left the intensity the same.
could have been caused by the increase in PAR
How did you assess intensity levels? What were the levels?
How did you assess PAR levels? What were the PAR levels? (In case these are different answers.)
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left the intensity the same.
could have been caused by the increase in PAR
Intensity levels were based on Radion intensity settings. I left them at the same percentage when switching spectrums....which was only 57% total intensity. All I did was slightly increase the whites/greens/and reds. The blues remained at 100%. The PAR levels were both using a PAR meter and also Ecotech's PAR calculator. The PAR levels were incredibly low based on what I have read that SPS "require". I was only reading around 600 at the surface yet I still bleached two acros? Once I lowered the whites back down and moved the acros lower in the tank, they quickly began to recover. I am still trying to figure out how people are running their Radion Pros near 100% in the 14-16K spectrum....I would cook my whole tank in a week.How did you assess intensity levels? What were the levels?
How did you assess PAR levels? What were the PAR levels? (In case these are different answers.)
Intensity levels were based on Radion intensity settings. I left them at the same percentage when switching spectrums....which was only 57% total intensity.
The PAR levels were incredibly low based on what I have read that SPS "require".
Once I lowered the whites back down and moved the acros lower in the tank, they quickly began to recover.
I am still trying to figure out how people are running their Radion Pros near 100% in the 14-16K spectrum....I would cook my whole tank in a week.
I put them on the side frag rack which gets very low light (@150par). I started to see some color and moved them to a different rack that gets 300par. Eventually[...]
All stress factors combine to precipitate a bleaching event, so I would stop focusing solely on the lighting scenario - there is definitely more going on for them to bleach so easily.
Corals growing out and blocking flow to others can be a biggie, even if you didn't make any changes.
Carbon dosing seems stressful if you're doing that.
@Waters, I know this probably is all in the past and you're just bringing it up for example, so this is just hypothetical analysis.
I wouldn't have any faith that the numbers on the fixture could be used like that.
Like you ended up doing, I would only use either a PAR or lux meter (even a cheapie $15 lux meter is better than eyeballs!) to assess intensity vs any calculator or built-in settings - and it sounds like your levels were very moderate.
Having before and after PAR readings would have been another set of data points though.
There's a lot of bs info and hyperbole floating around IMO.
30,000 lux (600 PAR) is not incredibly low.
Consider these points:
Also, lighting intensity is not the end-all....folks using more light than you are not doing anything "better" than you are. More is not better. :)
- Stony corals are known to survive down to 1,000 lux.
- 5,000-10,000 lux is where a lot of corals seem to reach their "compensation point" and is incredibly low intensity
- I run a stony coral tank that gets around 14,000 lux. :) It grows mostly the same corals as the 50,000 lux display next to it. (Tho probably slower.)
- 30,000 lux is moderate. In fact, right in the sweet spot, I'd say.
If you move your corals around at the drop of a hat, that's an additional stress factor to consider. Had they been moved recently before this?
Restoring the lights to their previous settings (undoing the change you made) should have been all you needed to do.
Now you have to move them again if you want them back at their original light (and flow, etc) position.....or the coral has to adapt to the new-new flow and lighting conditions. Might be fine in the long run, but in the short term it's another stressor in the mix.
It goes back to the more is not better thing. It's simply a matter of what their corals were acclimated to vs what yours were acclimated to. Neither is better....it's mostly a question of what is normal to the coral.
To that point....if the folks running 100% switched down to match your light settings, their results would be just as bad as you switching up to their settings.
I haven't done any comprehensive studies, but I have had good luck with dying frags without using any elaborate movement routine. They seem to do the acclimation on their own - you just have to remove the stress(es) that caused it. Often (maybe all the time?) that's as simple as bringing the coral home to a nice, well-kept tank. :) :)
I would definitely say that lack of food might be an issue....I have always had almost undetectable levels of nitrate and phosphates. I am trying to feed the tank more to combat that......algae just scares the crap out of me lol. The two that bleached were a fast growing red Millepora and an unidentified green acro. The green one has almost 100% recovered and the Millepora has recovered about 60%, coming back as green rather than red. Neither coral was at the surface but both appeared to be directly underneath the Radion pucks.Sounds like a good plan!
As things progress, maybe consider how easy those corals seemed to bleach.
Since your lighting seems moderate and the change you made seems to have been relatively small - I'd think of those pieces as your "canaries in your coal mine".
Seems to me there had to be one/more contributing factors. I mentioned some, but could even be lack of food...or just those corals being particularly sensitive...too many possibilities to guess at from across the internet. But the bleaching is a clue I wouldn't let go lightly - all you know really is what triggered it. It seems a stretch to say that your minute color change trigger a bleaching event all by itself.
One other thought: Corals use red light mostly to let them know how close to the surface they are (self preservation). Is there a chance these acros are deep water types that may have little/no adaptation for dealing with red light/surface light conditions? Any idea as to their species or collection location?
Electric.does anybody know what setting I should use on my new apogee 200 par meter, sun or electric mode?