Dude, that first page is a heartbreaker! Such a lovely forest.... then...... mush....
At least you're having some fun with it.
To a degree I would agree with you. I've watched bryopsis outbreaks happen in tanks with just 10,000K bulbs, while another tank in the system with much more blue light (and equal # of bulbs) had much less bryopsis growth.
But..... he likes the 6500K and had no algae problems at all before the tank meltdown.
I have actually tested the PAR on those CF bulbs, I tested a several-month old 6500K flood light (26W CF spiral with the flood reflector built in). Used an Apogee Quantum.
Notice how very quickly even in a 5.5g the PAR drops to a pittance. You'll have to trust me that the chaeto in the fuge was not blocking the PAR meter, this is a consistent reading.
Also, regarding PAR and 6500K lighting, I'm convinced that blue wavelengths (around 450-460nm) are often more productive for our tanks than red, yellow, and green (ie, what a 6500K really produces a lot of).
Most photosynthetic animals have a high peak of photosynthetic activity sitting right around the 450-460nm range, and another, much much smaller peak in the red wavelengths.
Add to this the fact that the Apogee Quantum meter tends to read blue wavelengths very low, and tends to read the red wavelengths a bit too high, and I think we have ample evidence that says that blue light is quite a bit more useful that you might be giving it credit.
The ATI Blue Plus (460nm) puts out an insane amount of PAR, and considering that the Quantum is likely under-reading it... the PAR may actually be much higher.
All that to say that the 6500K CF bulbs are not necessarily going to have the output and proper spectrum that you are hoping, esp. for that clam.
The clam may be just fine, and I'm sure you are taking proper care of it. I just wanted to bring this issue on the 6500K light to your attention.
Hopefully you find it useful