But we seem to have a lot of algae in our tank, is there anything else i can do to minimise it?
thanks in advance
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it depends what kind of tank you have, for most tropical tanks 12 hours is advisable.. if your redfield ratio is ok, you could go for 13-14 hours max without much algae problems. I have my Sera Tropical daylight and Sera Plant color TL's on for 13.5 hours, about once every 2 weeks I have to clean the front window of an occasional green dot of algaeNewFishKeeper wrote:lol!
Um yes it appears that as i love to gaze at them i have had the light on for too long!So how long do you recommend the light it on for a day? Its a blue light if that helps, i am really new to this so you have to bear with me!!
I think some of this attitude comes from the old fish keeping days when "aged" water was believed to have magical properties and people did not understand how biological filtration takes place. If you have the buckets and all the other junk out to do water changes, why spin your wheels with a small water change? Just carry an extra bucket or two and do the job right. I would recommend 30-50 percent as a "normal" water change. Dirty fishes (like Panaque spp.) will need a 60-80 percent water change weekly just to get the tank clear of sawdust. I do think a series of small water changes are better than one big water change if you have the time. Also, as was pointed out by racoll, you will need to work up to this regiment over time.Dont do 50% water change thats to much.(big shock on bio)
As I mentioned somewhere else, the average (and peak) nitrate (or other pollutant) level would be lower if you split the same water change volume into two lots.Shane wrote: I do think a series of small water changes are better than one big water change if you have the time.
-Shane