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PLANT HORMONES (fyi)

I.M. Boggled

Certified Bloomin' Idiot
Veteran
Plants need light from the sun, carbon dioxide from the air, and water and mineral nutrients from the soil.
From these building blocks, plants manufacture complex compounds that are needed for other plant growth and reproductive processes.

Think of each individual plant as a large factory that produces one or more primary products but also creates many intermediate products needed for the overall operation.
Intermediate plant products are the building blocks: carbohydrates (sugar and starch); lipids (oils and fats); proteins (structural components, hormones, and enzymes that assist in chemical reactions); and nucleic acids (for genetic material such as DNA).

The primary plant products could be the fruit, flowers, foliage, or other agricultural/horticultural products we value.
In some cases, the intermediate products are important products in and of themselves (e.g. sugars and oils).
Intermediate plant products are also used to produce plant hormones such as auxins, gibberellins, cytokinins, ethylene, and abscisic acid.

Plant hormones are needed in very small quantities but they facilitate essential plant processes such as growth, dormancy, flowering, cell differentiation, and fruit ripening.
Environmental factors, such as temperature, light, day length, and gravity interact with plant hormones to cause developmental responses in plants. Several plant hormones are synthesized for use in food and beverage production, herbicides, and plant propagation.

Auxins are produced in buds and seeds and promote cell elongation. Indoleacetic acid (IAA) is a naturally occurring auxin. While it is possible to extract IAA from plant tissue, it is more practical to produce a similar compounds, indolebutyric acid (IBA) and naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA), synthetically. Growers find it more effective and efficient than its natural counterpart because plants cannot break IBA and NAA down as quickly as they can IAA. IBA and NAA are common ingredients in rooting compounds and root stimulators. Another synthetic auxin, 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D), is a widely used selective herbicide that kills broadleaf plants and has little effect on grasses and other monocots.

Gibberellins are hormones produced in shoot tips, root tips, and plant embryos. In grapes, gibberellins are produced in the developing embryos and cause the berries to enlarge. Since seedless grapes do not have seeds, they cannot produce gibberellins to increase fruit size. Small amounts of gibberellins are applied to the developing berries to produce the large berries we see in the supermarkets. You may have noticed that homegrown seedless grapes always have small fruit unless gibberellins are applied. Ruby seedless grapes are an exception-they actually have embryos that produce gibberellins, but the developing seeds abort before the berries mature.

Cytokinins have been found in many species of plants and play a role in many plant processes including cell division, shoot initiation, and growth. Researchers have found the ratio of cytokinin to auxin can affect how undifferentiated plant cells (callus tissue) develop into specific plant tissues such as shoots or roots. These interactions are complex, but very useful in plant science research and tissue culture applications. Tissue culture is the process of growing and multiplying plant cells in artificial media. In tissue culture, ratios of cytokinin to auxin can be manipulated to alternately initiate root or shoot growth. Plant tissue culture is used commercially to develop new cultivars, ensure disease-free stock, and propagate large numbers of genetically identical plants.

Much is understood about the function and practical uses of plant hormones. However, new discoveries are still occurring.
Recent research has just uncovered how individual plant cells detect the presence of auxin through a protein on the cell surface.
New discoveries expand our understanding of plant processes ultimately creating new opportunities for agriculture and horticulture.
I know this column was a little slanted toward the “techie”, but how else are you going to increase your plant science literacy?
If you got this far, you were either waiting for me to make a useful point or actually interested in plant hormones.
I hope it was the latter!
 
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G

Guest

OK I'm going to take this opportunity to get a quick and easy solution:

What additive regimen (particular products) would you recommend to get the most well rounded hormone supplementation?
 
my god man we could turn you into a cannabis expert system.. nice work.. however too many people disagree with externally introduced hormones..
 

guineapig

Active member
Veteran
Thrive Alive (red) contains IAA which sets it apart from Thrive Alive (green- the "organic" product).....

Nitrozyme is particularly high in cytokinins. I am not sure if nitrozyme contains gibberellins.

this following info is courtesy of POD RACER who compiled so much dank info in his thread that it isn't even funny......much love to him..... :kissass:

GIBBERELLIC ACID (GA3)

Probably the best known of the plant hormones. It's produced by the plants tips and is responsible for the plant growth. Most use it in two ways:

1) If they want to germinate seeds, they soak the seeds first in a solution of GA3 (200ppm) for 24 hours. Compared to unsoaked seeds, the soaked seeds germinate faster, a better percentage of germinations and they grow like crazy.

2) After the clones have rooted and are established (usually 10 days), give them a foliar spray of 30ppm GA3. This makes them literally "take off". You can almost see them actually growing.

The problem with GA3, is that most growth is in the form of "stretching" which isn't always diserable, so except for seeds and clones, most don't use GA3 ever again in the plants cycle.

GA3 has some other uses as well. You can intiate male fowers on a female plant but using high doses every day for several days, you can also induce flowers earlier and yield bigger flowers but I haven't tried that yet.

BRASSINOLIDE

This is one of the main hormones used. Concentration use is approximately 0.1ppm as a foliar spray about every three weeks with a final spray just as you change the lights for flowering. It will increase a plants resistance to stress (cold, drought, too high a salt content), it helps the plant locate light, it strengthens a plants resistance to disease. It will also stimulate a plant to grow it's overall root mass. The overall effect is that the plant will be much healthier, stronger and thus the yield will be better. It is estimated that the effect is about a 50% better yield than the untreated plants.

6-BENZYLAMINOPURINE

Another favourite, depending on the concentration used, the effects are thicker and stronger stems, healthier and larger leaves (more surface area to capture light) at 300 ppm. If you find that youwould like a plant to have more branches, you give it a foliar spray of 2000ppm. This is called hormonal pruning and the advantage is that you don't need to pinch of the plants growing tip (thus decreasing the gibberrelins), the plant stays healthy and doesn't stop growing to repair the tip.

Another big bonus. If you spray MJ with 300ppm at the end of the 4th week of flowring there is a dramatic increase in bud growth. Combined with the earlier spraying of Brassinlide that most do at the start of flowering, the end result is outstanding in terms of quality and yield.

MEPIQUAT CHLORIDE

This is actually a growth inhibitor. It is sold in Hydro stores in pre-made solutions under various brand names. The idea is that it will stop the plant growth when it's time to start flowering. Not only does this control the final height (useful if you have a low ceiling problem), but also the plant will start to allocate it's growth resources into bud growth sooner. I resisted using this product because I don't have a height problem.The effect you see is that bud size that were usually about 5 weeks old are now bud size at 3 weeks. This gives you larger early buds and as you know, you can only build from there. Most hit the plants with the Benzylaminopurine and the bud growth takes off, supposedly. This hormone is relatively new to me concentration known to use is about 10ppm.
 

NiteTiger

Tiger, Tiger, burning bright...
Veteran
Very Good info IM and GP.

GP- Where do you find these hormones for use in your garden? And are there any downsides? (besides the GA being used to cause hermaphrodites)
 
G

Guest

Sweet, this thread is very very nice, I book marked it and will probably print it once it loses its momentum. Thanks guys!

I've got Thrive Alive Red and this stuff works wonders for reducing shock and stimulating root growth.

I have a couple of other questions regarding gp's post: Where do you find brassinolide and 6-BENZYLAMINOPURINE? (In what products?)

And is Mepiquat Chloride what is used in Phosphoload/Bushmaster?
 

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