Thoth
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The phytochrome-mediated response to photoperiod occurs in the leaves. Flowering occurs in the apical meristems. A signal, called florigen, connects the two.
The Signal to Flower
Flowering involves the conversion of the apical meristem into a floral meristem, from which all the parts of the flower will be produced.
Signals that change the fate of the apical meristem include:
- maturity of the plant;
- temperature;
- the arrival of the plant hormone gibberellin;
- and, for many plants, photoperiod — the relative length of day and night.
hope that helps
As a result of the problems with isolating florigen, and of the inconsistent results acquired, it has been suggested that florigen does not exist as an individual substance; rather, florigen's effect could be the result of a particular ratio of other hormones.[13][14] However, more recent findings indicate that florigen does exist and is produced, or at least activated, in the leaves of the plant and that this signal is then transported via the phloem to the growing tip at the shoot apical meristem where the signal acts by inducing flowering. In Arabidopsis thaliana, some researchers have identified this signal as mRNA coded by the FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) gene, others as the resulting FT protein.[15] First report of FT mRNA being the signal transducer that moves from leaf to shoot apex came from the publication in Science Magazine. However, in 2007 other group of scientists made a breakthrough saying that its not the mRNA, it is the FT Protein that is transmitted from leaves to shoot possibly acting as "Florigen".[16] The initial article[17] that describes FT mRNA as flowering stimuli stands retracted from the science magazine by the authors themselves
It all makes perfect sense, yet it seems strange talking about what florigen does when the actual identify of what florigen is is still debateable. Reminds me of physics when I think about it. We know it exists, we can measure its effects, yet we can't quite work out what it is.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florigen
I'm a firm believer that BLUE light is the trigger for veg and therefor the absence of Blue light along with the 12 hour critical dark period being met is what triggers our favorite plants to flower.
I'm suffering from flu and have half a roof at the moment so not had a proper moment to think about this but according to plant physiology it's 660nm that triggers veg (Although blue light will also trigger them to because of overlapping phytochrome absorption peaks) I'll try and scan the pages tomorrow and upload this weekend (Got no scanner at home need to go work) the relevant sections.
Yes, what i'm seeing is a slight re-veg in pic #1.. Meaning your critical darkness is not being met completely (hence why they wont ripen up for you..
The 730 ether needs to stay on longer or you need to drop down on the 13 hour of lights on time on.. I see you went to 12/12.
Try 11/13 for the rest of the time.. lets us know how/if they start to finish up..
If you have pure 730nm at your disposal ( meaning you can control the length of time it's on) you can get those girls ripping up in a big hurry.. Just depends on how long your willing to run 730nm during the dark period.
Just re looking at those pics.. Your close to a 12/12 schedule. And being that you put it at an exact 12/12 schedule now with the timer should def help them ripen.. I def would go 11/13 to see if she starts speeding up the ripping up for you.
Defiantly lets us no how it goes .
I have been using a 730nm LED lamp for nearly four years, the Flower Initiator, outdoors and indoors.any specific brands of ir lights?
anyone ever use any?
so someone could set some lights up to turn on for a couple minutes at dusk, converting pr to pfr, triggering plant to flower, even in the middle of the summer with a 14 light 10 darkness schedule
the plant would see it as 14/12
then be able to flower outdoors in the sunniest time of year, and not have to worry about the late season.
even if you just used it to initiate flowering 2 weeks or a month earlier than usual, i bet it would help a lot of people
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