A Sunny Disposition to Aquariums

The Benefit of Sunlight towards the Planted Tank

© Donald Lee

Natural light has many benefits to the planted aquarium. It also has some issues that have made it dismissed as a general bad idea. But is it really?

There are many arguments behind keeping plants in the aquarium, and most of them tend to center towards one particular rule: 2.5 w.p.g., or "Watts Per Gallon." If you have a ten gallon tank, that means you putting in 25 watts of light. For a 20 gallon, one would prefer 50 watts of light.

How many watts is your lighting setup?

If it is a normal lighting hood, then chances are that the energy ratio is too poor from incandescent light, and standard fluorescent lighting , while better, is usually still not normally good enough to provide much energy into the tank.

A more professional setup will often use lighting systems that are completely unlike any you would normally expect to see in an aquarium or even at home. Some even use metal halide lights, which are so powerful that they are not unlike the sort of lights theater crews work with: the sort that will burn paint off if left on for too long. The prices for these setups can range from 50 to 400 US dollars at minimum, and this is not including the materials that may be spent installing these stands into the tank or room.

There is another option that most aquarium keepers have that they do not normally remark upon: sunlight. Sunlight, as everyone knows, is used to grow plants everyday. Your plants, being custom-grown to thrive in the particular wavelengths of solar rays from millions of years of natural selection, will gain more from the light than from the glass bulb that they had a few days to acclimate towards.

The Catch?

Of course, most experienced fish owners are well-aware of sunlight. In fact, there is almost a sort of taboo towards it for the things it can do. For example:

However,

Verdict?

The only time one may see a potential hazard in this decision is if one lives in a warm region with a climate that is already comfortable for the fish. In this case, the heater would likely only turn on during the night, making it worthless during the day, offering no potential thresholds that sunlight would compensate for. And again, the temperature difference will not do much if the tank really is large enough.

Conversely, there are some breeders who, during the summer, will double-line a trash can left outside, fill it with water, a filter, floating plants, and fish. The light does wonders for the fish, the plants grow intense, and the algae that does grow in the can actually offers additional support and even some supplemental nutrition for certain fish. In the end, it still proves to be an invaluable resource when one wants to keep plants but not the equipment for them.


The copyright of the article A Sunny Disposition to Aquariums in Aquarium Water Gardens is owned by Donald Lee. Permission to republish A Sunny Disposition to Aquariums must be granted by the author in writing.




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