So I have an idea on one of my bleached out buds, this one grew up fast and was under the 2700K LED Array, about 4-5 inches away for about 1.5 days;
The really cool thing you can see in the flower is that, not only the yellow rashes on the leaves but the streaks of purple through the top Calyx's and then directly top you get almost pure white coming through.
Now I talked a little about DNA inside chloroplasts and what the plant uses this for, making complex proteins for growth among other things and I mentioned my idea is that chloroplasts have green pigments to protect and regulate light waves bouncing in and around themselves, apparently DNA is very light absorbent and the funny thing is the chloroplasts is surrounded by specific green pigments...
Now another thing to look at is unique genes that develop in plants, chloroplasts transfer these unique genes into the carrier Cells Nucleus's, basically making a record of all the past chloroplasts DNA and RNA that has developed of generation after generation.
Next, there are some interesting things that happen to damaged DNA;
- an irreversible state of dormancy, known as senescence
- cell suicide, also known as apoptosis or programmed cell death - unregulated cell division, which can lead to the formation of a tumor that is cancerous
The first two are worth a look at, when the chloroplasts DNA become damaged from say too much sunlight, they would either become dormant or actually self destruct! This is super cool, its like a self regulating system.
So this relates back to my bleached bud and that fact that these chloroplasts are so close to where the seeds are pollinated and produced and I would just have to prove it over time but I imagine you could control the ancestry of the DNA by the quality and quantity of light you give a bud, this leads me to think, some how these purple streaks in my bleached bud are just some very old genes pushing through, and because most of the chloroplasts became damaged, they went dormant, allowing a new mix if DNA and RNA. Now then the white tips, is this a total lack of chloroplasts DNA, and what happens here? Maybe this DNA would be more pure and you could start almost brand new stains?
Light, DNA and Chloroplasts...
There is more to come with how I think plants direct them self's to the light, but I will talk about that later.