Being a new member and a poor college student, some people may not take this seriously, but i am going to post anyway. I am a Agronomy major and i basicly study how plants grow. The thing i have noticed is the simularities of plants and corals. The photosnythesis theories are closely related. So here it is. I remember reading about a man on the net that kept a clown and an anenome alive in a nano at his office desk for 3 years. The kicker is that he was using stock flouresent lighting on the tank. I saw this story and thought how stressed and bleached that anenome must have been. But it could make sence. If the aquarium industry used to breed/propagate corals/inverts under less intense lighting, then it would make sence that they would be acclimated to a lesser light source. So when you bought a tank.. just say 20 years ago... the top of the line thing was flouresent lights, which probably cost a bit of money at the time. As the industry developed better light over the years they had to sell to stay afloat so they acclimated newly propagated corals to higher lighting sources... such as PC's and HID's. Well i will agree that SPS corals need higher light than softys, but the question is how much is enough? In the ocean corals receive most of their light from 10am to 2 pm. A mear 4 hour period. At that time of day light intensity is about 10,000 candle/ft2 which is close to a 10,000K MH. So is keeping coral under a 300W 10,000K bulb for 10 hours too much. Honestly i do not know... nor do i have the equipment to find out. But the reason i wrote this was to raise the question and maybe someone with more monitary support than myself could research it and find out.
The chart i attached breaks down like this.
1.Resperation is the nutrient use by an oganism and therefore growth. The resperation of a plant is not effected by light whatsoever and remaines constant.
2. As light intensity increases so does photosynthesis until the light saturation point is reached.
3. At the light saturation point, no matter how much light more is aplied no greater amount of photosythesis will take place.
4. At the light compensation point an organism will live but not grow... so Photosythesis is equal to Resperation.
5. Where Photosynthesis < Resperation, the organism will use all its reserved nutrient/energy and slowly die.
6. Where Photosynthesis > Resperation, the organism will grow and store energy.
SO... wouldnt it be great to know just how much light is enough without spending hundreds of dollars on excessive lighting... that is my goal.
I will be happy to try to answer any questions you may have.
The chart i attached breaks down like this.
1.Resperation is the nutrient use by an oganism and therefore growth. The resperation of a plant is not effected by light whatsoever and remaines constant.
2. As light intensity increases so does photosynthesis until the light saturation point is reached.
3. At the light saturation point, no matter how much light more is aplied no greater amount of photosythesis will take place.
4. At the light compensation point an organism will live but not grow... so Photosythesis is equal to Resperation.
5. Where Photosynthesis < Resperation, the organism will use all its reserved nutrient/energy and slowly die.
6. Where Photosynthesis > Resperation, the organism will grow and store energy.
SO... wouldnt it be great to know just how much light is enough without spending hundreds of dollars on excessive lighting... that is my goal.
I will be happy to try to answer any questions you may have.