For Your Growing Room
Buying The Right
Indoor Plant Grow Light
General Lighting Requirements For Plants
To determine how much light a plant will require, consider where and
how it grows best in its natural environment. Most vegetables, for instance, grow best in
full sunlight, which means as much light as possible must be supplied to grow vegetables
indoors. Foliage plants like the Philodendron grow in full shade and therefore can grow
normally with relatively little artificial light. Exotic plants, such as Bromeliads, grow
in varying conditions depending on the species. Some grow in deep shade in the jungle, while
others grow in bright sunlight. The lighting level required for growth indoors depends upon
the characteristics of the particular plant being grown.
Plants NEED Darkness
Plants need dark periods. Light (called photo-periods) and dark periods
and their relative lengths have an effect on plant maturity. Recent studies have conclusively
proven that it is not just the length of the day which affects growth, but the duration of
the dark period which follows. The dark period of each day affects flowering and seeding of
most plants. Although many plants can grow under continuous light, nearly all plants prefer
a dark period each day for normal growth. All plants need some darkness to grow well or to
trigger flowering. The ideal photoperiods of plants vary, some preferring long days and short
nights; other the reverse; and some do best when the length of the night and day periods
are equal.
Color Temperature
In scientific terms, Kelvin temperature is a measure of the color of a light
source relative to a black body at a particular temperature expressed in degrees Kelvin (°K).
In simpler terms, it is the degree of warmth or coolness of a light source,
not with regards to the physical temperature, rather to the visual temperature of the light. The
higher the degree K, the more blue, or "cooler" the lamp appears. The lower the degree K, the more
"warm", or red the light appears.
Incandescent lights have a low color temperature (approximately 2700°K)
and have a red-yellowish tone; natural daylight has a high color temperature (approximately
6000°K) and appears bluish. Today, the phosphors used in fluorescent and high intensity (HID)
lights can be blended to provide any desired color temperature in the range from 2800°K to
6000°K.
Below you will find a brief explanation of the various artificial light
sources used in horticultural applications that are available today along with the postives
and negatives associated with each type.
Color Rendering Index (CRI)
A rating scale for light sources (lamps) from 0 to 100 to indicate how
accurately colors can be perceived under a light source. The higher the CRI, the more accurately
colors appear. Technically, CRI ratings should only be compared for lamps with similar color
temperatures (Kelvin ratings).
Incandescent Plant Grow Lights
Most incandescent plant lights are best used to highlight indoor plant
groupings and have very little use as a true plant 'growing' light, even those that are labeled
as a "grow light".
Newer color corrected incandescent spot grow bulbs are suitable for adding
supplemental light or highlighting to a single plant, such as an orchid or indoor bonsai tree.
However, you should never place an incandescent bulb closer than 24 inches
over your plants. Incandescents burn very hot and will burn plants when placed close enough for
them to appreciably affect plant growth.
Most incandescent bulbs have an average life span of 750 hours.
Color Rendering Index (CRI)
A rating scale for light sources (lamps) from 0 to 100 to indicate how
accurately colors can be perceived under a light source. The higher the CRI, the more accurately
colors appear. Technically, CRI ratings should only be compared for lamps with similar color
temperatures (Kelvin ratings).
Fluorescent Plant Grow Lights
Recent advances in fluorescent technologies provide the indoor gardener
with a multitude of fluorescent plant growing options.
Standard Fluorescents
are an excellent choice for starting seedlings to get a jump start on spring
plantings. They also are excellent for cultivating a cool weather harvest in the basement year round.
Leaf lettuce, spinach, and herbs all will do well year round under fluorescent lamps.
The trick to using them successfully is to keep standard fluorescent bulbs
no further than 4 inches away from the tops of the plants. Since the tubes burn relatively cool to
the touch, you do not have to worry about burning plants unless they are actually touching the bulb.
Fluorescent tubes are an excellent choice for the display and grow lighting of african violets,
small cacti and succulents, and many kitchen herbs.
New advances in color blending make full-spectrum fluorescents one of the
truest color rendering lamps on the market today. Standard fluorescent tubes are twice as efficient
as incandescent bulbs, producing twice as many lumens per watt of energy consumed and have an average
usable life span of up to 20,000 hours... more than 25 times as long as an incandescent.
High Output Fluorescents
produce almost twice as much light as standard fluorescents while still burning
very cool to the touch. HO fluorescent fixtures have a very thin profile, making them extremely useful
in vertically limited areas. High Output Fluorescents produce about 5,000 lumens per 54 watt bulb and
are available in warm (3000K) or cool (6500K) versions. Average usable life span for High Output
Fluorescent tubes is about 10,000 hours.
Compact Fluorescents
take the cool burning fluorescent technology and pack it into a focused, high
output "bulb", that you can use not only for propagation, but for growing larger plants as well.
Compact fluorescents work in specially designed reflectors that efficiently direct light to the plants,
much like the high intensity discharge lamps described below. Compact fluorescent bulbs are also available
in warm (3000K) or cool (6500K) versions. Average usable life span for Compact Fluorescent bulbs is about
10,000 hours.
High Output Fluorescent / HID Hybrids
combine the incredibly bright cool burning power of high output fluorescents with
the penetration that can only be achieved through high intensity discharge technology. The primary
advantages to these fixtures is their blend of light colors and broad even coverage.
Metal Halide (MH)
High Intensity Discharge (HID)
Plant Grow Lights
Metal halide is a highly efficient light source capable of delivering a white
light in the range of 2700 to 5500 Kelvin degrees with typical Color Rendering Index (CRI) ratings
in the mid-60's to mid-70's. Some lamp chemistries even obtain CRI's in the 80s. The CRI is an
index that measures how closely an artificial light source matches the natural colors of sunlight,
with 100 being a perfect score. In contrast, high pressure sodium lamps yield yellow lighting
(2200K) and have a very poor color rendering index of 22.
By varying the blend of chemicals in the arc tube, metal halide engineers
are able to alter the characteristics of the light output. This flexibility in design makes metal
halide so versatile. White light is a very important attribute of metal
Halide technology, because it is the closest to the natural sunlight that
people prefer.
Metal halide lamps are widely used where color rendering is important such
as stadiums, malls, manufacturing plants, and supermarkets.
For horticultural purposes, metal halides tend to produce a shorter,
more compact plant habit that more closely resembles plants grown outdoors. A plants appearance
growing under most metal halide lamps is almost identical to those growing outside, which makes
it the preferred lamp for use in living areas. Horticultural metal halide lamps have an enhanced
fruiting and flowering without sacrificing plant appearance.
Metal halide lamps are about five times more efficient than their incandescent
counterparts and last up to 25 times longer, with a usable lifespan between 10,000 and 20,000
hours, depending on the wattage.
High Pressure Sodium (HPS)
High Intensity Discharge (HID)
Plant Grow Lights
High pressure sodium lamps have been used for years in less color critical
applications such as parking lots, street lights and as supplemental greenhouse lighting. The
benefit of high pressure sodium lamps to the horticultural industry is their ability to enhance
the fruiting and flowering process in plants. The orange/red spectrum HPS produces is the
spectrum plants use in their reproductive processes, which generally produces larger harvests
of higher quality fruits or flowers.
The major drawback to growing under high pressure sodium alone is that the
plants tend to be taller and leggier with a longer internodal length than plants grown under the
bluer light of metal halide.
Another minor negative is that plants generally do not appear very healthy
growing under HP Sodium light. The operative word being 'appear', because in fact most plants do
grow very well under HPS lighting.
Due to the poor color rendering of high pressure sodium, the plants tend
to look pale, washed out or nitrogen starved.
Additional benefits to high pressure sodium lighting are incredibly
long usable bulb life... up to two years in many cases; and unparralled efficiency at six
times more light output per watt of energy consumed than a standard incandescent bulb.
Due to their high efficiency and the fact that plants grown in
greenhouses get all the blue light they need naturally, HP Sodium lamps are the preferred
supplemental greenhouse light.