Was at Rob's briefly last week, and was looking at his new fish room (SShhhwwweeettt).
Anywho, He was explaining that LEDs emit no UV, and after a while, corals begin to loose their color (I guess this can be likened to the way our skin tans under sunlight, which is fairly rich with UV).
Is there currently anyway to supplement the correct amount of UV for the people currently running LEDS? Rob had shown me that his fixtures are equipped with UV emitters, but there's many people out there that have LEDs, that without UV supplementation seem destined to end up with washed out coral.
Something tells me that the answer is NOT to crack open a UV sterilizer and hang it over the tank, but seems like there should be low intensity, stand alone emitters for this job.
A cursory Google search brought back bubcus, anyone else wonder about this?
Thanks for the quick eye-opener Robb, btw.
Anywho, He was explaining that LEDs emit no UV, and after a while, corals begin to loose their color (I guess this can be likened to the way our skin tans under sunlight, which is fairly rich with UV).
Is there currently anyway to supplement the correct amount of UV for the people currently running LEDS? Rob had shown me that his fixtures are equipped with UV emitters, but there's many people out there that have LEDs, that without UV supplementation seem destined to end up with washed out coral.
Something tells me that the answer is NOT to crack open a UV sterilizer and hang it over the tank, but seems like there should be low intensity, stand alone emitters for this job.
A cursory Google search brought back bubcus, anyone else wonder about this?
Thanks for the quick eye-opener Robb, btw.