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Should I Be Worried

muskox

Blue Ring
Registered
Joined
May 21, 2007
Messages
46
I am not really sure if I should be worried or not but the sand in my 20 gallon tank has been changing color and just getting darker every day. The color is brownish-red. My shrimp seems to be doing fine and even molted today. My live rock is doing better than ever. It looks much more colorful than before. can anyone tell me whats going on.

Thanks
 
This is normal it is most likely algae growing in your sand. If your sand is new or the tank has been recently set up this might occur. When I first set up my aquarium my sand turned almost completely red/brown. It might help if you stir the sand up a bit ever few days or if you get a few algae eating crabs. The problem is either your lighting, try leaving your lights off for a few hours more each day, it could be your water flow, if there isn’t enough water movement in your tank algae might start forming in your sand, or your phosphate levels might be to high. If that’s the case simple perform more water changes or buy a special filter to deal with the problem. I Hope that helps.

~Tom
 
Is there any kind of a film of this brownish red stuff? Can you collect it in a turkey baster? Is it almost black when out of the water? If the answers are yes, then it is likely to be cyno bacteria (often called cyno algae or just cyno) and you will need to get it under control quickly. I would recommend against stirring it into your sand if it is a dark, purplish red (tan/orangish red is likely just brown algae). Cyno in itself it is not dangereous but it will cover and smother everything in the tank and is a general mysery to eliminate naturally.

The natural treatment is to remove as much of it as you can and do a major water change. If you can remove some of the rock without a problem, remove it and rinse it well with fresh saltwater (you may want to use a soft brush as well) then put it back into the tank. Continue very frequent water changes along with more manual removal.

I have never had major success with the natural way. The chemical solution I have successfully used includes the initial cleanup and water change but also includes putting 1/2 the recommended dosage of ChemiClean (this product only!) on the back side (the side facing the waterflow) of a cascade filter filter pad or poly filter (if you are not using a cascade filter, pickup a cheap one that can conveniently fit on the side of the tank, the more flow the better). Putting the treatment on the water flow side keeps much of the chemical out of the tank but exposes the water to the antibacterial chemical. I have had to retreat two tanks when I used 1/3 the dosage but I have never lost critters or corals with this method and have been 100 percent successful (usually with one treatment).

I have had outbreaks of cyno during the first year in all but three of my tanks and the only recurring outbreak after this treatment was after an experiment with AZ9 to reduce nitrate. The resulting outbreak from THAT product required two treatments.
 

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