neo12345
Well-Known Member
Surely the question should be how do trees get leaves? There are trees outside my house with no leaves on, so where do the new leaves come from? They have no leaves at all, so how can they make new leaves according to your theory that translocation stops when you defoliate a plant??edit: and hey mrshim..you don't need a masters to understand translocation...just a little reading comprehension. Which apparently many are lacking here.
translocation....look it up
if you really have a degree in botany then you should understand how defoliation would bring the process of translocation to a halt.
why the fuck do trees have leaves?
So if I moved the tree inside and gave it 18 hours of sunlight and warmer temps what do you think would happen? Yes it would start growing leaves, but how when it has no leaves to start with?
We have two choices here so it's either translocation does not stop when you defoliate a plant it actually continues with stores of energy from other sources such as the roots and crown, or there are leaf fairies with little bottles of Superglue that go round attaching the new leaves?
Try the experiment for yourself, veg a plant then defoliate it. Then watch what happens, you'll see that translocation does not stop and that it diverts to growing new leaves instead of storing up that energy in your old fan leaves.
If we must keep having solar panel analogies then can I add this one?
You have four solar panels on your roof, I come and rip them off. In two weeks time the solar panels have grown back but now there are eight of them. So which is better four solar panels or eight?
In those 2 weeks of vegging your plants are storing all of that energy in your big fan leaves, where as my plant has spent those two weeks growing twice as many leaves.
Is it better to have your plants storing the energy or using the energy I guess is the question i'm asking?