BeachVacationer
New member
Would that hurt nems, LPSs and other software corals? Or do they like it completely dark overnight. I personally like my tank very dimly lit overnight as I often stay up late.
I disagree. I am not sure if you have ever had a night dive. But the moon light we provide is way more bright than in the ocean. Even leds at 1% are way bright. Also I worry more about the fish circadian rhythm
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I disagree. I am not sure if you have ever had a night dive. But the moon light we provide is way more bright than in the ocean. Even leds at 1% are way bright. Also I worry more about the fish circadian rhythm
I have in my opinion seen negative effect on fish. Yes some fish die for no reason. I have seen drastic changes in behavior. Could be a coincidence but it's just my .02¢. I love my LEDs and really wanted moonlights however after watching my fish because I am usually up till 3 am working. I noticed they never appeared to sleep. Wrasses would not burrow. Tangs would stop grazing and so forth.I don't think anyone's claiming that letting the moonlights run all night mimics natural conditions. We're merely asserting that it doesn't negatively affect the creatures in our tanks.
Have you noticed any detrimental effect on your livestock from letting moonlights run all night?
I wouldn't be worried about corals but I would monitor the fish.You are probably correct there and I should have added a statement that most of the "moonlights" I've seen sold in this hobby are way to bright and done that way because they put the humans interests ahead of the animals..
A single LED running just a couple mA is more than sufficient.. Most are probably 10 to 15mA or more and multiple LEDs per "light".. No way should your typical 3W LEDs be used for moonlighting reasons..
I have in my opinion seen negative effect on fish. Yes some fish die for no reason. I have seen drastic changes in behavior. Could be a coincidence but it's just my .02¢. I love my LEDs and really wanted moonlights however after watching my fish because I am usually up till 3 am working. I noticed they never appeared to sleep. Wrasses would not burrow. Tangs would stop grazing and so forth.
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Whats unclear for me here is -- none of us stay up 24-7. Why not turn off moonlights while youre sleeping? No benefit and the likelihood of disrupting normal circadian rhythm, why not set a timer and turn them off while youre sleeping?
In terms of simulating nature, its good to recognize that a) all the moonlights we use on our tanks are waaaay brighter than real moonlight and b) in nature, the full moon only shines for one night a month, and its substantially dimmer all other nights (ranging down to zero moonlight on the new moon)
Whats unclear for me here is -- none of us stay up 24-7. Why not turn off moonlights while youre sleeping? No benefit and the likelihood of disrupting normal circadian rhythm, why not set a timer and turn them off while youre sleeping?
In terms of simulating nature, its good to recognize that a) all the moonlights we use on our tanks are waaaay brighter than real moonlight and b) in nature, the full moon only shines for one night a month, and its substantially dimmer all other nights (ranging down to zero moonlight on the new moon)
Dang logic and reason......:lol:
I am not sure if you have ever had a night dive. But the moon light we provide is way more bright than in the ocean. Even leds at 1% are way bright.
In terms of simulating nature, its good to recognize that a) all the moonlights we use on our tanks are waaaay brighter than real moonlight and b) in nature, the full moon only shines for one night a month, and its substantially dimmer all other nights (ranging down to zero moonlight on the new moon)
planulation in Pocilloporids. So moonlight isnt just affecting fish, it clearly affects corals too.