mhucasey
Acros & wieners, oh my!
This is an interesting concept...I've become convinced that to the coral, pure blue light is kind of invisible in the way that many marine organisms can't see red light with their eyes. Their Zooxanthellae may start using the light but the corals don't respond to high amounts of blue light until some red light is mixed in.Has anyone out there ever used a sorta "reverse" cycle where you burn the large amount of bulbs for a long time - and those are Blue+ - ish bulbs, and then burn the 2x dawn/dusk bulbs as "mid day" tubes rather than dawn/dusk and populate them with your full spectrum / white bulbs like GE6500k etc.
Kinda like you would burn your halides for 6 hours or so in the middle of the day, but run the actinics etc for longer.
I've been toying with burning 6 tubes for the long run (10-12 hours) all Blue+ and then the 2x dawn dusk bulbs (#3 and #6) as a GE6500k and Coral+ for only 6 hours or so.
PS - new bulb time.
When the red light is present, the corals start to react to protect themselves and regulate the amount of zooxanthellae present in their tissues as well as producing some protective pigments. I think it also triggers the coral to grow to take advantage of the increased light and the food produced from that light. However, when the coral gets too much red light it begins to "brown out".
If the coral gets almost exclusively blue light the coral will grow very slowly even though the amount of available photoynthetically active light is very high. I think of these mechanisms like when we go to the beach on a cloudy day - our eyes tell us that the sun's intensity is low, therefore we shouldn't worry about the associated UV. We cant directly notice the UV so we usually go by how intense the sun is. I think corals developed this mechanism to determine how much total light was reaching them based on the total red intensity.
The Dawn/Dusk bulbs would "wake up" the coral for the required intensity period. I just wonder if the increased photosynthesis in the dawn/dusk hours would benefit the coral or not. I'd be interested to read what you observe!