior Member
 
MaryPa's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Glenville,Pa.
Age: 58
Posts: 272
Default

Without a skimmer you`ll have to do weekly water changes. Honestly you really should have one especially with a FOWLER ( Fish only with live rock ) tank. With a FO ( fish only ) you can get away without a skimmer.
__________________
125 gal.
5 Clown Loaches
4 Phantom Tetras
8 Hyphessobrycon vilmae tetras
1 SAE
1 ABN Pleco
5 Bronze Cory
9 Gold barbs
55gal
1 Angelicus
1 Clown Pleco
1 ABN Pleco
12 cories
2 Discus
55 gal
Severum,
Blood Parrot
55
1 Threadfin Rainbow
4 cherry Barbs
CT Betta
2 Bumble Bee Catfish1
Swordtail Guppy Male
29 gal
Platies
29gal
Cories
29gal
Endlers and RCS
10
Swordtail guppy females and fry
MaryPa is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-06-2006, 07:08 AM   #7
MaryPa
Senior Member
 
MaryPa's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Glenville,Pa.
Age: 58
Posts: 272
Default

Personally i traded my SW tank for an empty 30 gal for FW fish. I found SW a pain in the a**.
__________________
125 gal.
5 Clown Loaches
4 Phantom Tetras
8 Hyphessobrycon vilmae tetras
1 SAE
1 ABN Pleco
5 Bronze Cory
9 Gold barbs
55gal
1 Angelicus
1 Clown Pleco
1 ABN Pleco
12 cories
2 Discus
55 gal
Severum,
Blood Parrot
55
1 Threadfin Rainbow
4 cherry Barbs
CT Betta
2 Bumble Bee Catfish1
Swordtail Guppy Male
29 gal
Platies
29gal
Cories
29gal
Endlers and RCS
10
Swordtail guppy females and fry
MaryPa is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-06-2006, 10:58 AM   #8
dixiechicken82
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Georgia
Age: 25
Posts: 4
Send a message via Yahoo to dixiechicken82
Default

It's a Penguin (not sure which model) power wheel filter and It hangs on the back. Maybe we have a skimmer on the filter?? I just assumed we didn't have one because we haven't bought one seperately! We were told that our next purchase should be a SEIO super flow pump. Would this help with the green water?? Is this what they call micro algae? Is that why I can't see it?
dixiechicken82 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-06-2006, 11:14 AM   #9
leveldrummer
something like a pimp
 
leveldrummer's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2005
Location: atlanta
Age: 29
Posts: 1,933
Default

the penguin definatly doesnt have a skimmer in it, i believe the little wheels on some of those filters can cause a problem in saltwater tanks, not sure if its green water, but you might want to get rid of it anyway, before something happens. (just the wheel, not the whole filter)
leveldrummer is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-06-2006, 11:59 AM   #10
Fishfirst
Fish Guru
 
Fishfirst's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Northern Wisconsin
Age: 24
Posts: 3,534
Default

the biowheels create a lot of nitrates, nitrates are nutrients that promote the growth of microalgaes. I'd get a good skimmer for your tank such as the aqua c remora skimmers. I'd also start using RO water, or distilled water instead of tap if you aren't already.
__________________
210 Gal Reef w/ 55 Gallon Sump/Fuge, 125 Gal Fish Only, 65 Gal Seahorse-29 Gallon Sump, 55 Gal FOWLR, 54 Gal Corner FW Community, 20 Gal Nano FOWLR, 55 Gal Piranha, 29 gallon QT

"All the yellow tangs and clownfish in the world can't save you now! hahahah" Peter from Family Guy
Fishfirst is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-06-2006, 03:00 PM   #11
CMonroe
Fishy Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Age: 40
Posts: 26
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Fishfirst
the biowheels create a lot of nitrates, nitrates are nutrients that promote the growth of microalgaes. I'd get a good skimmer for your tank such as the aqua c remora skimmers. I'd also start using RO water, or distilled water instead of tap if you aren't already.
I hate to even question someone with 1800+ posts, but it sounds like you are saying a Bio-Wheel is causing Nitrates, and should be removed? I thought nitrates were the natural byproduct of the nitrifying (sp) bacteria in the biological filter process: Fish Waste > Ammonia > Nitrite > Nitrate > plants (hence the algae blooms). Shouldn't ANY biological filter cause nitrates? Ideally, a mechanical filter and Skimmer should remove as much fish waste as possible, thus removing the source material that has to be converted from waste into Nitrate, but still aren't Nitrates a sign of a working biological filter? If you remove the bio-wheel, where the nitrification is taking place, aren't you making your filter less efficient?

Both Local Fish Stores I frequent have Pinguin filters w/ biowheels on ALL their marine tanks. Only the largest tanks have biowheels, wet/drys, refugiums, and skimmers.

Maybe they are doing a lot of water changes to remove the nitrates, but this is the first time I've seen a filter get blamed for doing it's job. Can somebody explain that please, I feel like I missed something.
CMonroe is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-06-2006, 03:17 PM   #12
Fishfirst
Fish Guru
 
Fishfirst's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Northern Wisconsin
Age: 24
Posts: 3,534
Default

heheh, you are exactly right about the biological filter thing and about the biowheel doing its job. Thats what it was MADE to do... unfortunately, saltwater requires LOW nitrates and while a biowheel is perfectly fine for freshwater, it often is a hassle in saltwater systems. You see, a biowheel does the same job your liverock does in a marine system, only liverock can produce macroalgae and beneficial algaes instead of your nussance algaes and your biowheel can't. Also, skimmers are supposed to take out a majority of the nitrate producing particles that become mixed in our water before they have time to rott, and by doing this they effectively lower your nitrate levels. This left over nitrate that the skimmer missed can be taken out by your water changes OR by the beneficial algae instead of the nasty green water you get. Also there is something called the denitrification process that occurs in saltwater, which can lower nitrates as well, it produces N2 (gas) through anerobic bacteria which can be cultured in a plenium.

As far as your LFS is conserned, using penguins as their main filters work as long as they keep up with frequent water changes. And their larger systems with the wetdry filter is probably a complete nitrate factory (it works even better at producing nitrates than your penguin) and is fairly obsolete for reef or fowlr tanks.

oh, and also, nitrate isn't the only nutrient that causes those nasty algaes... Phosphates can too (usually associated with fish waste and fish foods). A handy thing to have is a phosban reactor too, however I believe that a high quality skimmer could help them out enough to get things back on track.
__________________
210 Gal Reef w/ 55 Gallon Sump/Fuge, 125 Gal Fish Only, 65 Gal Seahorse-29 Gallon Sump, 55 Gal FOWLR, 54 Gal Corner FW Community, 20 Gal Nano FOWLR, 55 Gal Piranha, 29 gallon QT

"All the yellow tangs and clownfish in the world can't save you now! hahahah" Peter from Family Guy
Fishfirst is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-06-2006, 03:46 PM   #13
ron v
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Alabama
Age: 61
Posts: 1,123
Default

I'm learning too. Let me paraphrase what you just said and you tell me if it's correct. The nitrogen cycle still converts ammonia/ nitrites to nitrate and that's a good thing. Your filter ( bio-wheel, etc. ) can do it or your live rock can do it??? You would prefer that the live rock did it so it could produce microalgae and other good stuff. Right??? And I assume the bio-wheel is more efficient than the live rock. That's why you want to remove the bio-wheel. Right?
ron v is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-06-2006, 07:05 PM   #14
Fishfirst
Fish Guru
 
Fishfirst's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Northern Wisconsin
Age: 24
Posts: 3,534
Default

well yes and no, a skimmer just takes out things that decay and the liverock eats up the rest of the nitrate.
__________________
210 Gal Reef w/ 55 Gallon Sump/Fuge, 125 Gal Fish Only, 65 Gal Seahorse-29 Gallon Sump, 55 Gal FOWLR, 54 Gal Corner FW Community, 20 Gal Nano FOWLR, 55 Gal Piranha, 29 gallon QT

"All the yellow tangs and clownfish in the world can't save you now! hahahah" Peter from Family Guy
Fishfirst is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-07-2006, 06:40 AM   #15
CMonroe
Fishy Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Age: 40
Posts: 26
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Fishfirst
well yes and no, a skimmer just takes out things that decay and the liverock eats up the rest of the nitrate.
Ahh... I like what you said, and I don't think I've ever seen it written that way before. Just to make sure I have it clear... by having a highly efficient mechanical/biological filter in the pinguin w/ biowheel (or in my case a HOB & canister), I'm actually depriving my liverock of nitrites it needs for beneficial algae growth? The HOB filter or canister filter is converting the nitrites to nitrates before the liverock gets enough for it's own uses? Could this explain why I don't have good coraline algae growth and my nitrates have been high in spite of water changes? I also had a bad epidimic of hair algae. Could the high nitrates and phosphates have fed that bloom?

I've taken a few steps since the end of last year to try to boost coraline algae growth, and to kill the hair algae.
  • I replaced my normal fluorscent lights with compact fluorescent of higher watts.
  • I added a HOB skimmer from a reputible manufacturer (forgot name, but good reveiws)
  • I quit using tap water, and started using Ozarka bottled and/or purified water from the grocery store.

I believe it will take a while to get all the phosphates out of the system, but the hair algae growth has stopped; now I just have to wait for the cleanup crew to finish it off. The lawnmower blenny isn't interested in the hair algae.
My skimmer isn't producing much skim. Only a few tablespoons full in two months. The only time there is any froth is right after I feed. Is it possible that there just isn't anything to skim, or do you think there is something wrong with my skimmer? I've tripple checked my skimmer setup, and it is EXACTLY like the ones at the LFS where I bought it. Their's produces froth, mine doesn't produce much. I recently took the HOB filter off the maintank, so maybe now the skimmer will start finding something to skim.

Thoughts and opinions would be welcome.

CMonroe
CMonroe is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-07-2006, 08:35 AM   #16
Damon
Aquatic Naturalist
 
Damon's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Dayton, Ohio
Age: 32
Posts: 14,982
Send a message via Yahoo to Damon
Default

Yes. Liverock produces organisma that feed off of nitrates keeping them low in a saltwater tank. A biowheel produces bacteria that turn organics into nitrates which are a no-no in excess in saltwater but normal for freshwater. Skimmers remove organice so that they don't add to the nitrates your biowheel is converting them into. You want enough nitrates to feed the liverocks organisms but excess is fatal in saltwater. Skimmers keep them low enough.
__________________
For in much wisdom [is] much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.


Member of the AGA (Aquatic Gardner's Association)
Member of the IBC (International Betta Congress)
Damon is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-07-2006, 08:40 AM   #17
Fishfirst
Fish Guru
 
Fishfirst's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Northern Wisconsin
Age: 24
Posts: 3,534
Default

Hair algae comes and goes... my guess is once you get your trates and phosphates under control it will receed and if you have enough calcium in the water you'll start to see coraline algae.
__________________
210 Gal Reef w/ 55 Gallon Sump/Fuge, 125 Gal Fish Only, 65 Gal Seahorse-29 Gallon Sump, 55 Gal FOWLR, 54 Gal Corner FW Community, 20 Gal Nano FOWLR, 55 Gal Piranha, 29 gallon QT

"All the yellow tangs and clownfish in the world can't save you now! hahahah" Peter from Family Guy
Fishfirst is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-07-2006, 10:08 AM   #18
ron v
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Alabama
Age: 61
Posts: 1,123
Default

Fishfirst/ Simpte. I'm still puzzled. I'm a little slow, but I'll catch on eventually..... I understand that nitrates are a no-no, but nitrites are worse, right? Seems like we would ALWAYS want to convert nitrites into nitrate. So if we eliminate the bio-wheels, we would have nitrite????? What am I missing?
ron v is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-07-2006, 10:25 AM   #19
Fishfirst
Fish Guru
 
Fishfirst's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Northern Wisconsin
Age: 24
Posts: 3,534
Default

the liverock can convert ammonia to nitrite to nitrates... however the skimmer beats it to the punch most of the time and takes the particles out before they even have a chance of creating ammonia. Basically it lowers the whole bioload of the tank by extracting most of the fish waste, left over food, before it has time to decay. Of coarse you can't stop a live fish from breathing so you can't get rid of ammonia completely (fish excrete ammonia from their gills too) so the nitrogen cycle continues and is used by the liverock (remember there is a lot of beneficial bacteria on the liverock) by converting it from ammonia to nitrite to nitrate to beneficial algae. Biowheels and other filters trap detritus and lets it rot in the water column, thus, creating more nitrates than the beneficial algae can handle, which in turn, gives you blooms of bad algae.
__________________
210 Gal Reef w/ 55 Gallon Sump/Fuge, 125 Gal Fish Only, 65 Gal Seahorse-29 Gallon Sump, 55 Gal FOWLR, 54 Gal Corner FW Community, 20 Gal Nano FOWLR, 55 Gal Piranha, 29 gallon QT

"All the yellow tangs and clownfish in the world can't save you now! hahahah" Peter from Family Guy
Fishfirst is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-07-2006, 10:52 AM   #20
ron v
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Alabama
Age: 61
Posts: 1,123
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Fishfirst
filters trap detritus and lets it rot
So, it would be better if the detritus was allowed to continue floating around in the aquarium???? Why not just keep the filter clean?
ron v is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Funny, informative, or just plain sad? TheOldSalt FYI (For Your Info) 17 07-29-2007 04:33 PM
Glossary euRasian32 FYI (For Your Info) 22 06-20-2006 11:47 AM
Information for Beginners & Returnees lochness Beginner Freshwater 19 01-23-2006 02:53 PM
Max's journal maxpayne_lhp User Journals 9 07-11-2005 12:45 AM
Green Water micha447 General Freshwater 5 04-21-2005 12:21 PM


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 10:33 AM.