k0ijn
Scientia Cannabis
Question about this. Based on chemical/physical properties of osmosis/diffusion, the plant would sense the lower concentration of nutrients in their environment compared to roots. So it would either:
A. Take up extreme amounts of water in an attempt to dilute the higher concentrate of nutrients inside the plant
B. Expel nutrients into the medium to raise the concentration
When I talk about nutrients stored in the plant I don't mean the root zone.
Nutrients are stored in the leaves (not in the buds as many people think).
Osmosis concerns the roots of the plant since only it takes effect when a cell is submerged in water and tries to level the solution ration between itself and the water, that is basically the process of osmosis.
Therefore a cannabis plant will not retrieve nutrients stored in the leaves and expel them into the medium (water, if we're talking hydro) to balance the solution in ratio to what was already being processed by the roots.
The cells in the roots (if submerged inwater) however will diffuse or take up more water based on the solute ratio.
There are 3 possible reactions:
If the medium is hypotonic — a dilute solution, with a higher water concentration than the cell — the cell will gain water through osmosis.
If the medium is isotonic — a solution with exactly the same water concentration as the cell — there will be no net movement of water across the cell membrane.
If the medium is hypertonic — a concentrated solution, with a lower water concentration than the cell — the cell will lose water by osmosis.