I recently upgraded my tank - from a 525xl to a 225g peninsula. I was going to start a tank journal (and still intend to) to document things but have found myself in an epic dino battle about 6 weeks in.
To cut to the chase - I had an outbreak of Ostreopsis, which I easily defeated with UV. The Ostreo was quickly replaced by Amphidinium (or similar - IDed with microscope). The latter is apparently known to be less toxic so I decided to minimize intervention and just let the biome work itself out. Lost my shrimp and had a lot of grumpy corals but otherwise mostly OKish.
In the last 2-3 days, however, corals have rapidly RTNed, the snails have all died, and a huge amount of brown, hairy stuff has appeared (on rocks, pumps, and other high-flow areas - not sand):
It resembles brown GHA but looks like cyano under a microscope. Based on my research, it is likely Lyngbya Cyanobacteria? Highly toxic, seems relatively rare in the hobby, and the examples I found usually resulted in full tank teardowns. The problem is that now my fish have started to die - so I need to take more urgent action, but am flying out of town for 4 days on Sunday.
My plan is to basically remove all of the affected live rock from the DT. I'll siphon the sand, perform a large WC, and then move the rocks from my sump (clean and uninfected) up to the DT. My concern is the bio filter - I have a good amount of fish and am afraid my sand and sump rock will not be enough to nitrify the ammonia while I am gone (or provide enough hiding spots for fish).
I am interested in the advice of anyone here who may have experience with this sort of outbreak, or thoughts on a better plan (that I can implement in 1.5 days or so), and/or has some spare liverock they can give/sell/loan to me to swap into my tank and keep the fish safe while I am out of town.
Thank you!
To cut to the chase - I had an outbreak of Ostreopsis, which I easily defeated with UV. The Ostreo was quickly replaced by Amphidinium (or similar - IDed with microscope). The latter is apparently known to be less toxic so I decided to minimize intervention and just let the biome work itself out. Lost my shrimp and had a lot of grumpy corals but otherwise mostly OKish.
In the last 2-3 days, however, corals have rapidly RTNed, the snails have all died, and a huge amount of brown, hairy stuff has appeared (on rocks, pumps, and other high-flow areas - not sand):
It resembles brown GHA but looks like cyano under a microscope. Based on my research, it is likely Lyngbya Cyanobacteria? Highly toxic, seems relatively rare in the hobby, and the examples I found usually resulted in full tank teardowns. The problem is that now my fish have started to die - so I need to take more urgent action, but am flying out of town for 4 days on Sunday.
My plan is to basically remove all of the affected live rock from the DT. I'll siphon the sand, perform a large WC, and then move the rocks from my sump (clean and uninfected) up to the DT. My concern is the bio filter - I have a good amount of fish and am afraid my sand and sump rock will not be enough to nitrify the ammonia while I am gone (or provide enough hiding spots for fish).
I am interested in the advice of anyone here who may have experience with this sort of outbreak, or thoughts on a better plan (that I can implement in 1.5 days or so), and/or has some spare liverock they can give/sell/loan to me to swap into my tank and keep the fish safe while I am out of town.
Thank you!