cilyjr
Chris
I was recently at a fellow reefers home (he may chime in if he so desires)and we got to discussing lighting. I had been doing some reading on lights and was thinking on the necessity of the so called "full spectrum" LED. I don't want this discussion about that though it was just what got me thinking.
For a long time I was told by many an experienced reefing hobbyist that corals look better under more blue lights in the area of 14 to 20k but grow faster under lights in 10k range. I took this as fact. I had however recently with the help of above mentioned reefer, began to think about photosynthesis. It is making me rethink my inherited beliefs.
So to the meat of it. Photosynthesis primarily takes place at about 400nm with another spike in the 650nm area. If sps coral growth is fueled by the amino acids and glycerol that are byproducts of the photosynthetic process and if photosynthesis is primarily happening in the blue area of the visible spectrum would not a more blue light help to spur coral growth?
For a long time I was told by many an experienced reefing hobbyist that corals look better under more blue lights in the area of 14 to 20k but grow faster under lights in 10k range. I took this as fact. I had however recently with the help of above mentioned reefer, began to think about photosynthesis. It is making me rethink my inherited beliefs.
So to the meat of it. Photosynthesis primarily takes place at about 400nm with another spike in the 650nm area. If sps coral growth is fueled by the amino acids and glycerol that are byproducts of the photosynthetic process and if photosynthesis is primarily happening in the blue area of the visible spectrum would not a more blue light help to spur coral growth?