Filamentous algae in Florida ponds: why it keeps coming back
If your pond is clear in March and a green-mat disaster by June, the problem isn't the algae — it's the nutrient load.
Filamentous algae — the bright green stringy mats that float on the surface and cling to anything in the water — is the most common complaint we get on Florida residential and HOA ponds.
Why it blooms
Algae need three things: sunlight, warmth, and nutrients. Florida supplies the first two for free. The variable you control is nutrients.
The dominant nutrient sources on a typical Central Florida pond:
- Lawn fertilizer runoff from properties draining toward the pond
- Decaying aquatic vegetation that wasn't removed last season
- Septic seepage on properties pre-1990 that haven't converted to municipal sewer
- Waterfowl — a flock of resident geese or ducks contributes substantial phosphorus
- Stocked fish that are over-fed or over-stocked
Why algaecide alone fails
Copper-based algaecides kill the visible mat. The mat then sinks, decays, and releases the phosphorus it absorbed back into the water column. Two weeks later, you have a fresh bloom — fueled by the dead mat from the last treatment.
The actual fix
- Aeration. Sub-surface diffused aeration runs 24/7 and prevents the oxygen crashes that follow algae die-offs.
- Buffer plantings. A 3–6 ft strip of native shoreline plants (pickerelweed, arrowhead, duck potato) intercepts nutrients before they reach the water.
- Fertilizer setbacks. No fertilizer within 15 ft of the waterline. Educate the neighbors.
- Mechanical mat removal. When a bloom does occur, physically remove the mat instead of killing it in place — that pulls the nutrient load out of the system.
- Targeted algaecide as a last resort, never as a routine.
Realistic timeline
A pond with a chronic algae history will take 12–18 months of combined treatment before the bloom pattern breaks. The first six months will still see blooms; the second six should show shorter, smaller events; year two should be a stable shoreline.
Frequently asked questions
What causes filamentous algae in Florida ponds?
Excess phosphorus and nitrogen. The most common sources are lawn fertilizer runoff from surrounding turf, decaying aquatic vegetation, septic-tank seepage on older properties, and waterfowl waste. Heat triggers the bloom but nutrients fuel it.
Will copper sulfate kill filamentous algae?
Yes, copper-based algaecides (chelated copper or copper sulfate) kill the visible mat within 24–72 hours. The mat then decays, releases its phosphorus back into the water column, and a new bloom appears within 2–4 weeks. Copper alone is a treadmill.
What is the most effective long-term fix for pond algae?
A combined approach: sub-surface aeration to keep oxygen levels high overnight, shoreline buffer plantings (pickerelweed, arrowhead) that compete for nutrients, and reducing or eliminating fertilizer use within 15 ft of the water's edge.
Founder of Aquatic Cleanup. Florida-licensed aquatic-vegetation operator working private lakes, HOA retention ponds, and waterfront properties across Volusia, Lake, Seminole, and Orange counties.