No , I did not.Did you siphon out as much as you can before you treated with chemiclean?
Are you sure it's cyano? Happy to get you a definitive ID if you're near San Jose and want to give me a water sample.I have run into a Cyano bloom. I treated with Chemiclean and did a 30% water change. But Cyano did not go away. My Phosphate is at 0.04 and Nitrate is reading 0.00. Please advise.
This would be a good idea. Also if OP could get a picture under white light it would be easier for us to see it. Hard to really tell what it is under blue light.Are you sure it's cyano? Happy to get you a definitive ID if you're near San Jose and want to give me a water sample.
I would appreciate if you can ID it . I'll be in San Jose are tomorrow and if you are available I can bring the water sample.Are you sure it's cyano? Happy to get you a definitive ID if you're near San Jose and want to give me a water sample.
I'll be at the bowl of pho event, but should otherwise be home. I'll shoot you a pm with my phone number and we can coordinate a drop off.I would appreciate if you can ID it . I'll be in San Jose are tomorrow and if you are available I can bring the water sample.
Seconding this. An informal survey I did a while ago, coupled with scouring the Reef2reef dino threads, seemed to lend weight to the notion that undetectable phosphates predisposed a tank to developing dinoflagellates. It's by no means causative, but each of the times my tanks have gotten dinoflagellates it's been at a time of limited nutrients.Feed more or your gonna bottom out. If that happens and your using chemiclean. Dinos will follow.