Flora & Fauna
673 entries β care guides, placement tips, and notes from the community
Black Beard Algae
Audouinella sp.
Dense, dark grey-to-black tufts that cling stubbornly to plants, hardscape, and equipment. One of the most frustrating nuisance algaes for planted tank keepers. Caused by COβ fluctuation and low or inconsistent carbon dioxide levels. Spot-treat with liquid carbon (Excel) or hydrogen peroxide.
Blanket Weed
Cladophora glomerata
Dense, rough-textured mats of dark green filaments that blanket pond plants and surfaces. Common in outdoor ponds and highly nutrient-rich tanks. More coarse and branched than soft hair algae. Difficult to eradicate fully β physically remove as much as possible before treating with algaecide or reducing nutrients aggressively.
Blue-Green Algae (Freshwater)
Cyanobacteria spp.
A blue-green or red-brown slime that coats the substrate, plants, and glass with a slimy, foul-smelling mat. Technically a bacterium, not true algae. Caused by low nitrates, poor flow, and organic waste. Responds to a 3-day blackout combined with the antibiotic erythromycin or hydrogen peroxide treatment.
Lyngbya
Lyngbya sp.
Dark, wiry filaments of cyanobacteria that form dense mats β often mistaken for BBA. Unlike true algae, it can fix atmospheric nitrogen, meaning low nitrogen levels do not suppress it. Produces toxins harmful to invertebrates. Requires the same treatment as blue-green algae: blackout, HβOβ treatment, and improved flow.
Staghorn Algae
Compsopogon sp.
Grey-green single strands that branch into antler-like forks β often tangled in plant leaves and filter intakes. Like BBA, it signals COβ problems. More responsive to spot-treatment with liquid carbon than BBA. Siamese Algae Eaters will consume it.
Water Net Algae
Hydrodictyon reticulatum
Remarkable bright green net-like colonies β a tessellated honeycomb of cells visible to the naked eye. Beautiful under a microscope but a serious nuisance in garden ponds. Thrives in warm, nutrient-rich water. Manual removal is the primary method as few animals eat it effectively.