Setting Up My FIRST EVER Saltwater Aquarium! Part 2: ADDING MACRO ALGAE!

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024

Комментарии • 115

  • @MJAquascaping
    @MJAquascaping  Год назад

    Everything I've used so far (affiliate links)
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    Equipment I like to use (affiliate links)
    Tank
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    Light
    US: bit.ly/3S2WxjC
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    Wood (similar)
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    Rocks (similar)
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    Dwarf Hairgrass (Eleocharis parvula)
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    Umbrella Hair Grass (Eleocharis Vivipara)
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    Riccardia moss
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    Crypt lutea
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    Crypt walkeri
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  • @alternativeaquascaping517
    @alternativeaquascaping517 Год назад +45

    Also, that red slime is called cyanobacteria, definitely increase that flow, you want those algaes swaying like a field of grass. Something small like a nero 3 or jebao works great for a nano tank. Shoot for 10-20x turnover with no dead spots

    • @TheLiddojunior
      @TheLiddojunior Год назад +4

      For such a small tank, he doesn't need a wavemaker but could get away with using a small internal skimmer for increased flow! Something like the UNS delta skimmer. He has fine sand.

    • @Bullshitvol2
      @Bullshitvol2 Год назад +6

      Cyanobacteria is probably growing because his phosphates are over the roof, and not because of the flow. Out of balance nutrients are the main reason for undesireable algae.
      Also that sera testkit is pretty useless of accurate readings. Get salifert tests for nitrate and ATI tests for phosphate if you want to get accurate readings.

  • @dusk1947
    @dusk1947 Год назад +18

    I'm going to enthusiastically nerd-out for a second because I love this kind of tank:
    Nope, it's not a root. It's a hold-fast. The difference is that plant roots absorb nutrients, and some can conduct photosynthesis in the case of many epiphytes. Algae hold-fast's on the other hand are only structural anchors, but they can be incredibly strong when compared against a delicate root system.
    The other cool thing is the difference in photosynthesis. Macro algae's have a much wider range in primary photo-pigments, than plants. Specifically when you shift from a green algae, to a red or brown algae. Not something your likley to notice with a full spectrum light, but it's a really cool difference in there biology.
    As for the brown stuff: diatoms, cyanobacteria, and dinoflagates will all establish in your tank alongside side other bacteria. Marine systems have a much longer initial "cycle", which is a very poor word choice.
    You system big or small will go through ecological succession, with different microorganisms competing for space as they establish.
    Adding primary consumers like copepods will help maintain those population of microfauna, so they don't explode into what's referred to as an "ugly phase".
    But, just be patient. You can stabilize a freshwater system in a few weeks, but most marine system will generally take several months. It's frustrating, but normal.

    • @nedtroninck9299
      @nedtroninck9299 Год назад

      Very good advice. I’ve been experiencing this process the last 7 months. Even with ocean live rock there have still been different algae phases etc

  • @scaughtedaug
    @scaughtedaug Год назад +2

    Love the videos! Definitely following your foray into the salt world.
    Some low volume lo-fi music in the background of your videos would be amaze-ballz!

  • @NOoneENV
    @NOoneENV Год назад +2

    Fzone has an auto top off and its not ugly I'm using one and I love!

  • @BetuelGujonsson
    @BetuelGujonsson Год назад +1

    Love this! I'll set one up sometime in the future. Macro algae and Sea horses would be dreamy.

  • @nickbovee4372
    @nickbovee4372 Год назад +6

    Great job! So glad you take us along with this interesting journey and you've kept it "real" 😊

  • @eliasgilmore2795
    @eliasgilmore2795 Год назад +4

    I’m so excited to see how this fish tank turns out MJ! It’s so cool that you’re finally doing a saltwater tank after years of only freshwater. I have been watching your videos for years now and I hope you keep making more. Can’t wait to see what inhabitants will be in the macro algae fish tank.

  • @toddwatanabe7298
    @toddwatanabe7298 Год назад +5

    Love your channel. I have a reef tank, but have started my first freshwater planted tank thanks to you and others. Most reef keepers battle with cyano whether they admit it or not. Mine comes and goes. "They" say to always keep your Nitrates higher than your phosphate. Like maybe 100 times higher. I'm happy if I'm under 0.05 ppm for phosphate and 10 to 20 ppm for Nitrates. But, I've never kept macro algae, so maybe it needs a little more Nitrate. The comment someone made on flow is also good. Cyano usually clings to areas with low or no flow.

  • @alexandrafontaine8111
    @alexandrafontaine8111 Год назад

    Good jod! I realllly like the red salt thank. 🤩 Good luck! 💁🏻‍♀️🇨🇦

  • @carolthorn
    @carolthorn Год назад +1

    hope to see more updates on the reef tank!

  • @Tigahboy
    @Tigahboy Год назад +1

    Excited to see this project progress!

  • @andrejAgulage
    @andrejAgulage Год назад

    Cool looking marine planted tank 😎 I wish you good luck with cyano🤞

  • @madhatterjones4781
    @madhatterjones4781 Год назад

    Excited to see it develop and grow.
    Big love from Australia

  • @kimthompson1618
    @kimthompson1618 Год назад

    I love how clean this build looks. The clear intake and output lines are awesome.

    • @hypanusamericanus9058
      @hypanusamericanus9058 5 месяцев назад

      Clean = low biodiversity in this case. IMO it would be better to see this tank crawling with microinvertebrates, encrusting lifeforms, mulm/detritus, etc. which would help prevent stuff like nuisance algae from dominating.

  • @jasonsj
    @jasonsj Год назад

    Thank you Mark for those amazing videos! I just subscribed. Btw you remind me of Jaqen H’ghar from Game of thrones hahaha

  • @toadpope2522
    @toadpope2522 Год назад

    This is cool! I’m excited to watch your journey with this tank

  • @Talons_N_Tails
    @Talons_N_Tails Год назад

    When you get off work and see another video posted from you .. 🙌🏻❤❤❤🙌🏻

  • @MoonchildBrody
    @MoonchildBrody Год назад +1

    Glad to have caught your videos at the start of your saltwater aquarium keeping. I'm interested in getting into it myself, because I'd like to breed nerite snails, and maybe some other future creatures that can go between water salinities. Although I'm more interested in breeding water hoppers -- for a lack of better words -- I'm sure it'll be a gateway into me becoming obsessed with saltwater tanks. For the moment, I'll live through your saltwater tank haha!

  • @lakeshiamills1454
    @lakeshiamills1454 Год назад +2

    The brown slime could be cyano or diatoms. Generally best way to address it is depending on your nitrate and phosphate levels as well as your lighting schedule. White light which macros love also lead to issues with cyano, turf algae, bryopsis, bubble algae, etc. I would consider reducing the photo period or splitting it up (4 hours on, 2 hours off, 4 hours on) that really helped me when my macro tanks was going through that stage

  • @YourFavoriteNewb
    @YourFavoriteNewb Год назад

    I am genuinely so excited for this tank, if it's successful I'd love to do something similar in the future with a little clownfish

  • @Sangor03-SH
    @Sangor03-SH Год назад +3

    That grape caulerpa is called "Lato" in my country, and it's edible.

    • @ambersmith2612
      @ambersmith2612 Год назад +1

      I was just gonna say how delicious grape algae is

    • @Sangor03-SH
      @Sangor03-SH Год назад

      @AmberSmith yep! And it's also beneficial and helps prevent thyroid/goiter

  • @DavidDavis311
    @DavidDavis311 Год назад

    Can’t wait to see how this tank evolves! I think I would get some livestock in there asap so you can rely less on experimenting with dosing at least until the tank is more established. The salt mix already contains minerals such as calcium so there’s that to consider too.

  • @petrfrolich7544
    @petrfrolich7544 Год назад

    Looks interesting, wish you very good luck and can’t wait for updates:)

  • @stoneysscapes7544
    @stoneysscapes7544 Год назад

    Hey Mark , I just wanted to say congrats on your channel reaching 100K Subscribers!!! It's so awesome that you are going to have one cool addition to your wall, and I am looking forward to seeing where you will have it displayed . Which is the most recent reasons for another congrats on the new OASE SCAPERLINE aquariums and finally I am sure that you will enjoy this display from the RUclips channel Aqua Splendor and the video is- Anemone Aquarium- The Sunburst Bubble Tip Sep 7 2019
    The way the Clownfish is swimming and then the way it looks right @ the camera is as good as it can get , and it would be a great setup for one of the new Scaper tanks especially if you just went a little crazy and get as many as you think would be a safe start and there are exactly 30 different species + incredibly hardy + they can live up to 10 years and last is the different positions that they have when they are sleeping !!! Best of everything, MJ 🛥

    • @MJAquascaping
      @MJAquascaping  Год назад +1

      Thanks bud! Just watched the video, that is pretty amazing indeed!

  • @TylerValbuena
    @TylerValbuena Год назад +1

    Should add some copepods and feed them with phytoplankton. Will clean up a lot of the nuisance algae and avoid the “ugly phase” of a new reef tank

  • @knabdank
    @knabdank Год назад +1

    been thinking of setting up a salt water tank for like a year now love watching vids like this for inspiration, look forwards to seeing the results and growth!

  • @Layheeee
    @Layheeee Год назад

    It’s cynao and a bit of dinoflagellates, the cynao is the dark red slimier stuff lower in the tank and can be treated by maintaining phosphate and nitrates above zero. Sam story with dinos, there the more brownish bubble producing slime on the top leaves and they thrive in highlight zero nutrients tanks. Both pest algae’s extremely common in newer tanks, and even some older tanks. Just lost 90% of my coral to Dino’s but I’m finally on the other side and happy as could be!

  • @TheLiddojunior
    @TheLiddojunior Год назад +1

    If you ever want to add corals, i recommend soft corals! I think gorgonians would really fit well into macro algae tanks, even maybe a cabbage coral or colt coral.

    • @nedtroninck9299
      @nedtroninck9299 Год назад

      Gorgonians/zoanthids and Macros are exactly what I’m running and i love how natural it looks. Gorgs are easy and highly underrated

  • @label4706
    @label4706 Год назад

    Loving this series!! Now you have me considering salt water!!

  • @Jammilogy
    @Jammilogy Год назад

    Out of topic, you look like a CK model. Very Cool Bro! Btw, I like this video. I'm planning to have a saltwater tank too.

  • @lakeshiamills1454
    @lakeshiamills1454 Год назад +2

    Enjoy the macros! Culerpa is awesome, I love it grows fast and is amazing at nutrient control. It may die back a bit and go sexual before it makes a comeback. Some macros will require a deeper sand bed so look into ways of adding those algaes without having to add more sand (I've used containers to create deep sand beds for those types).

    • @hypanusamericanus9058
      @hypanusamericanus9058 5 месяцев назад

      As far as I am concerned, no macroalgae require sand though some appreciate having it around to anchor in. Seagrasses definitely require a sandbed.

  • @tracys.6033
    @tracys.6033 Год назад

    Tank looks good MJ. It's great but also a little weird to see you so happy putting algae in a tank! If fresh water diatoms looked as nice as these my problems would be solved! Looking forward to your next update.

  • @chicanoaquatics143
    @chicanoaquatics143 Год назад

    Haha nice work man! You're doing everything I did when I started...except I didn't get a test kit. Best of luck brother!

  • @glopper2148
    @glopper2148 Год назад

    I have used the grape caulerpa in the kitchen before. We referred to them as "sea grapes." If I remember correctly they swell up with heavy flow. We would rinse them under running water to fatten them up right before plating. Maybe that's common with macro algae? Not sure, I've only ever done fresh water. Anyways, great content... I've only been watching for a short time, but I love the channel.✌

    • @hypanusamericanus9058
      @hypanusamericanus9058 5 месяцев назад

      You are simply rehydrating the sea grapes. Macroalgae do not naturally swell up, though different flow patterns can affect the ways in which they grow.
      Fun fact: marimo are true freshwater macroalgae, so you may have possibly dealt with macroalgae after all!

  • @thehypercasual385
    @thehypercasual385 11 месяцев назад

    looks good. love a macroalgae tank. the red slime is cyanobacteria as others have noted. I really would like to try and persuade you to change out that rock for a more porous live rock. yours appears to be rather solid and almost volcanic looking?

  • @priyankardas2668
    @priyankardas2668 Год назад

    Looks very interesting....even the way the macroalgae moves with the flow has something special about it... very different to plants, yet similar in many ways...

  • @willwilkinson6989
    @willwilkinson6989 Год назад

    Great vid! That def looks like red cyanobacteria. Idk if this is much help but when i had cyanobacteria on my freshwater tank, I used Chemiclean Aquarium Treatment and it absolutely wiped the Cyanobacteria in a week and never had a problem again I was actually impressed by how quickly and effective it was. The box says it can be used for both salt and freshwater. Good luck

  • @aapassion5135
    @aapassion5135 Год назад

    Red Cyanobacteria very often in marine aquarium sometime increasing water flow can help if not there is some treatments for Cyanobacteria but more natural method is Redfield ratio. ( ratio between phosphate and nitrogen) works for freshwater and marine algae;)

  • @matthewsmith22
    @matthewsmith22 Год назад +1

    This looks great, hoping you troll all the salties and stock with mollies 😂!
    Have you seen the Mark's aquatics uk native rock pool aquarium, that was absolutely stunning and had a similar feel to it

  • @tombarb2864
    @tombarb2864 Год назад

    I am not a saltwater person. This is interesting now with “plants”. Here in Southern California we have huge kelp beds in the ocean. I guess that could be a “plant”. 🤷‍♂️. I wish you success on your venture MJ

    • @hypanusamericanus9058
      @hypanusamericanus9058 5 месяцев назад

      The brown macroalgae found off our coast are not plants. Unlike the red and green macroalage in this aquarium, brown macroalgae belong outside the kingdom Plantae and in the kingdom Chromista alongside diatoms. California does still have seagrass beds; seagrasses are vascular plants like those you see in freshwater tanks and on land and unlike red and green macroalage.

  • @conservativeslovekids5326
    @conservativeslovekids5326 Год назад +6

    Remember that macroalage can transform into a reproductive state and will release all their contained nutrients at once

    • @hypanusamericanus9058
      @hypanusamericanus9058 5 месяцев назад

      That's mostly just an issue with Caulerpa and only if it becomes stressed (ex. due to overcrowding).

  • @JosephGodisGood
    @JosephGodisGood Год назад

    the stringy red algae that you tucked away on left in the rock. I feel like you could of done something cooler lol

  • @bubblewizardmtg8254
    @bubblewizardmtg8254 Год назад +3

    doesn't look like cyanobacteria to me, i would guess it could be diatoms (from silicates in the new sand) so it will die eventually as you water change out the silicates, but if you wish to speed the process up i recommend JBL silicatex rapid.

  • @alino61
    @alino61 Год назад +1

    thnx ..lol you got me to do a planted co2 tank ..and now im going to start a mixed reef tank ..omg all your fault 😁

  • @happybubble4863
    @happybubble4863 Год назад

    These look so cool 👌

  • @rickyabdullah4758
    @rickyabdullah4758 Год назад

    Nice salt water tank 👍🏻

  • @marcmyers1465
    @marcmyers1465 Год назад +1

    You're going to want an Iodide supplement as well... 😉 I know Kent Marine use to sell one ? 🤔

  • @BabyFish4Music
    @BabyFish4Music Год назад +2

    Using RO/Di water? tap water,sometimes will create those algaes...

  • @pookahlakatribe
    @pookahlakatribe Год назад

    Oh man if you were here in Hawaii you could easily pick up plants and algae and coral for your tank 😮. I've always wanted to start a salt water tank but I'm afraid... Anyways, I hope to see the growth of this tank! Best of luck to you
    Aloha 🤙
    *edit I would send some limu *Lee mu* (algae in Hawaiian ) to you so you can grow a little bit of what the pacific waters have to offer 😊

  • @alternativeaquascaping517
    @alternativeaquascaping517 Год назад

    When i had mine, i used nitrogen and iron every few days, and micro nutrients every couple of weeks

  • @lorenzospina3174
    @lorenzospina3174 Год назад

    I love macroalgae but it's not simple find them .
    Greetings from Italy.

  • @widarohlin1412
    @widarohlin1412 Год назад

    Nice Video!

  • @trappermcgruder3491
    @trappermcgruder3491 Год назад +3

    Do dwarf seahorses

  • @lochy1128
    @lochy1128 Год назад

    Nice! 🐠

  • @formgeben
    @formgeben Год назад

    Any updates on this tank? I'm excited how it turned out

  • @Egyaquatic
    @Egyaquatic Год назад

    I think you need to use wave maker

  • @martiendenhaan9119
    @martiendenhaan9119 Год назад

    Mark, die Caulerpa taxifolia mag niet verkocht of verhandeld worden. Het is een invasieve soort in subtropische zeeën, waaronder de Middellandse zee. Je kunt hem beter niet promoten. Verder mooie video.

    • @martiendenhaan9119
      @martiendenhaan9119 Год назад

      Caulerpa racemosa is ook invasief verklaard in 2003. Caulerpa prolifera is een autochtone soort in onder andere de Middellandse zee. Die kan wel.

  • @seanaldrich5024
    @seanaldrich5024 11 месяцев назад +1

    I never knew seaweeds were actually algae, but don't they deal with tides all day so wouldn't u need a wave maker in this instance? I know the last video u didn't want heavy flow at first at least.

    • @hypanusamericanus9058
      @hypanusamericanus9058 5 месяцев назад

      Most macroalgae in the aquarium hobby do not have particularly demanding flow requirements. I assume this is because the species in question come from relatively sheltered environments. There are exceptions though, like various brown macroalgae which are not typically seen in the hobby.

  • @walterotiepka1460
    @walterotiepka1460 Год назад

    Add some type of clean up crew, I gave up sw aquariums few years ago but this something I might do

    • @marcmyers1465
      @marcmyers1465 Год назад

      Neon Gobies, Clown Gobies, and some Shrimp will help without contributing much to the bioload. 😉

    • @hypanusamericanus9058
      @hypanusamericanus9058 5 месяцев назад

      @@marcmyers1465 Neon and clown gobies do not help clean the tank and neither will most shrimp. Snails are some of the best options alongside microinvertebrates.

  • @kingzlatan12
    @kingzlatan12 Год назад +1

    You can eat the grape. We call it Latok in malaysia 👍🏻

  • @apdroidgeek1737
    @apdroidgeek1737 7 месяцев назад +1

    lava rock is a no no in reef tank

  • @MinhHieu-ie6eh
    @MinhHieu-ie6eh Год назад +1

    Hey MJ i has a question ? How many gallon is that saltwater tank ? Also which fish and invertebrate do you plan to add that tank ?

    • @hudsonhaynie1632
      @hudsonhaynie1632 Год назад +1

      It’s a 30 centimeter cube, it’s a bit more than 6 gallons

    • @MJAquascaping
      @MJAquascaping  Год назад +2

      Yeah 6-7 gallons or so! No idea yet about stocking 😊

    • @MinhHieu-ie6eh
      @MinhHieu-ie6eh Год назад

      6-7 gallon huh ? Uh that is almost a pico size tank so it kind hard to call it a “nano tank” and which size fish can be add in there is pretty much most likey small species of Goby (like cleaner goby: Neon Blue Goby, or Clown Goby: yellow, green, and orange, or goby with parther pistol shrimp:High Fin Banded Goby and Yasha Goby) and for invertebrate... well you has Astrea Snail, Blue Leg Hermitcrab, and maybe Sexy Shrimp ? Tho the last one more for look then any clean up crew stuff then the other two.

  • @OlgaStjarna
    @OlgaStjarna Год назад

    Why i see smiling face in this stones 😂

  • @ferryonn
    @ferryonn Год назад

    what if you injected co2 into a saltwater aquarium, would the plant get the benefits during photosynthesis? 🤔

    • @hypanusamericanus9058
      @hypanusamericanus9058 5 месяцев назад

      No one injects CO2 in the saltwater hobby, probably because it lowers the pH of water. Just feed more or manually dose nutrients into the water (heck, you could dose ammonia) and the macroalgae would do wonderfully.

  • @pawewasiak8485
    @pawewasiak8485 Год назад

    I think that when You will introduce a "live stock", dosing nitrate will be unnecessary, because fish and shrimps will build nitrate levels from waste and leftovers from fish food

  • @hudsonhaynie1632
    @hudsonhaynie1632 Год назад

    You need more flow, at least 20x turnover. Maybe cut back on the red and green light as well. Reefs are blue for a reason.

    • @tonywomersley1256
      @tonywomersley1256 Год назад +1

      Do we need to see such a flowrate for macro algae. I'd say not from my time in the hobby, my first tank had all manner of macro algae, perfectly happy swaying gently. As soon as I added more flow, the planting died back. Except the caluerpa which liked the dynamic, dirtier water conditions of the sump and red/green plant lighting - oddly enough. Sure thing we need the flow rates for coral, but not algaes. Also reefs are blue for the reason of highlighting symbiotic colours in coral. Where the plants need plant spectrums, not coral spectrums

    • @hypanusamericanus9058
      @hypanusamericanus9058 5 месяцев назад

      @@tonywomersley1256 A few macroalgae do require strong flow, but they are rare in the hobby. These tend to be the more difficult-to-keep red and brown macroalage.

  • @prophecy66
    @prophecy66 Год назад +3

    Here we all are spending time and money to prevent algae in freshwater and you're willingly adding it to saltwater lol. Funny how in saltwater, algae, of a certain type, is wanted haha.

    • @hypanusamericanus9058
      @hypanusamericanus9058 5 месяцев назад

      There are still some desirable freshwater algae, like marimo.

  • @martinprochazka6324
    @martinprochazka6324 Год назад

    what is the name of the inlet with the skimmer please?

  • @aurikarusnak8872
    @aurikarusnak8872 Год назад

    😍😍😍👍👍👍

  • @Aquaticvibes9775
    @Aquaticvibes9775 Год назад

    💚🖤

  • @gusart9168
    @gusart9168 Год назад

    ฉันอายุ14ฉันดูช่องนี้ทุกวัน แฟนคลับจากไทย

  • @cr0n557
    @cr0n557 Год назад

    that grape is edible i believe

  • @henrylo6773
    @henrylo6773 Год назад

    Lol we eat those in my country.

  • @KalebMorgan-l8t
    @KalebMorgan-l8t Год назад +1

    first comment

  • @rupinnair2225
    @rupinnair2225 Год назад

    Hope that algae, doesn't get algae.😂😂

  • @zoraz8404
    @zoraz8404 Год назад

    that looks like cyanobakteria for me

  • @mikeireland5118
    @mikeireland5118 Год назад

    MJ I am a huge fan of your fresh water work, but I am utterly gutted by your use of Caulerpa species in this tank. Caulerpa is an utterly devastating species throughout the world, particularly in the Mediterranean Sea so close to you. Please research the genus Caulerpa and reconsider your choice of macro algae for this project. This is an opportunity to rectify a misstep an educate your followers. I beg you not to miss this opportunity to act responsibility and sustainably!

    • @hypanusamericanus9058
      @hypanusamericanus9058 5 месяцев назад

      It's not a problem if he is properly disposing of his tank water and macroalgae trimmings.

  • @patricktoulze1274
    @patricktoulze1274 Год назад

    Really interested on this one, microalgae.... Cool.