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  #1  
Old 11-06-2021, 06:05 PM
DavTom DavTom is offline
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Hi,

What happens to orchids if they are exposed to an excess of light without an excess of heat?

Nowadays leds have become so efficient that you can easily provide an excess of light without having an excess of heat.

I have a mini growing tent (actually it is a stealth grow area within a small cupboard) in which I have a temperature between 26-28 degrees Celsius with lights ON and a temperature between 19-21 degrees Celsius with lights OFF.

When the lights are ON, the leaves have usually a temperature of about 1-degree Celsius higher than the temperature inside the cupboard (maybe the transpiration is not optimal as I read that the temperature of the leaves should be equal or lower than the ambient temperature? or maybe it is normal as my light has also infrared LEDs that provide some extra heat...).

Anyway, I am providing Phals with 200-250 PAR, Bulbs and Dendr with 300 PAR, and Cattleya with 400 PAR. Lights are ON for 14 hours x day. I understand that this is (significantly?) above optimal PAR and DLI for these orchids, right?

I have searched the web without finding any conclusive info about what happens to orchis exposed to an excess of light without an excess of heat.

Maybe somebody in this forum has some experience with that?

Thanks in advance.

Dav
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  #2  
Old 11-06-2021, 06:18 PM
thefish1337 thefish1337 is offline
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I think you're pretty spot on with the PAR you're hitting the different species with. Temps look good too. As long as you are running decent humidity I wouldn't worry about your current conditions much.

This guide might be helpful

in my experience I have been shooting for a DLI of 4-6 for low light orchids, 6-10 for medium light orchids and 10-15 for high light orchids. as long as you aren't operating at extremely high temperatures and low humidity dont stress if you're giving them a bit more.

Last edited by thefish1337; 11-06-2021 at 06:26 PM..
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  #3  
Old 11-07-2021, 07:37 AM
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If the light levels are much greater than “a bit” more, you will likely burn them. Plus, depending upon the plant, it can screw up blooming.

Folks seem to be of the impression that more light = more blooms, but “it ain’t necessarily so”. There are a multitude of chemical processes that occur in a plant. Some are driven by light, and some are slowed by it (or precluded from happening because others interfere).

Each plant has its own “Goldilocks point” of conditions, and light is no exception.
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Old 11-07-2021, 10:37 AM
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Heat and Light are factors, which have little to do with each other.

Each plant accepts a temperature range, which can be surprisingly broad (check geographical distribution AND elevation range).

For plant growth, the 3 inter-related factors are
  • Light
  • Water
  • Nutrients

While certain genera do require a true rest period, most orchids will happily keep growing - as long as a rest requirement is not triggered by outside factors (changes in light, temperature and/or water supply).
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Last edited by Fairorchids; 11-07-2021 at 10:41 AM..
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  #5  
Old 11-07-2021, 01:59 PM
DavTom DavTom is offline
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Hi all,

Many thanks for your replies.

Let me be a bit more specific.

Let's assume (it is just an invented assumption) that a Phal starts to get burned in nature when it gets a PAR of about 300 PAR units (I do not remember the definition of PAR unit by hard...) for 12 hours of exposition to the (filtered by the trees, etc...) sunlight.

But in nature, a PAR of 300 is accompanied also by a significant heat generated by the sun that is outside from the PAR freq. boundaries. And this is not the case with the Led lights that can instead provide only (or almost only) the frequencies within the PAR.

Now, if we remove the frequencies outside from the PAR boundaries (the one that the sun provides and that are responsible for a significant amount of heat) and we provide only the frequencies within the PAR (which is what led lights do in contraposition to the sunlight), then at what PAR would the Pahls start to get burned?

I would expect that the PAR required to burn the Phals under led light is significantly higher than the PAR required in nature (i.e. with the sunlight).

Does it make sense to you?

Thx.

Davide
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  #6  
Old 11-07-2021, 03:04 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DavTom View Post
Hi all,

Many thanks for your replies.

Let me be a bit more specific.

Let's assume (it is just an invented assumption) that a Phal starts to get burned in nature when it gets a PAR of about 300 PAR units (I do not remember the definition of PAR unit by hard...) for 12 hours of exposition to the (filtered by the trees, etc...) sunlight.

But in nature, a PAR of 300 is accompanied also by a significant heat generated by the sun that is outside from the PAR freq. boundaries. And this is not the case with the Led lights that can instead provide only (or almost only) the frequencies within the PAR.

Now, if we remove the frequencies outside from the PAR boundaries (the one that the sun provides and that are responsible for a significant amount of heat) and we provide only the frequencies within the PAR (which is what led lights do in contraposition to the sunlight), then at what PAR would the Pahls start to get burned?

I would expect that the PAR required to burn the Phals under led light is significantly higher than the PAR required in nature (i.e. with the sunlight).

Does it make sense to you?

Thx.

Davide
Daily Light Integral (DLI) is what's important, and that's measured in moles of photons - where a mole is 6.023x10e26.

PAR is simply saying the plant is exposed to all photons between 400 and 700 nm wavelength. There is no "300 PAR". Saying a plant gets PAR would be roughly equivalent to saying it gets "temperature".

A plant in nature does not get uniform light all day long. It starts as a photon collection (µmol/square meter/second) of zero at sunrise, reaches a peak at noon, then drops back to zero at sunset, affected by whatever shading it may get from clouds, leaves, etc.

Sure there is some heating, but as I said before, the relative lack of heating from LEDs does not mean the plant can take a lot more light.
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  #7  
Old 11-07-2021, 04:02 PM
DavTom DavTom is offline
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Thanks Ray. Basically you are saying that with less heat (i.e., due to frequencies outside the PAR interval) the plant can get a bit more light within the PAR region, but not much more. OK, got it.

Yes, of course, PAR without specifying the time exposure does not mean anything (that's why the assumption was considering as example a 12 hour exposure).

Dav
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Old 11-07-2021, 05:14 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DavTom View Post
PAR without specifying the time exposure does not mean anything
Actually, PAR is pretty meaningless...

"PAR" specifies a "color" - a range of wavelengths; nothing else - sort of a broader extension of "red" or "orange" or "yellow", "green", or "blue". It is just saying "all of the above", which constitute Photosynthetically Active Radiation - i.e., what the plant can use. It says absolutely nothing about what energy they are getting.
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  #9  
Old 11-08-2021, 04:32 AM
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There's something about the temperature too. If the temperature isn't in some particular suitable range, then the photo-synthesis process won't happen ---- aside from having enough water and anything else it needs for that process.
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Old 11-08-2021, 06:28 AM
DavTom DavTom is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ray View Post
Actually, PAR is pretty meaningless...

"PAR" specifies a "color" - a range of wavelengths; nothing else - sort of a broader extension of "red" or "orange" or "yellow", "green", or "blue". It is just saying "all of the above", which constitute Photosynthetically Active Radiation - i.e., what the plant can use. It says absolutely nothing about what energy they are getting.
Well, I forgot to mention another assumption I made, otherwise I agree that just knowing the PAR and the time of exposure (i.e., the DLI) is not enough to draw any conclusions on weather a plant is getting enough/good light.

I made the assumption that the good led lights available nowadays in the market (like the Viperspectra I am using) do have an optimal spectrum output. This means that within the PAR freq. boundaries, the spectrum is very similar to the spectrum of the sun (actually, these good light brands do pump a bit more the red frequencies w.r.t. spectrum of the sun, as this is proven to be very beneficial).

Now, if we know upfront that the light we are using has a good spectrum, then by adding the PAR level and the exposure time (i.e. the DLI), we have all what we need to know.

I will keep experimenting with (very) high DLI with some of my orchids (as below) and report here in the forum the results on monthly basis:
- Pahls: DLI of 12
- Bulb and Dendr: DLI of 15
- Cattleya: DLI of 22

And of course I will make sure that the temperature ranges and the humidity will also stay within the optimal values.

Cheers,
Davide

---------- Post added at 11:50 AM ---------- Previous post was at 11:26 AM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by SouthPark View Post
There's something about the temperature too. If the temperature isn't in some particular suitable range, then the photo-synthesis process won't happen ---- aside from having enough water and anything else it needs for that process.
Indeed, thanks for reminding that.

Dav

---------- Post added at 12:06 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:50 AM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by thefish1337 View Post
I think you're pretty spot on with the PAR you're hitting the different species with. Temps look good too. As long as you are running decent humidity I wouldn't worry about your current conditions much.

This guide might be helpful

in my experience I have been shooting for a DLI of 4-6 for low light orchids, 6-10 for medium light orchids and 10-15 for high light orchids. as long as you aren't operating at extremely high temperatures and low humidity dont stress if you're giving them a bit more.
Thanks for the link!

Dav

---------- Post added at 12:28 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:06 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by thefish1337 View Post
I think you're pretty spot on with the PAR you're hitting the different species with. Temps look good too. As long as you are running decent humidity I wouldn't worry about your current conditions much.

This guide might be helpful

in my experience I have been shooting for a DLI of 4-6 for low light orchids, 6-10 for medium light orchids and 10-15 for high light orchids. as long as you aren't operating at extremely high temperatures and low humidity dont stress if you're giving them a bit more.
I did the DLI calculation, I am significantly higher than what you are using...See one of my replies below.

Cheers,
Dav
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