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View Full Version : T5s and bleaching LPS - anyone noticed this?


Myka
08-07-2009, 01:40 PM
Has anyone else ever experienced LPS (I haven't noticed this with others) bleaching when they are placed close to T5s, even if there aren't very many T5s? I find I can place my LPS closer to my 250w DE halide bulbs than I could to my 2x39w T5s. So it's not from PAR. This was in the same tank, just playing around with fixtures.

Maybe I'm off my rocker, but I'm wondering if anyone else has experienced this? I'm wondering why this would be too...

findingnemo1
08-07-2009, 01:55 PM
Nope i have it to... I have a chalice that is now basically white with a small amnt of pink on it. I had it in the nem tank under a 250 halide and now is in with the t5's. No problems with the halide.

So i can agree with you on this. I have no idea what is going on.:(

I am gonna have to find the chalice a new home as i can't put it in with the nems...

sphelps
08-07-2009, 02:29 PM
Corals should be introduced slowly to different light spectrum and intensities. I suspect the lighting change in general is the problem, if you had them acclimated to T5s and then put a new halide right on top of them they probably won't look to hot either.

achilles101
08-07-2009, 06:57 PM
i have 4@54w t5 on 2x4x16 and Im seeing bleaching on my lps , sps are fine checked tank parameters and they are with in specs. I started out with 2@ 54 and noticed they bleaching and thats when I went to the four thinking it wasnt enough light. when tank was cycling I was running normal t5s and the coralline algae was really pink and thick but since going to the high outputs the coralline growth has dropped off and bleached too. tank parameters are the same.Im thinking about lifting t5s 6 inches off tank.

sphelps
08-07-2009, 08:25 PM
LPS corals usually have low light requirements and I find many people seem to think they need tons of light like SPS corals. Whenever I've been diving most LPS corals are in deeper waters or in crevices and some of the best LPS tanks I've seen are lit with simple PCs. My first tank was mostly LPS and was lit with a combination of NO and PC, to this day my LPS have never done as good as they did in that tank.

http://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a174/sphelps/Fishtank064.jpg

http://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a174/sphelps/Fishtank016.jpg

Myka
08-08-2009, 01:58 AM
Corals should be introduced slowly to different light spectrum and intensities. I suspect the lighting change in general is the problem, if you had them acclimated to T5s and then put a new halide right on top of them they probably won't look to hot either.

This isn't the case with my tank. My corals were all used to the 2x39w T5s in a 16" deep tank with T5s about 4" off the water surface, and it was the halides that I slammed onto there. Funny thing is that the halide fixture also included T5s, but now the bulbs were all 8" off the surface. The LPS improved colors quite quickly when the lights were changed. The exact same T5s were used in the new fixture. So the difference was height and halides.

Navarchus
08-08-2009, 03:48 AM
Myka, What kind of lps?

sphelps
08-08-2009, 03:54 AM
This isn't the case with my tank. My corals were all used to the 2x39w T5s in a 16" deep tank with T5s about 4" off the water surface, and it was the halides that I slammed onto there. Funny thing is that the halide fixture also included T5s, but now the bulbs were all 8" off the surface. The LPS improved colors quite quickly when the lights were changed. The exact same T5s were used in the new fixture. So the difference was height and halides.

So you're concerned that your corals are improving from better lighting? I'm sorry but I'm confused what the issue is :neutral:

Perhaps your previous T5s were older and where not producing efficient par or spectrum effecting the corals health and the new lighting helped?? Or maybe your previous T5 spectrum simply didn't show the coral color giving them the appearance of bleaching??

What T5 bulbs were you previously using?

Myka
08-08-2009, 03:44 PM
Navarchus, the corals mainly effected were all three types of brains I have (Symphyllia, Trachyphyllia, and Lobophyllia), Duncans, Hammers, and Frogspawns. The brains moreso than the others. I had to keep all of these near the bottom of the tank or they would bleach, they would start to bleach within a week even though polyp extension was good. Once the halides were on the tank all of these corals were placed within 12" of the halides for over a month, and didn't bleach out at all.

Oh come on now Steve, there is no issue, it's a discussion - just an oddity that I was wondering if anyone else shared similar experiences, or had any ideas as to why this would happen. The T5s were the exact same bulbs (as stated above), removed from one fixture put into the new one. One Fiji Purple and one AquaScience 17,500K. However, I noticed bleaching with all the other T5s I had tried in the last 2 years as well (Giesemann and Hagen). I suppose they had different reflectors and different ballasts running them, so there may have been a bit of a change there, but I would think not much. They went from a Hagen fixture to a Degenbao fixture.

whatcaneyedo
08-08-2009, 05:09 PM
I recently moved a bleached and dieing caulastrea from the bottom of my 50 gal which is lit by a single 250W 10K MH to my 20gal which has a 24" Hagen Glo with Life Glo and Power Glo bulbs. Almost immediately the coral stopped receding and regained its former color. Now it looks like it will make a slow recovery.

However on the flip side a friend of mine in town switched his 500gal which used to be lit with four 400W 20K XM to all T5 and had nearly all of his SPS near the surface bleach at first.

sphelps
08-08-2009, 05:26 PM
Oh come on now Steve, there is no issue, it's a discussion - just an oddity that I was wondering if anyone else shared similar experiences, or had any ideas as to why this would happen. The T5s were the exact same bulbs (as stated above), removed from one fixture put into the new one. One Fiji Purple and one AquaScience 17,500K. However, I noticed bleaching with all the other T5s I had tried in the last 2 years as well (Giesemann and Hagen). I suppose they had different reflectors and different ballasts running them, so there may have been a bit of a change there, but I would think not much. They went from a Hagen fixture to a Degenbao fixture.
I was simply confused and was looking for clarity, I don't have a problem with the discussion which is why I'm participating. But it sounds like your problems are related to your previous lighting, if you always experienced problems with the T5 only setup, it's likely you didn't have sufficient lighting, especially if adding more intense lighting fixed the problem. Less than 80W is not very much light for any reef tank. It's not normal for T5s to bleach LPS corals, on average they will usually do better with T5 lighting over halides. Since my T5s stopped working in my fixture my LPS corals have not been looking too well, the halides still appear to produce enough light for the tank but it seems fairly obvious the T5s definitely add something the LPS corals like.

Also I'm still confused how your corals have been bleaching and have shown tissue loss for 2 years yet you still have them?? It also sounds like you've changed lighting many times which can also add to the problem you're observing.

I should also note that bleaching refers to the loss of color in a coral which is caused by death or loss of pigmentation of the zooxanthellae. Bleaching does not directly refer to tissue loss. Different lighting spectrums produce different results for coral coloration, sometimes giving the effect of bleaching. I've dealt with many people who experienced this, usually right after buying a new coral from a tank with different lighting. This is the only reason I mentioned it before.

torrid_07
08-09-2009, 05:00 AM
hey, ive just started getting into corals, i have just purchased a zoo, and a kenyan tree (soft coral). now i have 8. 36w t5s in my 75 gal. is this too much light for my new corals? my lights are sitting about 6" off of the water is that fine or should i be lifting them? i have noticed that the coral almost lies down in the subtrate when the lights go off at night. is this normal? anyways any help with my new corals would be THE WORLD, thanks

Doug
08-09-2009, 01:51 PM
Nothing is really to bright. Just proper acclimatization is needed.

All this to bright for certain corals now. Bah. In the mid to late ,90s I grew tons of various soft corals and lps corals under my 250w 65K Iwasaki. Not much brighter than those.

Just manage depth and/or lighting periods when changing bulbs or adding new corals, until they are use to the lights. The eggcrate with some window screen also works well for acclimatizing.

You can keep corals that require less light down on or near the bottom, with proper lighting, instead of trying to get everything up into the light.

Myka
08-09-2009, 03:57 PM
I was simply confused and was looking for clarity, I don't have a problem with the discussion which is why I'm participating.

Sorry, your reply sounded like you were just trying to be difficult.

But it sounds like your problems are related to your previous lighting, if you always experienced problems with the T5 only setup, it's likely you didn't have sufficient lighting, especially if adding more intense lighting fixed the problem. Less than 80W is not very much light for any reef tank. It's not normal for T5s to bleach LPS corals, on average they will usually do better with T5 lighting over halides. Since my T5s stopped working in my fixture my LPS corals have not been looking too well, the halides still appear to produce enough light for the tank but it seems fairly obvious the T5s definitely add something the LPS corals like.

Moving the T5s further away from the LPS or moving the LPS further away from the T5s fixed the problem. I couldn't keep the previously named LPS anywhere near the T5s in my 16" deep tank. They all had to be on the sand. I just find this odd that the corals wanted to be 16" from the T5s whether a strong halide was added or not.

Also I'm still confused how your corals have been bleaching and have shown tissue loss for 2 years yet you still have them?? It also sounds like you've changed lighting many times which can also add to the problem you're observing.

On every T5 change out (every 8 months) I have changed spectrum, brand, and obviously PAR to try to find the perfect lamp combination. I went from a low Kelvin to a high Kelvin in an attempt to see if Kelvin would affect Valonia as the red spectrum increases algae growth, and it seemed like it may have had a fairly signifiicant impact interestingly enough. With every bulb change there were changes in the corals, as expected, but not once did I get bleaching from changing the bulbs out.

They have never shown any tissue loss, I didn't say anything about that. If a coral shows the beginning signs of bleaching I will do what I need to do to stop it. By no means have any of my corals been bleached for 2 years!! The worst of the bunch for bleaching is my open brain, it always had to be on the sand and off to the side of the 16" deep T5 tank where there was the least amount of light. Because that coral is quite nice looking I would try to slowly inch it out into the brighter light (I mean move it like 1" sideways every couple weeks or month, and it would start to bleach. When I changed out the 2x39w T5 fixture for the 2x250w halide w/ 2x39w T5 which was 8" off the water surface making the open brain about 24" from the lights the color actually improved. In fact, all the corals' colors improved. Now the open brain is directly under one of the 250w DE halides on the sand in the 24" deep tank, which is about 27" from the halides and T5s. It continues to look better and better every week.

So, I'm wondering what the simple answer to the bleaching is. Is it PAR? That doesn't make sense. Is it spectrum? Maybe. It is the T5s being too close? Maybe. I dunno, that's why I'm asking if anyone else has had similar issues.

Different lighting spectrums produce different results for coral coloration, sometimes giving the effect of bleaching. I've dealt with many people who experienced this, usually right after buying a new coral from a tank with different lighting. This is the only reason I mentioned it before.

Are you referring to how the spectrum changes the way to coral looks, or how the spectrum may change the actual color of the coral? Sometimes people are surprised when they buy a coral from a dealer who has it under 20K lighting, and put it in their tank which has 12K lighting, and wonder why it looks different. Well, that's not the case here, I'm referring to the coral itself has changed color. The color intensity has increased with the change in lighting. It just seems odd to me because I thought the open brain (for example) was bleaching because of too much PAR from being too close to the T5s since it would color up when it was moved away from the T5s, but now I am observing it under much greater PAR with an increase in color intensity.

The reaction is obviously not just a result of PAR, or at least not directly or singly. I'm leaning more towards spectrum, that maybe having a more complete color spectrum from the halides allows a much greater intensity to be used. That by using a bit of a broken spectrum using T5s (that's too harsh of a descriptor, but gets the point) makes the intensity of the T5 lighting seem greater to the corals. Just speculating here...

I'm wondering what the results would be if you placed coral frags in one tank where one side is lit by T5s, and the other lit by halide where the micromols of PAR were the same on each side, and the Kelvin rating was the same on each side what the effects would be. Try to limit the variables simply just to the "quality" of the spectrum. Maybe there would be little difference, maybe there would be significant differences. I wish I had the time, equipment, and money to try this out.

I know there was a similar experiment to the one I just described, but I do believe it just compared T5s of one brand to another if I remember correctly it may have been AquaScience VS Giesemann or AquaScience vs KZ. Anyone remember that??

Nothing is really to bright. Just proper acclimatization is needed. All this to bright for certain corals now. Bah. In the mid to late ,90s I grew tons of various soft corals and lps corals under my 250w 65K Iwasaki. Not much brighter than those. Just manage depth and/or lighting periods when changing bulbs or adding new corals, until they are use to the lights. The eggcrate with some window screen also works well for acclimatizing. You can keep corals that require less light down on or near the bottom, with proper lighting, instead of trying to get everything up into the light.

I agree for the most part that nothing is really too bright, which is why I don't think this issue of bleaching was caused by PAR. It definitely wasn't caused by too fast acclimation either. I've always used length of photoperiod to manage acclimation to new bulbs, and I have never had a coral bleach from changing bulbs (well not in the last decade anyway, since I've been a bit wiser lol). I'm still wondering if it is in fact spectrum quality...good quality spectrum allows for more intensity...maybe??

albert_dao
08-09-2009, 04:11 PM
I know there was a similar experiment to the one I just described, but I do believe it just compared T5s of one brand to another if I remember correctly it may have been AquaScience VS Giesemann or AquaScience vs KZ. Anyone remember that??

It was ATI vs. AquaScience. I have the link at the office. I'll post it tomorrow.

Myka
08-09-2009, 04:15 PM
It was ATI vs. AquaScience. I have the link at the office. I'll post it tomorrow.

Awesome, thanks! I seem to remember the AquaScience kicked butt. :D