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Shoal & Stem

Flora & Fauna

673 entries β€” care guides, placement tips, and notes from the community

algae
hard

Blue-Green Algae (Saltwater)

Cyanobacteria spp.

algaesaltwater

Red, purple, or dark blue-green slime mats that smother the sandbed and rockwork with a slimy, oxygen-depleting film. Technically a bacterium. Caused by low nitrates, poor flow, and high dissolved organics. A 3-day blackout, hydrogen peroxide spot-treatment, and improved flow usually break the cycle.

algae
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Bryopsis

Bryopsis sp.

algaesaltwater

Feathery, fern-like dark green algae that is notoriously difficult to eliminate β€” one of the most persistent reef tank nuisances. Resistant to most herbivores. Best controlled by raising magnesium to 1500–1800 ppm for 2–4 weeks (magnesium treatment). Sea hares will consume it but are not a permanent solution.

algae
hard

Bubble Algae

Valonia ventricosa

algaesaltwater

Iridescent green spheres that appear harmless in small numbers but rapidly colonise rock if left unchecked. Emerald crabs are the most effective biological control. Do not pop bubbles β€” they release spores and worsen the outbreak. Manual removal requires extracting the entire holdfast; even fragments regrow.

algae
hard

Derbesia

Derbesia sp.

algaesaltwater

Fine, fluffy dark green tufts that resemble a softer version of Bryopsis. Often appears in high-nutrient systems and around powerhead intakes. Like Bryopsis it is resistant to most herbivores. Sea hares will consume it; magnesium treatment (1500–1800 ppm) is effective. Reducing phosphate below 0.05 ppm also helps.

algae
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Dictyota

Dictyota sp.

algaesaltwater

Flat, iridescent brown-olive blades that spread over rockwork and corals. Beautiful under certain lighting β€” shimmers blue-green β€” but highly invasive in reef tanks. Produces chemical deterrents that most fish avoid. Very difficult to eliminate; manual removal stimulates regrowth. Sea urchins (Diadema) and Thalassoma wrasses occasionally graze it.

algae
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Dinoflagellates

Symbiodinium / various

algaesaltwater

Brown, stringy, bubble-filled slime that often appears in new reef tanks β€” frequently mistaken for cyanobacteria. Dinoflagellates ('dinos') form slimy mats that can smother corals and sandbed. Treatment is complex: raise nitrates (>2 ppm), raise phosphates (>0.05 ppm), run extended dark periods, and increase UV sterilisation. One of the most frustrating reef nuisances.

algae
hard

Turf Algae

Various genera

algaesaltwater

A dense mat of mixed short filamentous algae β€” the dominant algae type on wave-swept reef flats in nature. In captivity it traps detritus and is extremely difficult to manually remove. Sea urchins (Diadema, Tuxedo) and tangs are the most effective grazers. Consider a manual scraping plus herbivore-stocking approach.