Is red light invisible to reef inverts

I know this seems like a stupid question and very generalized to be applied to all the inverts, but I see this statement pop up now and then and wonder.

If it is true, I may work some Red LED's into my hood, but if it holds no merit and everything is going to go hide in the rocks, then I wont waste my time.

BTW, I have blue LED's on my Aquacontroller, but sometimes they are off at night (no moon) and the tank is dark and that is when life is at its max. That is why I am asking about the red LED's.

Chris
 
The science guy to the rescue (kinda):

Dear Straight Dope:

I've heard for years that red light supposedly doesn't affect the ability of the human eye to see in the dark (or a "dark-adapted" eye, to be precise). In movies you see submarine control rooms bathed in red light, maybe because it won't mess up the periscope guy's night vision (or it looks cool), while BMW uses only red light to illuminate the gauges and dashboard displays of its cars. A couple of my friends are rabid red-light-believers but can't call on much data to back them up, other than "Well, if BMW says so . . ." Myself, I think it's a load of hooey that got started somehow and has careened on, urban-myth-like, into present day lore (and car marketing). --Kevin G, Los Angeles, CA.

SDSTAFF Hawk replies:

It's not a load of hooey, but it's not earth-shaking either. As you probably know, the retina contains two types of photoreceptor cells: rods and cones. Cones are predominantly located in the center of the retina and are responsible for color vision in relatively bright light. Rods, which are mostly found on the periphery of the retina, are much more sensitive to light than cones but lack the ability to discriminate between colors. Cone cells work poorly in low light, so the rod cells give us a black-and-white picture of our environment. In near-absolute darkness, both cone and rod cells compensate by pumping out more light-sensitive chemicals. The more time spent in darkness, the more chemicals are produced. In about ten minutes, cone cells max out, producing as much as they are capable of holding. Rod cells max out in about thirty minutes. This process, called "dark adaptation," reverses in bright white light--the light-sensitive chemicals diminish, taking with them our ability to see in darkness. However, the light-adaptation period varies, depending among other things on the intensity of the light you're exposed to. Red light has minimal effect on night vision because its energy level is so low that the eye doesn't register it strongly enough to produce a compensatory reaction. (Red light, for those interested in the physics of these things, has the longest, slowest wavelength of any form of visible light and thus the least energy--as you shift toward the blue end of the spectrum, wavelengths shorten and energy levels rise.) Light of still lower energy is called infrared ("below red"), which is invisible to the naked eye and is more familiar to us as heat.

--SDSTAFF Hawk
Straight Dope Science Advisory Board
 
Okay, so If I were an alein with a terranium setup for a peope tank (hopefully an Earth biotope b/c you would not want to mix your peoples), they would see the red light come on at night when I was watching them so I would have to use another wavelength of light.

The post was very informative but I don't think it asnwered my question.
 
I will try again:

If my tank is active at night with microfauna & nocturnal inverts coming out of the rocks and sand to grazewhen the lights are off, and I want to see them, but when I turn the lights on or grab a flashilight, they all scurry away...

Would using Red LED's allow me to see these inverts without them knowing there is a light on and returning to their shelters.

I have heard of people putting a red filter on a flashiliht and beeing able to use this to view. If it actuallly works, I would like to install red LED's in my canopy for nightime viewing of the whole tank as opposed to using a flashlight and only see parts of the tank at a time.

Chris
 
Yes you are correct. Red light does not penetrate very far into water so most cannot see it as they have no reason to see it. This is the reason many creatures are infact red themselves, in the depths their colouration makes them almost invisible to any predators. So yes your red LED idea has merit.
 
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