Anthony in a previous post we briefly talked about artifical lighting we provide for our tanks and how it interacts with our corals. I would like to take it another step if you got some time.
In the wild SPS type corals get about 95 to 98% of thier energy budget through photosythisis and need to suppliment the balance. In reading your previous post you are saying that our artifical lighting does not meet the same intencity/per and so on, thus the ammount of light given to our corals is somewhat less then what they would recieve in the wild. Because of this the amount of food taken in through photo has affectively been reduce to a number below that of the wild. Not sure what it would be but less.
The statement made some sence to me, so I began to dig a little on it to get a wider picture. Now if we dive into the photo cycle itself I am wondering if the math works the same and wanted your opinion on it. A coral, specally a high light demanding coral has failsafe mechanisms with it to control the photo cycle and stave off oxygen saturation as a result of to much light. (one of the few things I liked about Dana's studies). What it shows is a saturation curve on the photo cycle in the wild. the photo cycle climbs on a steedy curve until it reaches a point of ...demishing return, from thier it begins to shut down until the cycle is completely stopped. I have back checked that data through a bunch of studies and it seems pretty conclusive. So now if we put that coral under artifical lighting I see the curve still existing but on a much more flat curve, but the point of deminishing return is still thier and so is the shut down process.
If we take that concept and apply it to the volume or total percentage of nutrition gathered by these types of corals would it put us back down to a few minor percentages required from external?? let me know yur thoughts
all else please feel free to jump in.
Mike
In the wild SPS type corals get about 95 to 98% of thier energy budget through photosythisis and need to suppliment the balance. In reading your previous post you are saying that our artifical lighting does not meet the same intencity/per and so on, thus the ammount of light given to our corals is somewhat less then what they would recieve in the wild. Because of this the amount of food taken in through photo has affectively been reduce to a number below that of the wild. Not sure what it would be but less.
The statement made some sence to me, so I began to dig a little on it to get a wider picture. Now if we dive into the photo cycle itself I am wondering if the math works the same and wanted your opinion on it. A coral, specally a high light demanding coral has failsafe mechanisms with it to control the photo cycle and stave off oxygen saturation as a result of to much light. (one of the few things I liked about Dana's studies). What it shows is a saturation curve on the photo cycle in the wild. the photo cycle climbs on a steedy curve until it reaches a point of ...demishing return, from thier it begins to shut down until the cycle is completely stopped. I have back checked that data through a bunch of studies and it seems pretty conclusive. So now if we put that coral under artifical lighting I see the curve still existing but on a much more flat curve, but the point of deminishing return is still thier and so is the shut down process.
If we take that concept and apply it to the volume or total percentage of nutrition gathered by these types of corals would it put us back down to a few minor percentages required from external?? let me know yur thoughts
all else please feel free to jump in.
Mike