Barbara Turner
Member
I was chatting to the owner of my local fish shop about planted tanks and Algae and he said that
"Now we sell LED lighting we have far more customers having problems with Algae"
My first question is
Do we think that this is correct?
I’m sure we still had algae problems but are they fewer?
My initial thought was that this is just due to the fact that most LED units are far more powerful than the fluorescent units he previously sold but looking around most of the LED lights for sale are less than 30w so I’m not convinced this is true.
Looking at the light spectrum of a fluorescent bulb, it produced far more UV light than LED’s do, (even if that wasn’t much). I also understand that UV is also harmful to plants but even more so to Algae.
Reading up on recent research plants can often adapt to UV lights and survive, it just made me wonder if we should add very low levels of UV light to our fish tanks.

"Now we sell LED lighting we have far more customers having problems with Algae"
My first question is
Do we think that this is correct?
I’m sure we still had algae problems but are they fewer?
My initial thought was that this is just due to the fact that most LED units are far more powerful than the fluorescent units he previously sold but looking around most of the LED lights for sale are less than 30w so I’m not convinced this is true.
Looking at the light spectrum of a fluorescent bulb, it produced far more UV light than LED’s do, (even if that wasn’t much). I also understand that UV is also harmful to plants but even more so to Algae.
Reading up on recent research plants can often adapt to UV lights and survive, it just made me wonder if we should add very low levels of UV light to our fish tanks.
