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What Is PAR in Aquarium Lighting? Photosynthetic Active Radiation Explained
📊 PAR is the single most important metric for plant and coral growth — Learn what PAR means, how to measure it, and the exact values your aquarium needs.
What Does PAR Stand For in Aquarium Lighting?
PAR quantifies light that plants and corals can use for photosynthesis. The unit is PPFD (Photosynthetic Photon Flux Density) expressed as µmol/m²/s (micromoles per square meter per second). PAR excludes ultraviolet (<400nm) and infrared (>700nm) because chlorophyll cannot absorb those wavelengths. For example, a reading of 100 µmol/m²/s means 100 million billion photons hit each square meter every second. Wikipedia defines PAR as the spectral range of solar radiation from 400 to 700 nanometers. Understanding PAR helps you choose the right light intensity for your specific plants or corals.
How Is PAR Different from Lumens or Watts?
Two lights with identical wattage can have vastly different PAR depending on spectrum. A green‑heavy LED may look bright (high lumens) but provide low PAR for plants. Conversely, a blue‑heavy reef light may appear dim to us but deliver high PAR to corals. Apogee Instruments explains that a 100W incandescent bulb produces 10–15 PAR, while a 30W plant LED produces 100+ PAR. Always ignore wattage as a proxy for growth – buy based on PAR charts and spectrum. The only reliable way is to measure PAR with a quantum meter or trust reputable brand data.
A 30W plant LED with red/blue: 40 lumens/W but 110 PAR at 12″.
How Do You Measure PAR in an Aquarium?
Submerge the sensor and point it straight up toward the light. Avoid shadows from your hand or tank rim. For accuracy, take 3‑5 measurements per zone and average them. Rent a PAR meter from local reef clubs or online (e.g., BRS rental program). Do not use phone apps or lux meters – they cannot measure PAR correctly underwater. For a complete coverage map, measure every 6 inches across your tank. Write down values for front, middle, and back rows. This reveals dead zones where plants or corals may struggle.
What PAR Do Low, Medium, and High Light Plants Need?
PAR thresholds are well established in planted tank science. Below 10 PAR, most plants cannot sustain photosynthesis. Above 150 PAR without CO₂, algae almost inevitably blooms. 2Hr Aquarist research provides detailed species‑specific recommendations. For a low‑tech tank (no CO₂, minimal fertilizer), aim for 20‑40 PAR at the substrate. High‑tech tanks with pressurized CO₂ can safely run 80‑150 PAR, achieving rapid growth and red coloration. Always check PAR at the substrate, not at the water surface – glass lids and water clarity reduce PAR by 5‑15%.
| Plant type | PAR range | CO₂ recommended? | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low light | 10–30 µmol | No | Anubias, Java fern, Bucephalandra, Marimo |
| Medium light | 30–80 µmol | Optional | Cryptocoryne, Amazon sword, Hygrophila, Vallisneria |
| High light | 80–150+ µmol | Required | Monte Carlo, Dwarf hairgrass, Rotala, Ludwigia, Alternanthera |
What PAR Do Corals Need (SPS, LPS, Soft)?
Corals host zooxanthellae that require specific PAR for photosynthesis. Too little PAR leads to browning (zooxanthellae overproduction). Too much causes bleaching. Reefs.com guide provides a detailed PAR chart. For a mixed reef, aim for PAR zones: sand bed 50‑100, middle rock 100‑200, top 200‑350. Use a PAR meter to place each coral accordingly. LPS like Euphyllia prefer lower light (100‑150), while Acropora thrives at 300‑450. Always acclimate new corals to higher PAR gradually over 4‑6 weeks.
How Does PAR Change with Water Depth and Mounting Height?
Freshwater is relatively clear; each 6 inches may reduce PAR by 20‑30%. In reef tanks with dissolved organics, blue light penetrates better than red. The inverse square law: doubling distance from light quadruples the area, dropping PAR to 25%. For example, a fixture at 6″ gives 200 PAR at substrate; at 12″ it drops to ~100 PAR. BRS tests show this relationship holds for LEDs. To calculate expected PAR at a new height, use: new PAR = old PAR × (old distance² / new distance²). Always use actual measurements rather than theoretical – optics and lenses alter the exact relationship.
Can You Have Too Much PAR? (Photoinhibition Explained)
When PAR exceeds what an organism can use, excess energy produces reactive oxygen species that damage cells. For low‑light plants like Anubias, PAR above 60 causes yellowing leaves. For SPS corals, PAR above 500 can cause rapid bleaching even with acclimation. Advanced Aquarist research notes that photoinhibition reduces growth rate despite high PAR. The solution is to match PAR to species needs, not max out your light. Use a dimmer or raise the fixture to reduce intensity. If your plants are pale or corals are white, reduce PAR by 30% immediately.
Corals: tissue retraction, bleaching (white skeleton), excessive mucus.
How to Increase PAR Without Buying a New Light?
Many aquarists waste PAR by mounting lights too high. Lowering from 12″ to 8″ can double PAR. Removing glass lid eliminates 10‑15% loss from condensation and dirt. Cleaning LED lenses and reflectors restores lost transmission. For T5, a worn reflector can cut PAR by 40% – replace reflectors every 2‑3 years. Reef2Reef community tips also suggest adding a simple DIY reflector (aluminum foil curved behind the light). Raising water level (if your overflow allows) reduces the distance light travels through air. However, never submerge non‑waterproof LEDs.
📊 PAR quick reference for common aquarium species
| Species/Group | Ideal PAR (µmol/m²/s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Anubias, Java fern | 10–30 | Tolerates very low light; no CO₂ needed |
| Cryptocoryne, Amazon sword | 30–70 | Medium light; root tabs help |
| Rotala, Ludwigia, Monte Carlo | 80–150 | Requires CO₂ injection for healthy growth |
| Soft corals (mushrooms, leathers) | 50–100 | Low to moderate light; don't overexpose |
| LPS corals (Euphyllia, Acanthophyllia) | 75–150 | Place in middle or lower zones |
| SPS corals (Acropora, Montipora) | 200–350 (Acro up to 500) | High light, high flow; acclimate slowly |

