Hi all,
It will depend a little bit how much natural light your tanks get, but particularly if they are open topped, ambient light is going to play a part in plant growth in most situations.
Sun-light is incredibly bright, even in the shade on a bright day in the summer you are getting about 10,000 lux in the shade, 60,000 lux in the sun, and as you approach the equator potentially at least double that .
You can compare this with room lighting, where 500 lux is quite a brightly lit room, and bright moonlight is about 1 lux.
Because I always have "jungles", I do very little intervention in terms of pruning etc., and my tanks are fairly nutrient poor, the amount of plant growth I have gives a measure of the amount of PAR.
At the moment my 2 x 2' tanks both have 2 x 24W T5 fittings, so reasonably high light in a "no added CO2/low nutrient" situation. The only regular pruning activities I do are to remove dead leaves and thin out the floaters.
If I don't thin out the floaters in the autumn (from approx. 3/4 coverage down to ~ 1/3) the planted plants will begin to undergo leaf death, because leaves that are now below light compensation point will be shed. This process will continue through the darker months, with I'd estimate tank plant biomass about 1/3 lower in the winter than the summer.
cheers Darrel