⭐ Identifying Dino's
Identify Dinoflagellates & Golden Algae
Use this microscope comparison guide to identify the exact species in your reef tank. Correct identification is the key to choosing the right treatment and restoring biodiversity.
⭐ Beating Dinoflagellates, the Right Way!!!
Dinoflagellates aren’t beaten with chemicals, blackout periods, or endless water changes. They’re beaten by restoring what your reef actually needs: biodiversity, stability, and balanced nutrients.
- Stop over-cleaning: Your reef needs microfauna, not sterility.
- Raise nutrients: NO₃ 10–15 ppm, PO₄ 0.08–0.12 ppm.
- Add biodiversity: Phytoplankton, copepods, microfauna blends.
- Use UV correctly: Only effective for free-swimmers (Ostreopsis, Prorocentrum).
- Reduce white light: High white intensity fuels outbreaks.
- Stabilize your system: Consistency beats dinos every time.
Once your tank has the right conditions, dinos collapse fast — and stay gone. This guide helps you identify exactly which species you’re dealing with so you can treat it properly.
Why Identification Matters
Different species behave differently — some swim, some cling to sand, some produce toxins, and some thrive in ultra-clean water. Knowing your species ensures you follow the correct recovery path and avoid wasting time on ineffective methods.
Movement Patterns (Critical for ID)
- Ostreopsis: Slow gliding, sticky, often stationary.
- Amphidinium: Fast darting, chaotic, sand-bound.
- Prorocentrum: Smooth swimming, spinning, free-floating.
- Coolia: Rolling marble motion, slow and circular.
- Motile Chrysophytes: Smooth gliding or fluttering motion; very active.
What Causes These Outbreaks?
- Low nutrients: NO₃ under 5 ppm, PO₄ under 0.05 ppm.
- New tank instability: immature microbiome.
- Over-filtration: heavy skimming, filter socks, UV misuse.
- Too much white light: long photoperiods or high intensity.
- Lack of biodiversity: low microfauna, sterile systems.
How to Treat Each Species
- Ostreopsis: Use UV sterilization, increase biodiversity (phyto + pods), and maintain stable nutrients. Highly toxic — avoid disturbing large mats.
- Amphidinium: Focus on the sandbed. UV is ineffective. Add pods, phyto, and microfauna. Raise nutrients and reduce white light.
- Prorocentrum: Responds well to UV + biodiversity boosting. Maintain moderate nutrients and avoid over-cleaning.
- Coolia: Low toxicity. Often resolves with nutrient correction and biodiversity increases. UV optional but helpful.
- Motile Chrysophytes (Golden Flagellates): Thrive in ultra-clean water. Raise nutrients, reduce white light, stop over-filtering, and add phyto/pods. Very responsive to biodiversity increases.
How to Take a Proper Microscope Sample
- Use a pipette to collect brown snot, dust, or surface film.
- Place one drop on a slide — do NOT dilute.
- Add a coverslip gently to avoid crushing cells.
- Use 100–400× magnification.
- Movement is the #1 identification clue.
Need Help Treating Your Species?
Explore our live cultures and dino-recovery blends to support your tank’s biodiversity and resilience.
Explore Live Cultures →