vemvare said:
Another problem with red dwarfs is that the proportion of its output that is visible light will be lower. IR-photons aren't terribly useful in driving chemical reactions.
If enough visible light to "run a biosphere" hits the planet, then it is likely to be too hot.
IR photons are not terribly useful, but visible may be.
Here on Earth, there are 2 major conditions with limited visible light.
For one, water at intermediate depths. Water is blue, red and yellow are strongly absorbed, blue penetrates to somewhat bigger depth.
That is where red algae grow.
For the other, the forest understory. The upper branches capture most light, and mostly green light passes below. The understory has various types of plants - grasses, flowers, moss, bushes, lower branches of the same trees whose upper branches capture the full sunlight, young tree saplings...
There is a curious contrast between how plants adapt to these two conditions.
In deep water, red is absent, but blue is relatively abundant. Plants adapt their photosynthesis: red algae make no use of red, and reflect it if it does reach them.
Under shadow of other plants, blue is in short supply, and green is relatively abundant.
What is curious is that plants do NOT adapt - the understory plants and leaves lay be slow growing but they are just as green as the plants in full light, making use of the little blue and red light that leaks through the canopy, instead of finding an use for the abundant green light rejected by other plants.
Here on Earth we do not have places with limited (but nonneglible) supply of blue light and abundance of red. How would plants adapt, or not adapt, on red dwarf planets?