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| | #21 |
| Senile member.. Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: Staten Island
Posts: 3,100
Reefer Ratings: (25) | Hence,, the reason for this thread... Thanks for all the input please keep it coming,,, I really would like to here about all opinions pertaining to fish and corals..
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| | #22 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Senile member.. Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: Staten Island
Posts: 3,100
Reefer Ratings: (25) |
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| | #23 |
| Junior Member Join Date: May 2007 Location: Florida Keys
Posts: 12
Reefer Ratings: (0) |
Bob, Have you thought about creating 2- day/night cycles within a 24 hour day, I belive they do something like this when breeding canaries. This way you may be able to expose the corals to a little more light during say,... 2-8 hour photo periods a day,with a 2-4 hour "night time" phases,..if you don't try something like this, I might-Dave |
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| | #24 |
| Senile member.. Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: Staten Island
Posts: 3,100
Reefer Ratings: (25) |
i have never lit my corals less than 12hrs.. 24hrs for a week only made the blues in my tank pop more... The yellow millis have green polyps now and the red millis got dull like a redish brown... 400w 12k reeflux is what I'm running now... Looking to switch to 20k to see the difference...
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| | #25 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2003 Location: NY
Posts: 6,000
Reefer Ratings: (47) |
__________________ Rich ---------------------------- | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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| | #28 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Hoboken
Posts: 1,601
Reefer Ratings: (6) |
Here is another thing to think about. Studies show a decline in photosynthesis during the time of day when the sun is the brightest. Leaving your lights on 24rs a day could possibly slow your growth... I found this on reefcentral. Corals growing in shallow reef lagoons are exposed to very high levels of light, especially during summer. Excess light can cause damage to the photosystems. Most photosynthetic organisms have a range of mechanisms to dissipate excess light and protect themselves from absorbing too much light. These mechanisms include down-regulation of photosynthesis, non-photochemical quenching and use of the xanthophyll cycle. We found that three species of coral (Acropora aspera, Goniastrea sp. and Porites sp.) which grow in the shallow lagoon of Heron Island, all displayed an apparent mid-day down-regulation. The above figure shows the change in electron transport rate in Acropora aspera as related to changes in diurnal light. The decline in photosynthetic activity corresponded with the period of highest light. During the afternoon the photosynthetic activity recovered, this implies that this was a regulatory response, not damage from the high light..... by UTS Science
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| | #30 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Brooklyn
Posts: 504
Reefer Ratings: (10) |
I have read that during the first 3-4 hours of natural daylight on a reef provides the coral with enough energy for the remainder of the day. Which pretty much means 6am to about 10am. By the noon time the corals become over saturated with light and therefor do not continue their photosynthetic process. Test on xenia and montipora have shown closure of all polyps during the noon hours. Depending on the how much energy the coral expends it will recontinue its photosynthetic process until it once again reaches its saturation. Yes the color remains because the zoo algae are acclimated to your lighting intensity, but some functions of the organism itself somewhat shutdown. During the night time cycle the corals continue on with their processes depending more heavily on cellular O2/CO2 exchange. The nocturnal time as well as temperature and other factors bring about feeding for most corals. Are you going to kill the corals, I dont think so. But for the overall health of the tank I would say continue a night cycle. Thats unless you dont care to much about the fish in the tank or smaller guys like bristle worms then Times Square it is. Keep us posted as to what your findings are.
__________________ I'm not a Marine Biologist, I just play one on this forum. ![]() |
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