OK Ok ok
ok...
Based on a few hours
objective reading (Robert, Mel, Ed, Jose and other reputable sources)
1. Removing leaves removes essential reserves for primary nutes, which are mobile, so the plant can transport them to where they are needed. For example from old leaves to young new shoots when there is a nutes def in the medium.
2. Removing healthy leaves can cause stunting/delay partly because the total amount of photosynthesis becomes smaller for the plant. Large leaves create a shadow but do so by catching light for the entire plant - an essential process for creating new material including plants, flowers, buds, etc.
3. Removing leaves can slow the transition to flowering, which causes the stretching to go on longer with the nett result being just having less leaves.
4. Removing leaves can cause stress, hence a decrease in yield.
5. "
The buds that form from leaf axils with leaves removed are noticeably smaller than those where the leaves have been left on the branch."
6. Leaf removal may also cause sex reversal resulting from a metabolic change. [I too expected that would change a few people's minds...]
7. Removing leaves weakens the plants and makes it more susceptible to pests and deceases.
That's largely translated "
back" to English from an excerpt of a
dumbed-down dutch post "The slaughtering of innocent leaves" which I wrote for some people on my side of the pond (including sources of course). Mainly to see if they had
any valid rational argument or decent side-by-side test experience or whatever... I don't need to explain how that went...