growingforfun
Well-Known Member
Thats still comes a slight breeze not still air, so now the topic is that at what point does the wind benefits to the plant outweigh the costs. You claim there is a cost to the plant via forced transpiration, and since I dont know I'll assume your right. So then we line up the benefits of wind, the wind at a minimum when make the plant stronger and able to produce more and larger buds. It make those buds denser. From my experience those buds will also be more covered in trichomes.I give clear limits which come from cited work on the subject of 0.3 - 0.5m/s.
It is at the boundary where free convection becomes forced convection in terms of leaf cooling.
I just know this and other subjects at higher levels than the info on these sites, you might find a few others who say this and many scientific papers that also suggest the same after studies in these environments.
Weed stomata are linked to the environment, those that arent handle wind better like some broadleaved plants. Pinnate leaves are of a different class to some extent and most designed to create their own thermsal currents which again facilitates boundary layer transfer etc etc etc.
The info here is weak on a lot of subjects, the fact that you can grow in reasonably calm air means someone isnt telling the whole story....
I'd call this forced transpiration issue a small one, because if your claim is correct in the first place, it's never hurt me. Wind doesn't hurt the plant as a whole until branded are breaking or the plant is wind whipped. If it was such a negative I wouldn't be getting 3-5 lb outdoor plants an nearly 2 lb indoor plants. At least to the extent I dont really care because these numbers are pretty good in my mind. Now if your getting plants larger than 2 lbs indoors I'll listen.