Why is my rocks turning purple with bubbles?
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It’s probably Cyanobacteria. It is usually caused by excess nutrients / parameters out of balance. You can use Chemiclean which works really well Without hardly any side effects as long as you follow the directions.
I'm in stone mountain/Decatur area memorial driveWhere are you located? I have a 220 with a 120 sump and a 60 frag. Total water volume is approx 325.
I just watched the video, pretty good and really reiterates what a lot of people are saying on many of the other sites out there. NO3 & PO4 are not bad... as long as you don't have any other issues. GHA, Cyano, Diatoms, along with a host of other things. Under the current way many of us have done things we will still need to keep those nutrient levels down to help mitigate nuance algae and bacteria's like Cyano. As we add the cuc and fish that have specific jobs we can experiment with letting those go up a bit, until we run into a problem. It's a learning curve that we all must go through and I think most of us start too slow with corals. We have a box of water and rock with more and more fish without the coral to go with it. Then all these problems start popping up and we start scrambling trying to fix the next thing that plagues our tanks. Before you know it we're playing whackamole.
New systems have a whole lot more than one cycle in the beginning and I know, at least for the first few years, that there are several milestones that happen while the system is establishing itself. You have the initial nitrogen cycle, then you go through the ugly phase, then other problems popup, like cyano. As you look at this guys tank you'll see a fairly large and diverse biomass. It takes time for corals to grow to those sizes unless you start with some fairly large colonies. Most people start slow because that what we've been taught to do. There's a lot of merit to taking things slowly in this hobby but I'm starting to believe there are certain things that can be done a bit faster. The fish load for a system should always be done slower so the system as a whole can build up to the ammonia output of those new fish. How slow though is a big question, months or weeks? Also most anemones should not be introduced for at least six months, others for a year or more. But coral on the other hand I think should be put in in larger quantities and sizes shortly after the nitrogen cycle. The problem is the cost and likelihood of killing several of them. But a larger coral biomass with a significant amount of flow may help newer systems push through some of these early problems quicker as they add significantly to the ability of a system to uptake those nutrients before the things we don't want to do that take a foot hold.
Whenever you see successful systems, especially newer ones, you'll see all that coral that we all want growing in our tanks. Like the BRS 160 and the recent series they're doing with WWC. I really think more emphasis needs to be focused on getting us newer hobbyists to understand the need to have more coral in our systems early on. I started out big for my 1st system and I think I really went to slowly with several aspects, coral being the biggest. I've been fairly fortunate though. No diatoms or dinos but I've have my share of GHA and Cyano, even bryopsis & Apitasia. And now my big issue is Red turf algae. I wanted a Mixed Reef and never shot for a ultra low nutrient system. Things are really doing well now, I'm getting close to the 2.5 year mark. I just need to get those last two taken care of. But the corals are doing great.
What type of system are you shooting for? SPS, LPS, mostly Softies or a Mixed Reef. And what are you using for powerheads?