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just my dang luck

  • Thread starter Thread starter jokersplayground
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jokersplayground

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So I have beat the cyano(thank god lol) it's been a week sense the last sign of the cyano. So I thought I was just getting diatoms but it's not diatoms. I have Dino's(great the tank gods hate me for some reason). My nitrates are at 5ppm, phosphates are at 0ppm. I was thinking to start dosing some peroxide. I'm kind of nervous to dose it cause I have a really nice nem and a few sps. What do you guys think I should do?
 
Here is a pic that looks just like it just mine don't have bubbles. uploadfromtaptalk1448580792498.jpg I can't snap a pic as the lights are off. But I will tomorrow moring

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I got fooled once I had Cyano and Diatoms that combined fit the description of Dino's. I kept on course for Cyano and it all straightened itself out. Just make sure and don't do anything rash.
 
That sure looks like dinos to me. Bummer.

I've never tried the peroxide approach so I can't offer any advice on that. Sorry and good luck. I bet you're missing that cyano right about now :(
 
I am missing it lol. It just sucks I fix one problem just to get another problem.
 
Ok so after looking at the tank today really close I can't tell if it's dino or not. Cause on the a couple days ago I dosed chemiclean to make sure I don't get cyano back. I still have micro bubbles everywhere from my skimmer. On the rocks it kinda looks like hair algae but can't tell with all the bubbles in the tank. On the sand there is that long brown stringy film again can't tell if it's dino cause of all the micro bubbles. I really hope I don't have this crap lol I hate dino. I had it a long time ago in my 120 and I killed it with peroxide.
 
I'd avoid dosing hydrogen peroxide because from what I've read I don't see how it is beneficial to getting rid of them when you're killing other unseen things in the tank. I'd raise your pH and do water changes/siphon it as much as you can. If you don't add anything for a while and are rigorous I'd expect them to go away as soon as they exhaust their food. Hydrogen peroxide is a nasty chemical for biochemical reactions and people don't realize that. Hydrogen peroxide is bad for people, and many people don't realize this because of the harmless sting and fizz it gives when it touches a wound. Your body does that with an enzyme to keep it out because it isn't good for you.
 
I’ve had Dino's in two of my tanks (confirmed by microscope). The first time I got it to slow down but never went away. I tried blackouts, elevated PH, Hydrogen peroxide, stopped water changes and in the end I freshwater dipped my rocks and corals and then replaced the sand bed. My all of my critters lived in a 32 gal brute barrel for a while my tank recycled everything stabilized.
My second fight several years later, I used the blackout method, Hydrogen Peroxide and elevated PH. I had tried this on several occasions but each time the dinos would eventually comeback. During one of the blackout/PH periods/H2O2 treatments I started Fauna Marin DinoX which without a doubt did the trick. My corals lost a lot of color but are making a comeback and recently I have had a Diatom bloom which I believe had something to do with the dying dinos or the DinoX treatment not sure which one. Over all I would recommend the DinoX treatment but I have been told that it does not work for all species of Dinos.
Good luck dinos have been known to cause people to tear down their tanks.
 
In my opinion everything comes down to good husbandry of your tank. Not that you don't do that but sometimes we all miss something usually something simple like missing a water change feeding too much or overdosing something you aren't measuring enough to control I have found after a while you may not need to dose or run carbon or gfo to maintain good water. Dino's are tough to beat but it can be done
 
I think the root of all your recent problems is the rock you purchased to start this build many months ago.......bad from the get go!
Remove it, good acid bath and re-start it (naturally in a separate container/tank)
 
There is nothing on my original rock. I bought some more rock a while back and ever sense then I have been battling this problem. But I did not think anything of it as it was covered in coriline.
 
I had Dino's in my 75 reef. It was stringy and brown with bubbles within the snot,classic case. I battled it for a while and it pissed me off because daily I had to blow off my corals with the turkey baster, especially my birds nest because the snot would get so long it eventually dislodged itself, float around and catch the sps and tips. This eventually will cause die back to a extent but you have to stay on it to save the precious coral. What I'd did to address it was fist test my water for problems, imbalance, my rodi checked out fine, the next was parameters. I use API till this day, reagents go bad for a fact my nitrates tested fine with my API and the other parameters where in check as well but not being convinced I took my water sample to the LFS and sure as snot my nitrates were in the red sky high.... With Dino's a lot of reefs tend to agree that water changes are not the answer and can exasperate the problem but with out doing the research and seeing this issue with water changes, I proceeded to do massive water changes to correct the problem. My nitrates were 100+ ppm so I wanted to attempt to cut the number in half , I did a 30gallon water change and it brought the number down by almost half. I countinued during the next couple weeks with the same method to bring it down eventually to 5ppm and was satisfied and out of money and still with Dino's . My solutions was complete lights out. I rapped the tank all the way around with bankets and the top was basically covered by the light. I had to do this multiple times with short brake in between to give the coral some light (sps dominant they all browned out)and eventually the Dino's halted. I shorted my light cycle a couple of hours and maintained better water quality and it worked. The corals came back with magnificent colors as well from reducing the nitrates.
 
I agree with Mike N. You've had a number of problems with this build and it's known that you started with uncured rock. That in and of itself is a problem. Furthermore, it hasn't been long since you started this tank. Just because you've completed the initial nitrogen cycle doesn't mean the tank is mature at all. Especially when you start off with dead rock.
 
I have fixed the issue. I didn't have Dino's after all which is good. All the algae is gone too

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What did you do or change? The pic sure looked like dinos to me..
 
That pic is not my tank I took it off of google. But I just kept doing big water changes and sucking as much of it out as possible. I tried to post a pic of my tank now but it's to big
 
ImageUploadedByTapatalk1449106961.545533.jpg

I had a similar outbreak. Couple large water changes while siphoning out what I could and total black out for like a week.

At the same time, a couple Stomatella hitchhiking snails surfaced and mowed through it. LoL


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