Many post here ask if they have enough light.
I'd suggest they have too much in most posts, cases.
All light is not on equal terms. Most advice is based on watt/gal or experience.
A small amount perhaps on testing using a PAR meter.
I see many suggest that for red plants, that they need/require more light than green plants, I've not found any basis to this to date.
So why not just get to it:
Nice red plants, 20cm above the tank, a T5 light with 1.8w/gal on a nice deep 60cm(24") tank.
Does very well with colors.
So no matter what all else is going on in aquariums, we know it cannot be due to low light, the PAR is 50 micromols at the bottom sediment fairly evenly spread. In other words, nice red growth is independent of low light in this aquarium.
You might have issues in your tanks with red plants and/or green ones for that matter, and you might find some correlation with light, but there are other dependent factors going on there in that case.
CO2, dosing, too much light relative to CO2 etc...........
Various types of light have more output etc. But PC/T5's, HQI's all have a very high amount relative to T12 lights without reflectors etc, which much of the older outdated advice is based upon.
Light is the starting point and where the demand for everything else begins.
So attention to this and buying a good light for a given goal is much wiser, more light is not better.
I must say I find it ironic that many pour over nutrients and adding "just enough", test them often, fiddle with chemistry, but then never "test" light, consider adding "just enough" of that.
Growth starts with light, not with nutrients.
Light drives => CO2, so all things CO2 will be easier with lower light, and the nutrients will also be easier with lower light. More light makes everything harder to manage and less efficient(less light use efficiency, wasting energy basically).
Regards,
Tom Barr
Regards,
Tom Barr
I'd suggest they have too much in most posts, cases.
All light is not on equal terms. Most advice is based on watt/gal or experience.
A small amount perhaps on testing using a PAR meter.
I see many suggest that for red plants, that they need/require more light than green plants, I've not found any basis to this to date.
So why not just get to it:
Nice red plants, 20cm above the tank, a T5 light with 1.8w/gal on a nice deep 60cm(24") tank.
Does very well with colors.
So no matter what all else is going on in aquariums, we know it cannot be due to low light, the PAR is 50 micromols at the bottom sediment fairly evenly spread. In other words, nice red growth is independent of low light in this aquarium.
You might have issues in your tanks with red plants and/or green ones for that matter, and you might find some correlation with light, but there are other dependent factors going on there in that case.
CO2, dosing, too much light relative to CO2 etc...........
Various types of light have more output etc. But PC/T5's, HQI's all have a very high amount relative to T12 lights without reflectors etc, which much of the older outdated advice is based upon.
Light is the starting point and where the demand for everything else begins.
So attention to this and buying a good light for a given goal is much wiser, more light is not better.
I must say I find it ironic that many pour over nutrients and adding "just enough", test them often, fiddle with chemistry, but then never "test" light, consider adding "just enough" of that.
Growth starts with light, not with nutrients.
Light drives => CO2, so all things CO2 will be easier with lower light, and the nutrients will also be easier with lower light. More light makes everything harder to manage and less efficient(less light use efficiency, wasting energy basically).
Regards,
Tom Barr
Regards,
Tom Barr