This is mostly pertaining to acropora but can transfer to lps and some other sps too. If your not trying to color acropora then I wouldn’t worry about going any lower than where your at. Going lower than where you are at now might bring out lighter coloration and brighter more fluorescent tip color, while contrast from base to tip should be nice. Keeping nutrients above natural sea water will keep corals a more solid bold color with deeper tips and keeping nutrients very high will keep colors deep and rich looking without as much contrast since the base colors are darker and tips won’t be as bright. We used to run very high par and natural looking light with halides to get nicer colors with nutrient rich tanks but now with most people using leds it’s harder to get bright colors with lots of nutrients unless your one of the few people who has acclimated their corals to a lot of fixtures running at very high percentages on both white and blue.
If your going to keep going lower you will need to do it very slowly and keep a good eye on your corals. This is where people mess up and most blame having 0 readable nutrients for their coral death when it was actually the transition that caused the issues. I have seen some amazing colors from tanks reading 0 nutrients but they are well fed and most don’t care for the lighter coloration.
I think focusing on spectrum, par and using more white light can do a lot more for some reefers color than dropping nutrients. If you run a very blue tank it’s going to be really hard to get some colors to really come out well. Like red, yellow and blue. Sure the blue part is debatable but any coral that’s blue under leds you can bring into natural lighting for a min and see most of the time it just fluorescing blue light and looks much different. Just my take on it sorry for the rant.
If your going to keep going lower you will need to do it very slowly and keep a good eye on your corals. This is where people mess up and most blame having 0 readable nutrients for their coral death when it was actually the transition that caused the issues. I have seen some amazing colors from tanks reading 0 nutrients but they are well fed and most don’t care for the lighter coloration.
I think focusing on spectrum, par and using more white light can do a lot more for some reefers color than dropping nutrients. If you run a very blue tank it’s going to be really hard to get some colors to really come out well. Like red, yellow and blue. Sure the blue part is debatable but any coral that’s blue under leds you can bring into natural lighting for a min and see most of the time it just fluorescing blue light and looks much different. Just my take on it sorry for the rant.
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