born2killspam
Well-Known Member
As far as biological signals regarding photoperiod go, its the length of the dark cycle that is important.. The length of daylight is only an issue in the sense that I mentioned earlier about forcing the plants to work too hard.. Read up on phytochrome if you care about why.. Its directly linked to gene expression..
Personally though, I tend to believe that nature has brought plants to where they are today nearly as efficiently as possible at a 24hr day with the natural intensity of sunlight the plant evolved under..
I guess I'm thinking the relationship works more as if there is an ideal number of photons a plant can absorb in a light period before it needs a break to undergo its night-time processes..
But then again, does anybody know how a healthy plant knows lights out are coming, so it can relax its leaves a few minutes before the flip?? I've only observed it, I've never seen info regarding it..
Personally though, I tend to believe that nature has brought plants to where they are today nearly as efficiently as possible at a 24hr day with the natural intensity of sunlight the plant evolved under..
I guess I'm thinking the relationship works more as if there is an ideal number of photons a plant can absorb in a light period before it needs a break to undergo its night-time processes..
But then again, does anybody know how a healthy plant knows lights out are coming, so it can relax its leaves a few minutes before the flip?? I've only observed it, I've never seen info regarding it..