Echidna09
New member
Higher Kelvin ratings have been proven to [generally] make a coral's color more vibrant but slow growth. Would a pink or green coral grow faster than a blue coral of the same species with similar placement in the same tank due to using 20k bulbs intestead of 14k or 10k?
My thought was that along the lines of what certain trees will do when they are in an environment that they do not receive sufficient light; start producing red leaves instead of green to be able to better capture green light for photosynthesis.
[I think] the blue coral would be less efficient at utilizing the bluer 20k light (since blue is the color it reflects rather than absorbs) than the green or pink would be, again all being the same species with as identical as possible conditions.
If my thoughts are correct, the green would grow less than the blue or pink would with lower kelvin ratings in the 6700-12000 range. Green would not be as efficient at handling the more yellow light than the other two since green and yellow are close on the spectrum.
Anyone have info on this?
Thanks for your help; hope I was clear enough.
My thought was that along the lines of what certain trees will do when they are in an environment that they do not receive sufficient light; start producing red leaves instead of green to be able to better capture green light for photosynthesis.
[I think] the blue coral would be less efficient at utilizing the bluer 20k light (since blue is the color it reflects rather than absorbs) than the green or pink would be, again all being the same species with as identical as possible conditions.
If my thoughts are correct, the green would grow less than the blue or pink would with lower kelvin ratings in the 6700-12000 range. Green would not be as efficient at handling the more yellow light than the other two since green and yellow are close on the spectrum.
Anyone have info on this?
Thanks for your help; hope I was clear enough.