mh0000
07-25-2009, 11:08 PM
Hello, I have a 90 gallon tank with a single RES turtle in it. As such, I have a UV and incandescent light for basking. Therefore, I have ran into the problem of algae that I would love to eliminate. While a turtle is known to be "messy" on the individual level, a single turtle in 90 gallons certainly yields a low total bioload. My tap water reads 5ppm nitrate (I will be testing phosphate soon), and after 2-3 weeks of absolutely no maintenance, the reading doubles to 10ppm nitrates. My question is, how will the smaller bioload affect the efficiency of a scrubber? If it bottlenecks algae growth, will I not need to clean it as frequently? Or maybe even allow for a smaller screen (i'm a little tight on space)? Perhaps with a smaller screen, I can place an emphasis on effective lighting over the entire surface of the screen rather than only a small section of it.
Also, how well does a scrubber work in freshwater? I know someone on the MFK forum made an outdoor one will good results (as far as I know). Anyone else with knowledge of the effectiveness of FW scrubbers?
I'm desperate to get rid of the algae, I'm even going to construct a DIY external overflow box just to accommodate a scrubber. Just hoping this will work!
Thanks!!!!
Also, how well does a scrubber work in freshwater? I know someone on the MFK forum made an outdoor one will good results (as far as I know). Anyone else with knowledge of the effectiveness of FW scrubbers?
I'm desperate to get rid of the algae, I'm even going to construct a DIY external overflow box just to accommodate a scrubber. Just hoping this will work!
Thanks!!!!