I feel like there is more to this than the obvious, even to the most experienced growers. From my own experience, I have noticed longer dark periods, and colder root zones, will produce more trichomes than a more intense application of uvb light. Also, putting your plants in a 48-72 hour darkness period with about 40 degree water during this time will produce an explosion of trichomes on the flowers. This means that uvb has nothing to do with trichome production. However, UVB is directly linked to the thc concentration within the trichomes and flowers of the plant. What I want to know is how, according to multiple sources, that uvb degrades thc once the plant is harvested but increases concentration when applied to plants while growing.
Is this because once the plant is harvested, compounds that develop into thc molecules are no longer produced and then further degraded from thc to a lesser potent compound and not replaced like they would on a growing plant, but when a plant is growing, are those degraded THC molecules replaced by newer thc molecules in a higher concentration and harvesting at the exact time when the highest thc concentration to the highest trichome concentration is achieved. From then on, preventing thc breakdown by avoiding uvb exposure is key? Is that what the pick no bud before it is ready concept is all about?