While some people have questioned the test results because some years later the group was caught padding some other results, tests, accurate or not I cannot swear, have shown that giving plants 72-hours of total darkness at the end of flower/just prior to harvest can increase levels/amounts of THC in some strains as much as 30%.
The THC itself is not more potent by volume but supposedly you can have a large increase in volume.
It is only my opinion, since people have questioned the research and as far as I know no one else has tried to duplicate it or disprove it, they just questions it … but considering how certain light rays and THC react together it would make sense that they should at least in most cases be some increase in overall THC.
It is the same principal as when you know you will be harvesting tomorrow when your lights turn off tonight you unplug them or flip a switch, if you have then switched, so they do not turn on again tomorrow before you begin your harvest. Or in the case of an outside grower harvesting at first light.
Either way the idea is to harvest without light rays having a chance to degrade any of the THC that was produced the night before.
Plants will only continue to perform their functions/live for a fairly short period of time once they are deprived of light but during that time they will continue their hours of darkness functions as much as they can for as long as they can. That would have to at the very least result in maximized levels of THC if not increased levels of THC, possibly as much as the tested/reports 30% increase certain strains developed. Genetics are bound to play anything from a small part to a major part in results but at least to some degree it has to happen.
Some people that swear outdoor grown pot is better will at times point to the length of the nights and the shortness of the days towards the end of flower and say look at how much more potent they became in the last weeks during the longest nights. They will say because of the extended period of time for THC production at maximum levels with the least amount of THC degrading per 24-hour period due to short days with the light rays striking the plants at lower angles the increased levels of THC late in flower was at least in part due to growing conditions and not only or even mostly plant genetics.
The same people will sometimes say the reason indoor growers try to stick with light cycles that make use of the longest period of light possible at any stage of growth is because they need to make up for the weakness of indoor lighting in comparison to the sun and think that will go a long way to make up for the difference but end up giving up quality by trying to find it. They think the natural lighting periods should be closer mimicked. I cannot say I agree with that, at least not all of it, but there is some logic to be found in parts of it.
Where I question that belief is if you are working with far less light than the sun supplies cutting the periods of light to more closely duplicate nature you are just giving your plants even less of the lower levels of light. How much of a loss might be the result? The other part is certain light rays so breakdown THC but then growing in conditions with much lower levels of those light rays, as in when growing inside rather than outside, how much less THC is degraded in an average day compared to when grown outside and is there more of a net gain found in one than the other? Will less be degraded so your overall gradual increase results in more or will along with the increased degrading process in outdoor growing will the light says stimulate the trichome heads to further increase THC, and other cannabinoid production, and there will be a larger net gain found there?
If anyone has performed definitive tests I have never read the results so it is sort of an opinion thing right now, so each person believes what they are most comfortable with.
I tend to believe that a 72-hour period of darkness just prior to harvest of an indoor crop and the longer fall nights and shorter fall days with sun lays striking plants from lower angles both cause an increase in THC production. In some strains the difference might be so slight that it would take the highest tech testing equipment to prove it and on another it might only take one hit of each test group type to make it clear.
In some cases genetics have a much greater or much lesser impact on the results of some method of growing. It just depends on what something is made up of and in what amounts as to if it will respond the same or better/more, less/worse for any growing method or trick.
There are a number of differing beliefs about various light cycles but I do not know of any that are out of the norm that have legitimate research behind them backing that the overall final results are better. People attempt various things and their observations tell them they see some positive or some negative and then they either go with it or not.
It is just what is observable and what is not and what people are unable to test but instead at best can only rely on senses to judge, which can be bent/formed by preconceptions, it is not all that uncommon for people to believe they found positive things that do not really exist and fail to find negative things that do exist.
The most standard indoors light cycle will most consistently provide the best results for the widest range of genetics and is the simplest, of course autoflower strains would add more to discuss, but in general it is the best and that is why it is the most used.
It is not that I have some problem in attempting to advance the science/art of herb growing through experimentation but I think that is best left for the pros to do and then instruct us on. They have the setups and the resources and if something turns out to be a flop they really aren’t out much but if we try something and it blows chunks, well a harvest celebration might not be much of a celebration now and then. So we can lose big.
Something I have said many times is that ever generation thinks that if it did not actually invent sex, drugs and rock & roll they at least perfected it. Something similar happens with each generation of growers. They get some Ralph Kramden super-idea and get all pumped up about it or hear of someone else’s idea or way of doing things and get all pumped up about it and they mention it in a thread and 30 people respond saying how great of an idea it is and how they will have to try it too.
I normally tend to chuckle because I can remember back to the 70’s and 80’s and 90’s when I tried those things or friends tried those things, or even older growers from the 60’s and maybe before had told me how they tried those things and in each case where there was no scientific research backing a final decision things were clear enough to say success or failure.
The successes were copied by virtually everyone but every generation of new growers will reinvent at least some of the failures and then get others whipped up on them and then they try them too …. and get the same basic poor results as in the 60’s and 70’s and 80’s and 90’s when the same things were attempted.
If a majority of skilled growers do something a certain way there is a valid reason behind it. It is because doing whatever it is in that way works the best overall.