Robo Roach Posted November 8, 2009 Share Posted November 8, 2009 Hi, I was just wondering what the effect of a black light (bulb) would have on a roach colony for night heat and viewing vs a red bulb, for night heat and nocturnal viewing. Regards Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pharma Posted November 15, 2009 Share Posted November 15, 2009 Hi Robo Roach Black light = UV-light (plus heat produced by absorption of visible light): Seams stupid to me cause it is not the best (in terms of ecology and economy) heating source and it's quite likely that roaches can see it and will feel disturbed. Besides, long term irradiation with UVA can be dangerous/harmful! The red light might do fine cause roaches don't see long ranged red light and have a reduced sensitivity towards the 'rest of the red spectrum' and therefore are less disturbed by a red bulb. In addition it's a cheaper, safer, and regarding heat a more efficient/direct* night light. *With black light a good part of the energy is transformed into heat being transduced by conduction (the bulb and its socket will heat up) and/or will irradiate in every direction whereas the heat of a red tungsten lamp will in good parts be transduced by directed irradiation (towards the roaches). Liebs Grüessli Andreas P.S. Sorry if my english is especially bad tonight but I lost my brains in the last 3 weeks of annual military service (= doing nothing useful and even that not very good)... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robo Roach Posted November 18, 2009 Author Share Posted November 18, 2009 Hi Robo Roach Black light = UV-light (plus heat produced by absorption of visible light): Seams stupid to me cause it is not the best (in terms of ecology and economy) heating source and it's quite likely that roaches can see it and will feel disturbed. Besides, long term irradiation with UVA can be dangerous/harmful! The red light might do fine cause roaches don't see long ranged red light and have a reduced sensitivity towards the 'rest of the red spectrum' and therefore are less disturbed by a red bulb. In addition it's a cheaper, safer, and regarding heat a more efficient/direct* night light. *With black light a good part of the energy is transformed into heat being transduced by conduction (the bulb and its socket will heat up) and/or will irradiate in every direction whereas the heat of a red tungsten lamp will in good parts be transduced by directed irradiation (towards the roaches). Liebs Grüessli Andreas P.S. Sorry if my english is especially bad tonight but I lost my brains in the last 3 weeks of annual military service (= doing nothing useful and even that not very good)... Hi, I will eventually go to a red bulb, but right know i am trying a green aquarium bulb, witch doesn't seem to bother them much. Its a little 15 watter and doesn't produce enough heat tho. Regards Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.