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I've been doing some reading about running more than one photo period in a day. It sounds like this substantially increases growth rates, and with the tank set to run fallow for 12 weeks once I've caught all of our fish, I think I have a great window to experiment with a lighting schedule that would be stressful to the fish.
How would I acclimate the tank to this? As I see it, I have two options:
1. Lengthen my photo period gradually, add a dip in the daily peak, move the peaks further apart, and then gradually drop the lights out during that middle period.
2. Jump straight from current photo period (11 hours with 4 hours peak, 2 hours of ramping, and 5 hours with lights set to their minimum possible brightness), to two 6 hour photo periods consisting of ramp up, ramp down, and the same peak brightness.
In some ways, I think the change to the new schedule will present a lower "daily" light integral without those 5 hours of minimal lighting. I would expect that light shock should not be a concern in this situation, but Im curious for others' thoughts.
How would I acclimate the tank to this? As I see it, I have two options:
1. Lengthen my photo period gradually, add a dip in the daily peak, move the peaks further apart, and then gradually drop the lights out during that middle period.
2. Jump straight from current photo period (11 hours with 4 hours peak, 2 hours of ramping, and 5 hours with lights set to their minimum possible brightness), to two 6 hour photo periods consisting of ramp up, ramp down, and the same peak brightness.
In some ways, I think the change to the new schedule will present a lower "daily" light integral without those 5 hours of minimal lighting. I would expect that light shock should not be a concern in this situation, but Im curious for others' thoughts.