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#1
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![]() I turned on the blue light about 20 minutes ago and they are now settled down and laying flat again and zoas are not reaching anymore. Wierd!!
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#2
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![]() So they were in fact getting less light. You can try keeping both blues and whites on and see how the corals react. And the blues will make your corals look prettier too.
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You wouldn't want to see my tank. I don't use fancy equipment and I am a noob ![]() |
#3
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![]() I can keep both on at same time during the day?
Figured white only was better for them to grow aka simulate Sun I suppose...? Time to upgrade lights I suppose |
#4
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![]() Quote:
Light upgrade is always fun. Been there done that ![]()
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You wouldn't want to see my tank. I don't use fancy equipment and I am a noob ![]() |
#5
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![]() I leave my blues on at 100% for at least 2 or 3 hours longer than my whites.
BTW, I NEVER have just the whites on and they're only at about 30%. Your mushrooms and Zoas were definitely NOT getting enough light or were missing the blue spectrum. Consider changing your lighting schedule around to have blues on say 11 hours and whites on 8 hours, rather than just whites on most of the time. Cheers, Anthony |
#6
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![]() Not enough of the right light.....
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#7
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![]() As light penetrates water different parts of the spectrum are removed the further down it travels. In the ocean, by the time sunlight hits corals a lot of the warmer spectrum is gone and it's being hit with a much higher percentage of the blue spectrum. Blue travels the furthest through water, warmer colors like red/orange/yellow are stripped first.
So ya, turn on those blues all the time. |