Pet Information: Algae-Eaters
Algae is a fact of life in all fish tanks. The end product of the Nitrogen Cycle is Nitrate, which fuels plant and algae growth. While it is only toxic to fish at very high levels, fish keepers need to figure out some way to deal with it. Live plants use it for food and can naturally remove it from a properly stocked tank. In fish tanks without live plants, that are overstocked, or that have high light levels, algae will also grow. You can control the algae several ways: decrease the amount of light, increase the number of live plants, decrease the number of fish, preform frequent partial water changes, or add an animal that will eat the algae for you. Herbivores (plant eaters) have a lower bioload than carnivores (meat and insect eaters); the ammonia waste fish produce is the end product of breaking down the protein consumed and most plants simply have a lot less of it.
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