Just some clarification on some points you made in the recently closed thread - 'Defoliation test'
I'm with Hank. It's been real. Peace.
Lol. I think what we have here is... A failure to communicate.
Failure that some don't get it or won't.
....i can also clearly see the fact that removing a leaf retards the photosynthate production of a plant. If you dispute this, you do NOT know how plants work. The leaves are there to make compounds that feed growth. No?
Correct. We're getting somewhere.
also. Removing leaves around a bud will not enhance the bud development in any way, shape, or form. If you dispute this, you do not know how plants work. It is not opinion, it is fact. It's so entirely not disputed that asking a question like this in a university level class would get you laughed at.
No question about it. They (the mother pluckers) would get laughed right out of the room not only in a university class but any collection of commercial growers, whether it be greenhouse nurserymen, vineyard managers, tomato growers, etc.
If you think a bud is like... an apple, you are mistaken. See, in apples, the fruit responds to sunlight is various ways like enhanced color or even sugar development. Peaches blush on the sunny side. So do plums and ... you get the point. Think about it. It makes sense, if a plant wants the fruit to be noticed and consequently eaten, its gotta be bright. Makes sense.
I've already posted about this issue. Most pit fruit is shaded but needs some filtered light to develop marketable attributes.....mainly nice color. If the product doesn't look good, the customer will not buy. Has NOTHING to with the process of photosynthesis which produces the simple and complex carbs that drive flower or fruit production or in the case of vineyard canopy management, judicious "leafing" is done to remove a certain chemical that produces a distasteful herbaceous character in wine. Debate is out on that one too as most experts think that 10% of direct sunlight is enough, which occurs because of winds moving the canopy around.
Vines produce sugar from carbon, oxygen and hydrogen. Energy is also required, and the energy comes from the sun. This process is called photosynthesis, and photosynthesis only takes place when sunlight falls on green leaves. When new shoots are growing early in the season, the vine moves most of the sugar from the leaves to the new growth where it is needed. Later, when the grapes are ripening, most of the sugar is moved from the leaves into the fruit. After harvest, the sugar is moved into the woody parts of the vine where it is stored until it is needed to start new years growth.
http://rvva.wetpaint.com/page/Farming+Your+Vineyard
The part I underlined is what Jorge was alluding to. It's just common sense, for bonafide horticulturists anyway.
Buds are flowers- wind pollinated flowers. There is no reason whatsoever for this plant to develop these pathways. So it doesn't make any sense for light to affect flower development. It would be a waste of resources. These pathways don't exist in MJ or plants with the reproduction methods it employs. Period.
Correct, nor do cannabis flowers have any real value to the plant when it comes to photosynthesis. Photosynthesis drives flower production, not the other way around.
Again, those promoting defoliation have NO clue about what makes a plant tick.
UB