^ There is. Warm white contains more red, less blue light which has some effect on flowering. You could argue that a more efficient light setup would just be primarily in the red and blue range but humans do like to be able to see their plants in a fuller spectrum.
^ Anything that needs light? The differences in what particular plants need, are more about how much light, temperature, humidity, soil/water/fertilizer/etc. You can adjust how many plants these support based on the grow area and height of the lights... and of course that unless you want to expand your lighting as they grow, you'll need more than enough light to start out, to end up with enough once they are larger plants.
I haven't used this product and seldom trust generic LED product specs, so I can't tell you how suitable they'll be for the earlier growth stage of plants opposed to the later blooming (and podding for crop plants). Generally the warmer color spectrum is for the 2nd half of development rather than going from seedling to mature.
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I call bull-pucky.
I haven't used this product and seldom trust generic LED product specs, so I can't tell you how suitable they'll be for the earlier growth stage of plants opposed to the later blooming (and podding for crop plants). Generally the warmer color spectrum is for the 2nd half of development rather than going from seedling to mature.
Thank you!