i was hoping you would tell me lol...
is the higher dry mass from the hps coming from the better penertration due to the extra green light?, shows spectrum has a definite roll to play and it shouldnt all be about efficiency.
i found the nuitrient uptake of the different spectrums the most interesting. i never really realised just how important spectrum is in driving different nutrient uptake. i think most growers have seen how different spectrums from different light sources can effect nuitrient uptake, but is it not just effecting it, is it actually driving it?.
we know in general a blue shifted spectrum is better for veg and a red shifted spectrum is better for flower, and in veg generally plants need more N to grow leaf and stalk and in flower they need less N and more P and K to grow flowers.
blue heavy spectrums seems to drive N, Ca, Mg uptake, so good for veg, also the heavy blue spectrums seem drive sulfer uptake more, so makes sense with the higher terps numbers and blueing your spectrum out at the end of flower/swapping out sodiums for metal halides for the last week or so for better taste/terps.
the red heavy spectrums seem to drive P, K, uptake more so good for flower growth but not great for thc/terps production ect which ties in with led grown bud(ample blue) generally scoring higher in thc and terps than sodium grown flower(very little blue).
we know uvb light can trigger the uvr8 gene leading to increased thc levels ect, but normal led spectrums contains no uvb or uva yet they still show a bump in thc ect compared to sodium and heavy red spectrums with very little blue. is this down to the more blue in the spectrum the more nutrients that are available that faciltiate better thc, terp production ect...?.
@Kassiopeija do you know how this mechanism works? i know roughly how different nm wavelengths drive the different photosystems and hit different chlorophyll peaks ect, but how is different nm light driving different nutrient uptake?, different protein inducement/suppression?.
or is it just as simple as blue shifted spectrums signal a strong vegative response and red shifted spectrums signal a stronger generative response so the plant naturally consumes more of the nutrients the response demands?. or is that just saying the same thing i already said just in a different way???...
as for leaf and inflorescence colouration im not sure what to draw from it apart from hps and rose had similar rgb levels and both have a very similar blue to red ratio.
amber and red had the highest percent green and both are primarily red heavy with almost no blue and again with a similar blue to red ratio.
purple and blue had the lowest rgb levels and both are heavy blue spectrums but with different blue to red ratios?.
most of this is above my pay grade lol and im bombed and rambling so ill gladly be put in my place when you tell me i have got it all wrong...