rory420420
Well-Known Member
goddamn,i just realized im having a family reunionon r.i.u...all the uncles and a crazy cousin on this page...
I've been scanning RIU for your posts and it seams like with every post there is someone trolling..Fellas, this is not supposed to be about me. I appreciate all the attention. Suggests I have a lot of power over some of you guys.
Stay sugar sweet........ and Buck, you give your thuggery buddy thar a slap on the ass for me before you two give it up for the night, ya hear?
Aint it the truth. In fact, this thread may have been started to bait me and the usual trolls into another shitfest. I could be wrong and his heart may be in the right place. If it is/was, I apologize. Like I said, I see no relevance to anything that's important to growing canabis when my suspicions tell me it was a link to the issue of popcorn buds, or me using auxins at will. Really doesn't matter in the grand scheme of things, at least not to me.I've been scanning RIU for your posts and it seams like with every post there is someone trolling.
Makes me wonder if they artificially introduced the sucrose directly into plant tissue instead of directly at the roots, that's the only way I see this working...I must be crazy, But I really thought the plant makes it's own sugars(photosynthesis) and anything in the soil must be first broken down into ions.
SO, adding sugar or sugar products won't help the plant, but will feed microbes. RIGHT?
I highly doubt this study has anything to do with the amount of sugars in the plant. It simply takes the theory that auxins control apical dominance and replaces it with sugars. So, when you train, you redirect the sugars, not the auxins, so much. That is really the only thing you can take from this study.Makes me wonder if they artificially introduced the sucrose directly into plant tissue instead of directly at the roots, that's the only way I see this working...
Adding molasses etc to soil is solely feeding microbes in soil.
a brix meter can easily test this.It would be interesting to see if sugar levels increase in plant tissue distal to the site of removed 'sink' leaves.
Also will be interesting if more studies could prove/disprove this?
It has everything to do with the amount of sugars in a plant. The study finds that increased levels of sucrose suppresses BRC1 regulator and allows for dormant budsites to get access to sugar and become active budsites.I highly doubt this study has anything to do with the amount of sugars in the plant. It simply takes the theory that auxins control apical dominance and replaces it with sugars. So, when you train, you redirect the sugars, not the auxins, so much. That is really the only thing you can take from this study.
Pretty straight forward for me as well, however, 'sugar supply' shouldn't be taken literally. In other words, dumping white cane sugar in your soil, well, duh. Hope they have enough research dollars to continue the study and determine exactly the molecular structure of the 'sugar' they're referring to. Then we're getting somewhere and could lead to recommendations as to how one may 'enhance' the supply of the specific sugar the plant is looking for."An enhancement in sugar supply is both necessary and sufficient for suppressed buds to be released from apical dominance."
That's pretty straight forward to me...
They made mention of sucrose.Pretty straight forward for me as well, however, 'sugar supply' shouldn't be taken literally. In other words, dumping white cane sugar in your soil, well, duh. Hope they have enough research dollars to continue the study and determine exactly the molecular structure of the 'sugar' they're referring to. Then we're getting somewhere and could lead to recommendations as to how one may 'enhance' the supply of the specific sugar the plant is looking for.
What would be your goal?They made mention of sucrose.
I have IV supplies and could make a quick sterile enough field and find some sucrose and make a drip, lol. I also wonder the specific structure of the sugar they're using.
I have 5% dextrose IV bags but doubtful that'd work as its in solution with saline...
Thats what I thought as well but again a newb when it comes to anything other than time release nutes and praying (seems to work for the most part lol). I would really like to to go kind of au natural for the auto's, so by adding some kind of sugar I would think it would help with the all around health of the soil. That hopefully would help the plant get required nutrients without hitting the spot on a regular basis. I just thought the study may explain why some soil growers say they get good results using molasses. Also the enzymes people use in hydro, are they not used to convert dead plant material into sugars? If I'm getting way off topic I'm sorry and just tell me to get the hell off this thread lol.I must be crazy, But I really thought the plant makes it's own sugars(photosynthesis) and anything in the soil must be first broken down into ions.
SO, adding sugar or sugar products won't help the plant, but will feed microbes. RIGHT?
Excellent post, Ben. Interesting times we live in. It's stuff like this that keeps reminding us just how little we know. After all the years of study on plants and all living things, new stuff is discovered every day. It's truly a treat for a science guy such as myself to sit back and soak it all in. I hope we still have a group of younger people with the same kind of thirst for unanswered questions that my generation has. I suspect they're out there but they currently have their faces stuck in their cell phone worried about somebody's post on Facecrap, in my opinion.Significance
It is commonly accepted that the plant hormone auxin mediates apical dominance. However, we have discovered that apical dominance strongly correlates with sugar availability and not apically supplied auxin. We have revealed that apical dominance is predominantly controlled by the shoot tip’s intense demand for sugars, which limits sugar availability to the axillary buds. These findings overturn a long-standing hypothesis on apical dominance and encourage us to reevaluate the relationship between hormones and sugars in this and other aspects of plant development.
......Our data support a theory of apical dominance whereby the shoot tip’s strong demand for sugars inhibits axillary bud outgrowth by limiting the amount of sugar translocated to those buds.
"A theory". Let's be clear cause some folks tend to rush to conclusions and link this to that. The buds they refer to are not flowers for starts, they are dormant foliar buds which I refer to in my 4 main cola ditty. You take out the apical dominant points and those sugars/auxins/Cuero Gold shots are redistributed, which backs up my never ending preaching that the top, the most active growing part of a plant/tree/shrub is gonna get mother nature's goodies. IAA also plays a strong role.
When it comes to cannabis, there are some plants that seem to put on good nugget development at lower levels, which I showed in my "no light" thread.
Moreover, artificially increasing sucrose levels in plants represses the expression of BRANCHED1 (BRC1), the key transcriptional regulator responsible for maintaining bud dormancy, and results in rapid bud release. An enhancement in sugar supply is both necessary and sufficient for suppressed buds to be released from apical dominance.
I never found any reference to how, when, and where sucrose was applied in the study and in what form.
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2014/04/04/1322045111.abstract
https://www.facebook.com/FESPB.EU/posts/278091662359052