BroScience Bullshit - Post here

Have you EVER done any Broscience on your plants ?

  • Yes

    Votes: 89 61.4%
  • Hell no

    Votes: 33 22.8%
  • I ain’t sayin

    Votes: 23 15.9%

  • Total voters
    145
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DarkWeb

Well-Known Member
nitrogen fixation
[ˈnītrəjən fikˈsāSHən]

NOUN
biology
nitrogen fixation (noun)
  1. the chemical processes by which atmospheric nitrogen is assimilated into organic compounds, especially by certain microorganisms as part of the nitrogen cycle.



 

kingkush4200

Active Member
"The plants need darkness. 24/0 is a bad light cycle and will hurt growth/yield.".

Well, considering I veg in 24/0 and have for eight years where on average I get about a 1/2 lb per plant, I'd have to say we've got another broscience statement.
[/QUOTE]

Hey man 24hr light def works but you might want to do a little research into the difference between light and dark respiration.
This is actually why many large facilities will run lights half and half in veg.

Cheers
 

Kassiopeija

Well-Known Member
The lightning makes nitrogen that's in the atmosphere available for the plants
That could be right... my books tell my that plants are able to uptake atmospheric N in the form of NH3 (ammonia) through their stomata (IF the concentration is HIGH - if LOW, they rather loose NH3 through the stomata)
 
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spek9

Well-Known Member
Hey man 24hr light def works but you might want to do a little research into the difference between light and dark respiration.
I don't disagree with researching and testing things, but if I have been growing for eight years, stabilizing on an average 1/2 pound per plant with four plants per 4x4' flower tent, with varying degrees of temperature and humidity, what benefit would researching the difference of 18/6 to 24/0 do me? A couple of grams per my two pound tent? Do you really think that when I get up to 90%+ humidity that I'm concerned about plant respiration or transpiration?

Sometimes known stability is enough to know that setting up a test environment isn't even worth it.
 

Kassiopeija

Well-Known Member
whew... considering plants have ion-pumps sitting in the plasmalemma I wonder if this wouldn't disrupt a plants ability to actually use them...
interesting nonetheless... perhaps the current has the power to dissolve some of the soilbound nutrients and make them "plant-ready"... ?

This is true, lightning is a natural nitrogen fixer, but the vast majority of nitrogen fixing is done by bacteria in the soil which turn atmospheric N into ammonia, which is then processed by other bacteria into nitrites that can be used by plants. Legumes and decomposers (like aerobic and anaerobic bacteria and fungi) also act as nitrogen fixers. Lightning's effect is negligible in the grand scheme of things.
tbh I watered my plants for about 2 years with just rainwater, and that said, I lived in the city with historically the most rainfall throughout the year. Some of the rainwater was taken from the roof, and used on the indoor plants, and for the outdoor plants it was collected right on the spot with plastic planes... or taken from small natural ponds.
At the time I fed mineralically, even outdoors, and always measured the EC - which was always 0.01 (the min display)... if there was anything in it, then not ionic.... but perhaps the N source came differently to either plants or the roots....?
 

lime73

Weed Modifier
My plants in veg seem to sleep, one hr before lights out they rest , til lights come back on, running 18/6... but when I'm running my plants under t5 I veg 24hr. Under the Mh I run lights 18/6.
 

Kassiopeija

Well-Known Member
I don't disagree with researching and testing things, but if I have been growing for eight years, stabilizing on an average 1/2 pound per plant with four plants per 4x4' flower tent, with varying degrees of temperature and humidity, what benefit would researching the difference of 18/6 to 24/0 do me? A couple of grams per my two pound tent? Do you really think that when I get up to 90%+ humidity that I'm concerned about plant respiration or transpiration?

Sometimes known stability is enough to know that setting up a test environment isn't even worth it.
some evidence that 24h veging is better than 18/6:


(+ that AI can grow better than scientists, just by alternating variables + examinating the results, so it basically disregards all "theory" and acts rather empirically)
tough shit
 

Gentlemencorpse

Well-Known Member
whew... considering plants have ion-pumps sitting in the plasmalemma I wonder if this wouldn't disrupt a plants ability to actually use them...
interesting nonetheless... perhaps the current has the power to dissolve some of the soilbound nutrients and make them "plant-ready"... ?


tbh I watered my plants for about 2 years with just rainwater, and that said, I lived in the city with historically the most rainfall throughout the year. Some of the rainwater was taken from the roof, and used on the indoor plants, and for the outdoor plants it was collected right on the spot with plastic planes... or taken from small natural ponds.
At the time I fed mineralically, even outdoors, and always measured the EC - which was always 0.01 (the min display)... if there was anything in it, then not ionic.... but perhaps the N source came differently to either plants or the roots....?
So there is some N in rain water because nitrates that aren't taken up by plants are actually broken down by denitrifying bacteria and bond with water droplets that then evaporate back into the atmosphere. Also whatever potting medium you used likely had nitrates and/or the requisite bacterium to fix nitrogen themselves
 

kingkush4200

Active Member
I don't disagree with researching and testing things, but if I have been growing for eight years, stabilizing on an average 1/2 pound per plant with four plants per 4x4' flower tent, with varying degrees of temperature and humidity, what benefit would researching the difference of 18/6 to 24/0 do me? A couple of grams per my two pound tent? Do you really think that when I get up to 90%+ humidity that I'm concerned about plant respiration or transpiration?

Sometimes known stability is enough to know that setting up a test environment isn't even worth it.
well obviously no its not worth it if you only run a 4x4 .... do what makes you happy bro, personally I like my environment to be on point. I was just telling you to educate yourself on light and dark respiration before claiming bro science when its basic botany. I use 24hr veg myself sometimes no sweat but I wouldn't tell people it isn't likely better to run 18/6. It could potentially be alot more than a few grams if you decreased veg time by 2 weeks. That could be alot even in a 4x4!

Cheers man happy grows :weed:
 

spek9

Well-Known Member
From the lightning thing, I have learned something.

I was in communication with someone else here recently where we were discussing the compatibility of elements and nutrients. I know that Ca is incompatible with any sulfates or phosphates. The other grower stated that it might be possible that nitrates might be problematic in the same sense that Ca is.

I questioned what I knew. Now I know for sure. I was correct in my original knowledge. I can assure that nitrates don't interfere with the others mentioned above at all. In fact, after doing some readings, I went and looked on some of my past and previous nutrient labels, and indeed, in "grow" bottles (or my powdered micronutrient blend), the N is often in Nitrate form, which means that it isn't N in nitrate form that causes precipitation at all.

Many good things coming out of this thread.
 
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spek9

Well-Known Member
well obviously no its not worth it if you only run a 4x4 .... do what makes you happy bro, personally I like my environment to be on point. I was just telling you to educate yourself on light and dark respiration before claiming bro science when its basic botany. I use 24hr veg myself sometimes no sweat but I wouldn't tell people it isn't likely better to run 18/6. It could potentially be alot more than a few grams if you decreased veg time by 2 weeks. That could be alot even in a 4x4!

Cheers man happy grows :weed:
Can't remember for sure, but didn't I ask for references to scientific papers that back that up? Maybe that was somewhere else.

Either way. Citings please. References to papers that I can review.

I'm not in the business of running 2kW of lights plus my time to do a four month test because someone without any background says I should "educate yourself on light and dark respiration".

If you have something tangible I can quantify into justification for the cost, I am definitely all ears.
 

kingkush4200

Active Member
some evidence that 24h veging is better than 18/6:


(+ that AI can grow better than scientists, just by alternating variables + examinating the results, so it basically disregards all "theory" and acts rather empirically)
tough shit
Very interesting man, good read.

So like I said earlier this is why large scale we run lights half and half in veg.
This allows dark respiration to take place even though the room is technically receiving 24hrs of light.

In the MIT studies of 24hr lighting I wonder if the AI ramps the light intensity down to allow dark respiration to occur, that would be very interesting.
 

THT

Well-Known Member
lets see it backed up with more than anecdotes.
My experience may not count for you and that's fine, not trying to argue the point, I've seen male parts on reg seeds too, the probability of male parts on fem seeds is substantially higher in my experience, if you think reversing doesnt lead to that higher probability that's fine, you also offered no evidence to suggest I'm wrong. some reversing methods may be better than others, some strains already have the propensity for herm traits, and seeds made from those genetics will have those genetics. there's no bro science here.
 

kingkush4200

Active Member
Can't remember for sure, but didn't I ask for references to scientific papers that back that up? Maybe that was somewhere else.

Either way. Citings please. References to papers that I can review.

I'm not in the business of running 2kW of lights plus my time to do a four month test because someone without any background says I should "educate yourself on light and dark respiration".

If you have something tangible I can quantify into justification for the cost, I am definitely all ears.
Hey man Naw, don't think we've talked about this before.

Check this out, the info on the efficiency of older and younger leaves is also interesting.


Also how exactly would you know what my background is?
 

Kassiopeija

Well-Known Member
Very interesting man, good read.

So like I said earlier this is why large scale we run lights half and half in veg.
This allows dark respiration to take place even though the room is technically receiving 24hrs of light.

In the MIT studies of 24hr lighting I wonder if the AI ramps the light intensity down to allow dark respiration to occur, that would be very interesting.
Just peaked through some books and it seems that the whole topic of "dark breath" or "respiration" is a comlicated matter at hand, as there are several different methods or mechanisms at large which plants can use to deal with some of the buildups which they usually deal with, when they "sleep".

It's also strongly influenced by temperature, light-levels, plants genotypes (Cannabis needs to breath A LOT), tissue age, and ambient O2 & CO2 levels.
Some "breath" seems to be mitochondrial, another not... while some of the "dark breath" is actually supressed by light (but still can run low - which is the reason why a plant under 24h light doesn't die or stunt in growth...)

It's related to the "KOK effect"
 

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