EdwinK
Member
If I did use erythromycin where would I get it?
Go to your local drug store and buy it. If you need a prescription ask your family doctor.
If I did use erythromycin where would I get it?
It isn't legal in the UK. There are good reasons why antibiotics are only available via prescription <"Non-prescription antimicrobial use worldwide: a systematic review">.As far as I know, it is illegal to purchase antibiotics (for fish/animals) in the UK without a prescription from a qualified Vet. Im not sure if buying from ebay would be legal here (Uk).
waste may be building up - my filter may be due a clean
It is strange because you have a fluidised bed filter, can you get more oxygen into the tank?but certainly always worst in low flow debris collecting areas.
It is strange because you have a fluidised bed filter, can you get more oxygen into the tank?
Cyano is a predecessor of algae in tanks. Once it runs it's cycle, algae of some sort normally take over. In my experience it's caused by a combination of low oxygen, high organics, especially leaching from too rich substrate, and light of course. The last time I had it, it was in a tank I systematically overfed.
Although one may suffer for weeks with it, cyano eventually disappears and gets replaced by the next pest that loves similar conditions. It has the potential to destroy plants if it grows rampant....
Some do say it's due to low nitrogen as cyano can produce it's own. Worth spot dosing with powdered kno3 on top of where the cyano is. I've never really tried that method because mine was certainly not caused by low nitrate. I fed my fry high protein foods several times a day...just before a huge cyano outbreak ....If anything, excessive nitrate and phosphate look like the more logical reason to me....
Having a rich substrate and dosing EI is certainly overdoing it. The ferts are important along the way afterwards, so the substrate doesn't get depleted completely but at the start you certainly don't need dosing anything.
But it's the organics in the soil that are attracting cyano and not directly the levels of nitrate or phosphate Rich substrate goes through heavy organics breakdown which depletes oxygen quite fast. Cyano loves these conditions, it is a heavy oxygen producer that can exist in anaerobic conditions unlike plants and algae which don't do as well as in such environment. They need oxygen as much as they need co2.
I thought I'd quote wiki because we sometimes forget the basics...
By producing gaseous oxygen as a byproduct of photosynthesis, cyanobacteria are thought to have converted the early reducing atmosphere into an oxidizing one, causing the "rusting of the Earth"[7] and causing the Great Oxygenation Event, dramatically changing the composition of life forms on Earth by stimulating biodiversity and leading to the near-extinction of anaerobic organisms (that is, oxygen-intolerant).