"Chlorophyll synthesis is the chemical reactions and pathways by the plant hormone cytokinin soon after exposure to the correct Nanometers wave length (about 670 NM) of light resulting in the formation of chlorophyll, resulting in continued growth of a plant, algae, zooxanthellae and the ability to "feed" and propagate, and without this aspect PAR (670 NM light energy), zooxanthellae and plants cannot properly "feed" propagate. The results of the lack of this high PAR "spike" would be stunted freshwater plant growth, and eventually poor coral health in reef tanks.""
can you give a reference to where you heard this bit I read that when different corals where tried to grow in different coloured lights (blue, green, red) blue light grew the corals best. also like you mentioned that the red light is filtered out the deeper you go so alot of corals aren't even going to get that(670) wavelength
Few things here...
1) Chlorophyll containing cells are one of the more "productive" phtotosynthetic cells. They produce a lot of food for the organism, and are preferred. Plants and Corals that have access to higher nm peaks can utilize chlorophyll.
But chlorophyll does need both spikes in the Lower AND upper nm registers.
If the organism receives
only the upper nm / red spectrum, it can't fully use photosynthesis via chlorophyll.
Add to that, there are two types... Chlorophyll A and B...
A is more productive in food given to the coral,
but B requires a lower nm peak for full activation, and is slanted more heavily toward the blue end of the spectrum.
It follows logically then, that most of our corals that do use Chlorophyll rely more upon Chlorophyll B.
2) Many corals evolved lower on the reef and therefore had access to less par at depths. And as we have seen [via links and pics above] there are a multitude of different photosynthetic cells that each use their own particular nm spectrum. And the majority of these lay between 400-600nm (often giving us the awesome coloration of Greens, yellows/oranges we are familiar with).
So corals that [grow deeper on the reef and] contain those particular [blue-green light] strains of photosynthetic cells have grown over time [via natural selection] to rely more upon these "blue/green" cells than "chlorophyll cells"... the coral had to because it couldn't get that extra red 'spike' chlorophyll needed.
This is why we see increased growth of corals under experiments pitting ONLY blue light vs ONLY green light vs ONLY red light, etc...
Some photosynthetic cells can still produce food for the organism with ONLY bluer light...
However very few photosynthetic strains in corals rely upon nm higher than 600 (red) with the exception of Chlorophyll, which again needs BOTH Blue AND Red to produce food for the coral...
All these studies of red only vs blue only merely go to prove what we already know...
Corals do rely more on blue light than red light relative to each other for photosynthetic food production.
That said, even though corals rely
more on green/blue light than yellow/orange/red - there are still many photosynthetic strains (and the resulting colors we see given off by the coral) that are likely contained within the coral that
would use that yellow/orange/red light up to and over 600 nm.
Most corals have at least a few different photosynthetic strains in them... if the light was available to you, and you could make food from it, why wouldn't you?
IE.
Some corals can survive under bluer light only... and may even be damaged by the intensity of even small increases in nm PAR offered...
But most corals would thrive better (and have better coloration) if they were offered light in the higher 500-600 nm PAR as well.
Example...
I didn't see a Yellow band on my Prizm Favia until I doubled the amount of 10k T5 light I was giving it... even though green coloration stayed just as prominent.
The Favia had many strains of photosynthetic cells, and while it was surviving and growing under "more blue light" just fine, those particular "yellow" photosynthetic cells were effectively inactive (not producing color for me or much food for the coral) until it received its required intensity of it's "activation spectrum" of nm.
If you have to go for "only blue" or "only red" light, you'd be better off going for "only blue". However, your coral would thrive and color up better if offered a wider range of color nm in addition.
Once you get the right balance for your needs, you can still add additional blue lights to change the "Kelvin color" overall appearance of your tank for aesthetics ... as long as you don't increase the
intensity to where it would hurt the coral.