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ureapwhatusow
yea blaze does
I disagree on all three of these points. UV is highest in the middle of summer, any quick google of UV level information will show this. Never seen resin form on the undersides of a leaf first, not seen any hard and fast research on this however. 'Little impact' well, define little, are you suggesting it has some impact, albeit little? Hard science needed here, not spurious, random statements.
Interesting stuff folks
This 'theory' ,,first perpetuated by Ed Rosenthal et al.,, has way too many holes in it to seem logically credible,, IMO. We agree that a side by side comparative is needed...
I didnt think you'd agree with me indifferent
Let's put it another way ,UV is NOT highest in Autumn or Winter months when cannabis naturally flowers (in north and south hemisphere) and thus produces the majority of its cannabinoid profile.
Several African varieties (including Malawi and Congo) gave stalked resin glands on the underside of the shade leaves first,, followed by resin on the upper parts latter. This dispelling the myth.
Little impact suggests that UV light does play a role in the available light-spectrum. However there is no correlation between the role of resin in cannabis and melamine in human skin... which is where the root of this wild theory comes from!
Likewise if we look at companion species such as Paparver somniferum from the Hindu Kush region, or Cacti from the Yucatan peninsula ,, we find that these companion species do not produce a layer of resin , although they are still subjected to the same levels of UV.
UV is usually associated with and used by insects (in all of the above species) as a way of navigation/mapping sources of wild flowers / pollen in correlation to hive/colony location. It is quite possible,, and extremely interesting,, that cannabis may have evolved to utilise UV reflection (in its pistils and male flowers) over insects as a means of factotum ,, in maintaining population diversity and ultimately gene-pool preservation over longer distances than wind will allow.
This is one reason why ganja smells so much.. to draw insects in and make future map references on the ultraviolet pattern of that specific plant/population. For example, Bee's travelling back to the hive will relay the direction and distance of the UV pollen light source to fellow workers using an elaborate dance.
Hope this helps
full spectrum sunlight has all kinds of radiation outside of the human visible spectrum.
enjoy your garden!
This 'UV theory over cannabinoid production' is weak... IMO / IME
plants use both 'red' & 'blue' light... or both 660nm & 440nm... & a few others... just different wavelengths.A couple of notes... "The Earth's ozone layer blocks 98.7% of the sun's uvb"
I think it is safe to say 660nm (red light) is more important to plants than 230-400 nm (uv). Also I have read reports that say UV can attract insects.
there is also additional data here:blue light:350-500nm
chlorophyll a catalyst
auxin catalyst
cell activity
split of water atom
influence on movement of plant
MH Lighting For Entire Grow?the best unit for expressing the energy requirement of a specific plant species is the irradiance expressed in milliwatts per sqaure meter or milliwatts per square foot(mw/m2,mw/ft2). it is the measure of the quantity of energy in wavelength band 400-700 nanometers(nm) received by the plants.
*edit*5K - 7K Kelvin: Strong Blue Light
Promotes bushy growth. Ideal for rapid growth phase of plants.
Greatly enhances all-around plant growth when used with super
high output, high pressure sodium or 3K warm metal halide lamps.
4.2K - 4200 Kelvin: Cool white Flourescents
Can be used as supplimental blue lighting when used with a 3K
source.
4K - 4000 Kelvin: Neutral Metal Halide
Best single source for plant growth, producing shorter, bushier
growth than 3700 Kelvin and color rendition. Used in general
plant lighting.
3.7K - 3700 Kelvin: Softer Metal Halide (coated)
This coated lamp is used in general plant lighting and for more
rapid growth than 4000 Kelvin produces.
3K - 3200 Kelvin: Warm Metal Halide
Highest photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) value of all HID
lighting for all phases of plant growth. PAR watts account for the
nutritional value of light and are a direct measure of the light
energy available for photosythesis.
2.7K - 2700 Kelvin: High Pressure Sodium Lamps
Redder color mix, used for propagation, blooming, supplemental
greenhouse lighting.