*mistress*,
Checking for understanding:
Vapor Pressure Deficit describes the difference between internal hydraulic pressures and external hydraulic pressures.
It's been observed that plants tend to grow the best with a VPD of 3-7g/m^3.
Presumably, this optimizes the presence of all the necessary components of growth in the correct regions (CO2, nutes, the correct light energy to excite everything into a new chemical constituents).
Plants fed water directly transpire lots (low external osmotic pressure offers little resistance to the hydraulic pressure derivative from transpiration).
Nutrients will move throughout the plant independent of transpiration.
I'm missing a little something here, in that I don't see a connection here to plants being able to take up water independently of nutrients from your post. I see rapid transpiration in the absence of opposing osmotic forces. I see osmosis and chemical solutions seeking equilibrium in the absence of transpiration. I don't see a plant pulling just water out of a solution (i.e. selectively feeding). But maybe that wasn't your implication.
Anyway, I've been avoiding the whole VPD discussion for a while. Your post in this context was very helpful in starting to get my brain around it.
VPD (hydraulic pressure), CO2, nute concentrations (osmotic pressure), light levels and DNA are clearly a balancing act. I see why knna just skipped the whole analysis.
That said, understanding why he skipped the analysis is better than not even knowing that there was one to be done.
This particular page on this particular thread has been particularly thought provoking.
Thanks everyone.
Checking for understanding:
Vapor Pressure Deficit describes the difference between internal hydraulic pressures and external hydraulic pressures.
It's been observed that plants tend to grow the best with a VPD of 3-7g/m^3.
Presumably, this optimizes the presence of all the necessary components of growth in the correct regions (CO2, nutes, the correct light energy to excite everything into a new chemical constituents).
Plants fed water directly transpire lots (low external osmotic pressure offers little resistance to the hydraulic pressure derivative from transpiration).
Nutrients will move throughout the plant independent of transpiration.
I'm missing a little something here, in that I don't see a connection here to plants being able to take up water independently of nutrients from your post. I see rapid transpiration in the absence of opposing osmotic forces. I see osmosis and chemical solutions seeking equilibrium in the absence of transpiration. I don't see a plant pulling just water out of a solution (i.e. selectively feeding). But maybe that wasn't your implication.
Anyway, I've been avoiding the whole VPD discussion for a while. Your post in this context was very helpful in starting to get my brain around it.
VPD (hydraulic pressure), CO2, nute concentrations (osmotic pressure), light levels and DNA are clearly a balancing act. I see why knna just skipped the whole analysis.
That said, understanding why he skipped the analysis is better than not even knowing that there was one to be done.
This particular page on this particular thread has been particularly thought provoking.
Thanks everyone.