Hello Frank and everybody else.
The more i read on this subject from experimental data and from practical expierence, the more i get convinced that coral photoadatation is fundamental. This is particularly clear when we read that with 400 PAR corals bleach... Nature, and the sea in particular, is quite different from the water we have among those 5 glasses... The water in our tanks is different in many ways and the combination of its parameters heavily affects our results. SPS need not only light, but also food and all the bricks to grow their skeleton. These three elements must be combined togheter to achieve the hoped results. In conclusion we can have good colours without great growing rates, but if we push coral to grow with much light, they need also calcium ad much food. An healthy growing coral willl be surely bright and colorful if the tank is well set up and can manage a good quantity of food. In my tank i haven't found yet the limit for the excess of food: i can put in what i want that inorganics won't increase. But if organic excesses corals consumption, they will get darker. Increasing light (also duration, and that's what i'm doing) they need more food, otherwise they get lighter and then bleach. More light, means more growth and they also need calcium (i keep it at 500 mg/l), but growing rate is very good and tissues are much more thick.