vladimiroslav
Well-Known Member
There’s another aspect of LED that also has the potential to be transformational. Traditionally growers keep young plants basking in light 24 hours a day and then switch to a schedule that gives them 12 hours of light and 12 hours of darkness as they mature. The darkness slows the plants’ growth, but that simulated night is necessary to trigger the all-important flowering of buds.
SPARC’s production director, Robby Flannery, who holds a PhD in plant biology, says he may have figured out a way for his plants to have their buds and gorge on light too. To a plant, the absence of light in the red spectrum signals night. So by eliminating red light 12 hours a day while continuing to shine blue light, SPARC should be able to create plants that still produce buds while constantly absorbing light. “You can keep driving photosynthesis and trick them into thinking it’s nighttime,” he says. Flannery is setting up the A/B test now and plans to publish an academic paper in conjunction with the University of California–Davis later this year.
What you guys think? It comes from a April 2014 Wired article but it seems I cant post the link for some reasons.