then just prove that.
prove what? What the study you quoted said about reduced dry leaf weight, and also about reduced total dry weight?
It is easy to prove... just carefully read what you cited... they clearly mention reduction of both dry leaf weight and of dry total weight.
Or that the slight increase in 'fruitfulness relative to height and weight' would be negated by the 28% reduction in height and 30% reduction in weight?
The paper you cited said clearly There was a reduction in yield of 14%.
Removing one-half of previous leaves and of each new leaf weekly from the start of flowering caused little change in the sums of sugar and starch in leaves or young bolls but there was a 42% reductionin the main stems. The half-leaf treatment reduced plant height by 28%, number of mainstalk nodes by 5%, fresh weight of leaves plus stems by 30%, and yield by 14%; relative fruitfulness was increased slightly. Fiber strength was increased but there was little change in other boll and fiber properties.
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