still it continues...you are wrong....photoperiod determines when the plant flowers............it's just science...i'm sorry....
phytochrome is what triggers many plants to start flowering...it is how plants see light.........i can't believe how many people don't now this......many plants are not photo period sensitive but
most cannabis is...and it uses phytochrome to detect the change in photo period...
Phytochrome is a photoreceptor, a pigment that plants use to detect light. It is sensitive to light in the red and far-red region of the visible spectrum.
Many flowering plants use it to regulate the time of flowering photoperiodism) based on the length of day and night ( and to set circadian rhythms. It also regulates other responses including the germination of seeds, elongation of seedlings, the size, shape and number of leaves, the synthesis of chlorophyll, and the straightening of the epicotyl or hypocotyl hook of dicot seedlings.
Biochemically, phytochrome is a protein with a bilin chromophore.
Phytochrome has been found in most plants including all higher plants; very similar molecules have been found in several bacteria. A fragment of a bacterial phytochrome now has a solved three-dimensional protein structure.
Other plant photoreceptors include cryptochromes and phototropins, which are sensitive to light in the blue and ultra-violet regions of the spectrum.
it's pretty easy...plants use phyto chrome to see light...when the photo period is right for certain plants......it triggers the flowering period....it's s fact...
more and more info on how the phytochrome system is used to detect photo period and trigger flowering........
Photoperiodism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Many flowering plants use the pigment
phytochrome to sense seasonal changes in day length, which they take as signals to flower. Broadly, flowering plants can be classified as
long day plants,
short day plants, or
day neutral plants.
Long day plants require a certain amount of daylight to initiate flowering (this was initially thought) it is now known that it is actually the night length that will influence the flowering, so a long day plant needs a short night which in turn will mean it has a long day. These plants flower in the spring or summer. Conversely, short day plants will flower when the length of daylight falls below a certain amount. Short day plants need the night to be longer and therefore the days are short, they will flower in late summer, autumn or winter. Day neutral plants do not initiate flowering based on photoperiodism i.e. they can flower regardless of the night length; some may use temperature (vernalization) instead.
A long day plant is a plant that requires less than a certain number of hours of night in each 24 hour period to induce flowering. Long day plants typically flower in the late spring or early summer.
A short day plant is a plant that cannot flower under the long days of summer. Short day plants typically flower in the fall of the year. These plants require a certain number of hours of darkness in each 24 hour period (a short daylength) before floral development can begin. Plants use the
phytochrome system to sense day length or photoperiod.
A short day plant (long night) will not flower if a flash of light is used on the plant during the night. This does not occur from natural light such as lightning, fire flies, etc.
Phytochrome is converted to its active form by red light (660 nm), and its inactive form by far-red light (730 nm). Moonlight produces a greater percentage of far-red light than sunlight, so during the night the phytochrome is slowly converted to its inactive form. More phytochrome is converted in a longer night, allowing the plant to measure the length of the night.
Other instances of photoperiodism in plants include the growth of stems or roots during certain seasons, or the loss of leaves.
Long day plant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A
long day plant is a plant that requires less than a certain number of hours of sunlight in each 24 hour period to induce flowering. Long day plants typically flower in the late spring or early summer Plants use the
phytochrome system to sense daylength or photoperiod.
Short day plant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A
short day plant is a plant that cannot flower under the long days of summer. Short day plants typically flower in the fall of the year. These plants require a certain number of hours of darkness in each 24 hour period (a short daylength) before development can begin. Plants use the
phytochrome system to sense daylength or photoperiod.
i didn't make this up it's real........
this is why I have a bloom room on 12/12.....right?