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Nualgi Ponds - Safely Controls Algae & Promotes Fish Health (60ml)

Nualgi Ponds has been developed specifically to starve nuisance algae, reduce foul odors, and increase oxygen levels in your pond. Nualgi promotes greater fish and plant health while keeping the water crystal clear. Enjoy your new habitat and show off your pond as your fish become more active and your plants gain more color. WHAT IS NUALGI? Based on Over 15 Years of Research, Nualgi is the fourth generation of a patented nano-silica-based micro-nutrient supplement for all types of ponds, lakes & water gardens. Based on 9 years of lab research and 8 years of field research for applications in commercial and municipal water management. The Nualgi formula specifically helps pond owners improve water quality and manage algae on a much smaller scale. HOW DOES IT WORK? Within 3 – 5 hours of applying Nualgi Ponds, a bloom of Diatom algae (the good kind!) will develop. The diatom algae bloom out-competes nuisance algae for CO2, N, P and other nutrients, causing the bad algae to die off. It then locks away some of the harmful nutrients in the new bio mass that is consumed as live food for your fish and zooplankton. By kick-starting this natural process, the diatom algae out-compete the nuisance algae for nutrients, thus starving and eventually eliminating the bad algae from your tank!


Product Features



  • Eliminate Nuisance Algae & Get Crystal Clear Water – Without an Algaecide!

  • Safe for Fish, Plants & All Types of Ponds & Water Gardens.

  • Safely improves water quality and balances the nitrogen cycle in your pond to reduce algae, maintenance and bad odors,.

  • Improves Fish Health, Color & Activity.

  • Improves Aquatic Plant Growth & Coloration.


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Nualgi Ponds - Safely Controls Algae & Promotes Fish Health (60ml)

UF/IFAS, Others Improving Health of Marine Life and Coastal Economies


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Newswise — GAINESVILLE, Fla. – University of Florida researchers will work with other scientists to study how to make the water and marine life in Tampa Bay healthier, which in turn could help protect Florida’s offshore ecosystems and fishing economy.


Scientists with UF/IFAS are the first researchers at the Center for Conservation, part of an alliance comprised of UF/IFAS, Tampa’s Florida Aquarium, Tampa Electric Co. and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.


The partnership came about after Tampa Electric, a subsidiary of TECO Energy, offered the Florida Aquarium 20 acres in Apollo Beach for off-site quarantine and animal holding in 2012-13, said Craig Watson, director of the UF/IFAS Tropical Aquaculture Laboratory in Ruskin. Watson suggested the partners bring FWC aboard because the agency was looking for marine enhancement centers, Watson said.


Then TECO, the Florida Aquarium, UF/IFAS and FWC formed an alliance to create the Center for Conservation on the Apollo Beach site, he said. The site is also near TECO’s Manatee Viewing Center. The CFC will try to solve aquatic resource problems, Watson said.


“One major goal is to attract universities and other research entities to the site in an ‘open campus’ situation,” Watson said.


Enter UF/IFAS. Two new researchers are in on the ground floor of UF/IFAS’ participation: Josh Patterson, an assistant professor of restoration aquaculture and Mark Flint, a research assistant scientist in coastal and marine sciences, are now at the Apollo Beach site working closely with the state government, not-for-profit and commercial partners.


Aquaculture is the process of growing, harvesting, shipping and marketing aquatic animals and plants. Through his research, Patterson tries to figure out how to grow corals and other species and use them to restore natural areas.


Patterson gave two reasons why aquatic restoration is essential for Florida.
First, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration estimated in 2011 that Florida’s coral reefs have an asset value of $8.5 billion and generate more than 70,000 full- and part-time jobs. Additionally, coral reefs benefit Florida by attracting tourism, providing recreational activities, enhancing fisheries, protecting the coastline, and providing ecological services.


As a veterinary epidemiologist, Flint said he’s helping identify health issues in Tampa Bay. In particular, he studies sea turtles because they provide a great baseline for health in that body of water.


While there’s no single sentinel indicator of environmental health, Flint said he’s creating a surveillance program for Tampa Bay and Florida’s waters that includes multiple species, each giving an insight into the health of an area depending on how they use their homes.


“Sea turtles live for about 100 years,” Flint said. “They live in the same area for basically their whole lives, use the same foraging areas, nest on the same beaches, mate in the same areas. This makes them a great study for seeing what is going on in Tampa Bay.”



By Brad Buck, 352-294-3303, bradbuck@ufl.edu
Sources: Craig Watson, 813-671-5230, ext. 107, cawatson@ufl.edu
Josh Patterson, 813-419-4917, joshpatterson@ufl.edu
Mark Flint, 813-419-4917, flintm@ufl.edu









UF/IFAS, Others Improving Health of Marine Life and Coastal Economies

Koi Health & Disease

Dr. Eric Johnson is recognized as one of the world leading experts of fish health. This book will take you though the diagnosis of fish problems and the associated treatments.

Doc has written this book so the average pond owner would be able to follow his instructions to bring a sick fish back to good health.

The “Release #2″ is his most recent updated release of this book


Dr. Johnson covers topics that pertain to all types of fish that might be found in an ornamental pond.

A Quick Reference Chart is printed on the back cover to help guide you through diagnoising fish problems.

The reason you should get the second book is because your first edition is probably rather worn by now. Plus, WE DROPPED about 70 pages of information from the first edition and replaced it with 90+ new pages of edited, revised and updated inforamtion. The book is now 204 pages long!


We REDUCED the font size, and improved the page layout to fit in MORE information but it STILL ran about sixty pages more than the old book.


New information: Almost everything was massaged, revised for accuracy, and we added notes of interest from the field garnered from the last ten years of practice of fish health. So everything’s updated, and we added expanded information on:


Nutrition, handling, laboratory techniques, bacterial infections, Koi Herpes Virus, SVC, Tricide Neo potentiated anti bacterial dip, Praziquantel in its current usage, pond predators and much, much more.


We also added improved images. We went back to the source code on some of the original images and retouched them then we put them to digital publishing on high resolution printers and paper.


By the way, the paper and binding are top notch. This isn’t copier paper simply perfect-bound. This is heavy 65lb paper with a nice spiral binding that allows the book to lay flat next to your fish, or your microscope.


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Koi Health & Disease