Hi keith, u can manually remove those infected leaves, siphon the dirt away.. do some trimming to thinning them down
Hi keith, u can manually remove those infected leaves, siphon the dirt away.. do some trimming to thinning them down
Hi, my glosso also had very fine black dot on the leave. I think it should be another type of algae. Already remove/cut some of infected leaves. But a week later, still found quite lot of the leaves are already infected again. I brought them found Gen-X, only planted new grown leaves & discarded the infected leaves. Don know how it grow back again. Very lazy or don have much time to cut it manually again.
HI jason, if thats the case, remove all of them and get new plants.. always remember that foreground plants like glosso, riccia, tenellus... looks nice when they r thick, but rotting happens to those below, thus, u will be unable to see it till its too late, another reason is the poor water circulation between the layers, therefore, algae oso will be very likely to grow and multiply.. always try siphoning during water change
Try using yamoto shrimps... It solve it for me...
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