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nekkidrobert

red algae

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im 62 days into my saltwater tank and been cycleing the rock and i just started noticing red algae in my sump. Been doingmy normal 20% water changes every week with Ro water. I have one fish in the sump to help cycle the tank and i only put enough food in that i can see it eat. I just wondering where its coming from. If u can help thanks. I want to take care of it before it becomes a probelm

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Comments

  1. Midnight's Avatar
    Need a picture, if there is a light and nutrients then you will have algae. It may be that your sump has slightly too slow of flow through it?
  2. Midnight's Avatar
    Why is the fish not in the display?
  3. nekkidrobert's Avatar
    not sure but i notice some in the display when i turned the light on today and the reason the fish is in the sump is because its a damsel to help cycle the tank and the wife didnt want it in the main tank since she wants clowns. trying the 3 days of darkness on the sump and see if that helps.
  4. melev's Avatar
    Shouldn't be a problem for your system, but we'd have to see the situation with a picture to state anything for sure.

    New tanks go through various algae phases.
  5. nekkidrobert's Avatar
    after fighting the red bubble algae i had the water tested and foudn out that my water has high levels of chloramines so now i have to order a new RO system so it will remove it since the system i have dont
  6. Midnight's Avatar
    Chlorimines should be removed by the carbon blocks if there not full/dead I believe. I would check into replacing or adding that to your system. Could you post a pic of your rodi system?
  7. Midnight's Avatar
    found this:


    Chloramine, which consists of a mixture of chlorine and ammonia, is added to the water of many cities as a substitute for free chlorine. It is often referred to in the plural, as “chloramines,” because it can take on a number of forms according to the pH and mineral content of the water.
    The whole reduction discussion for chloramines can become quite complex, but the main thing you need to know is that chloramine is removed from water with essentially the same strategies that are used to remove chlorine. This means that carbon filtration is the best removal method, and, contrary to urban legends, filter carbon does indeed remove chloramine. The problem is that it takes more carbon and more contact time to do the job. In practical terms this means that if your city disinfects your tap water with chloramines you'll need to get a larger and better carbon filter than you would need if chlorine alone were used.
    For drinking water you can consider high quality carbon units like Multi-Pure, or double and triple units that use lots of carbon. And, contrary to another widely promoted myth, reverse osmosis units do remove chloramine. In fact, they do it well, because any good RO unit contains a couple of carbon filters and the water gets an extra slow pass through the first one.
    In choosing carbon for chloramine removal, a specially prepared carbon called “catalytic” carbon is far superior to regular carbon.
    Catalytic carbon is a specifically processed grade of filter carbon that is designed especially for, among other things, exceptional chloramine removal. On our site, the brand name for catalytic carbon is Centaur.
    You should also consider specially prepared carbon filters from Pentek, which are expertly designed to reduce chloramines.