Promoting algae

Post pictures of your beloved catfish aquaria here. Also good for pictures of your (cat)fish rooms or equipment discussions. If you are posting pictures of identified catfish, please do so in the appropriate husbandry and reproduction forum above.
Post Reply
Beeman
Posts: 8
Joined: 10 Feb 2006, 10:15
Location 1: Fremont, CA

Promoting algae

Post by Beeman »

I've recently set up a new tank, for the first time with a sand base. After adding a the first few fish I got a good bloom of brown algae(diatoms). I got some ottos to clean that up and absolutly love them, I can't belive common plecos exist in the trade when this fish that never gets over 2 inches exists and is so much fun to watch. So now I'm trying to think of ways to farm diatoms for them. any good ideas? they are eating other foods, algea eater wafers, and I'm trying flash-frozen spinach recently.

If I add Phosphorus and Potassium will that help the algae out-compete the plants and grow like crazy again? Should I be worried about the amount of silicate in the water going down, maybe replace some of the sand at times?

My first test I'm gonna save the water I chage out and put it under a growlight with a good flat rock in there, hopefully that will get covered. Will this need a fish in it to keep the N levels up or areation? Can I just have that be the target of weely water changes and it'll stay good?

Lots of questions I know, but I couldn't find anything on promoting algae growth, only preventing it, and it doesn't seem like I can just reverse that advice and have it work :)
User avatar
Silurus
Posts: 12420
Joined: 31 Dec 2002, 11:35
I've donated: $12.00!
My articles: 55
My images: 893
My catfish: 1
My cats species list: 90 (i:0, k:0)
Spotted: 424
Location 1: Singapore
Location 2: Moderator Emeritus

Post by Silurus »

You might want to try farming algae.
Image
Beeman
Posts: 8
Joined: 10 Feb 2006, 10:15
Location 1: Fremont, CA

Post by Beeman »

Hey look at that, I guess I need to try somemore keywords in my searches :) I tink I'll do a sand base in my water container to keep the silicate levels up and add a little fertilizer see how it goes.

Thank you very much. I love this website, its gotten me back into my favorite hobby of aquariumkeeping.


Also is driftwood important for ottos, the internet seems a bit conflicted on this.
Post Reply

Return to “Tank Talk”