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Light Intensity Question

Does less light for a longer period equal more light for a shorter period? For example is having leds at 30% for 12 hours roughly the same as having them at 60% for 6 hours? Would corals benefit from one approach over the other? Let me know what you guys think.

Thanks,

Joe
 
Does less light for a longer period equal more light for a shorter period? For example is having leds at 30% for 12 hours roughly the same as having them at 60% for 6 hours? Would corals benefit from one approach over the other? Let me know what you guys think.

Thanks,

Joe

I would imagine it's the same if the coral was 1" from the light, but I would think having it at 30% it might not penetrate the water well enough to provide the same amount of usable light to corals at different depths.
 

redfishbluefish

Officer Emeritus
Officer Emeritus
What a great question.

I have advanced degrees in ignorance (some call it philosophy), so take this with a grain of salt.

Plants require a minimum photoperiod to live (and actually it is uninterrupted darkness to flower). Since almost all the corals we have are in a symbiotic relationship with zooxanthellea algae, I would have to conclude that the LENGTH of light is critical to our corals. The “chlorophyll” reaction to produce sugars (and polymers thereof) has a minimum threshold of light required, but increasing it past that level will not speed up the reaction. You’ll “burn” the plant and kill the cells. JMTC
 
IMO no, the important variable is the intensity of the light. It has to reach a "certain" intensity before it becomes efficient for the zoo.
 
Many people here have seen spideybry's tank and how his corals are doing and growing (quite well with awesome coloring). He has a very interesting lighting scheme that follows what saltkreep is speaking of, intense whites for a shorter period of the day and relying on blues for the rest of the photoperiod. Hopefully he sees this and chimes in, because I forget his exact timings.
 
Many people here have seen spideybry's tank and how his corals are doing and growing (quite well with awesome coloring). He has a very interesting lighting scheme that follows what saltkreep is speaking of, intense whites for a shorter period of the day and relying on blues for the rest of the photoperiod. Hopefully he sees this and chimes in, because I forget his exact timings.

This is similar to what I do but don't want to sacrifice color or growth

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In either case it doesn't work that way, light isn't cumulative. If 30% is below what the subject needs to be productive, than it doesn't matter if you run 30% for 24 hours straight - it won't accumulate over the longer time span to the benefit of the coral. There will be a par value that is spot on for a particular coral. That is why you put them at different depths, away from the light source. They should have that spot-on intensity for a proper duration, eg. 6 hours at least or whatever it is.
 
I guess I should have asked if light was cumulative, that is the root of my question. Thanks dppitone!

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Tommyboynj

Administrator
Officer Emeritus
Interesting discussion. I would also hope that spidybry chimes in. I have often thought of trying something out like this myself. Mabe ill try in on my frag tank and sees what happens.

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