Root Development vs Plant Growth

tahoe58

Well-Known Member
hey skunk....this continues to be a real treat to sit and read when I have the time...and I did have the time again this morning. and a thought came through my mind....but I can't remember if it has been raised anywhere in the last thirty pages or not so I'm gonna through it out there....

I remember how fascinated I was when I first learned about jungle and tropical forest environments, and the complete lack of top soil and the manner of root develoment, literally at the surface. I had understood at the time that the volume of available moisture, and the nutrients from the continuous massive foliage shedding and heat/moisture degration recycling processes, provided the necessary environment to grow these humungous behemoths of trees. Where the stability of the tree became the risk due to the lack of roots. I realize this is sort of the fundamentals of hydroponic and all its variants. and I then also recall fdd's comments about his flushing and watering/nutirfying the humungous tree that he built, and his experiences with smaller rooting structures.

This all came through my mind when you were talking about roots seeming to seek out the sides of pots, and instinctual root development. Now unfortunately, I am not taking from any experience....I have none. But thinking about how nature loves a void and tries incessantly to fill it, and relating that back to nature generally being very efficient in the way it goes about its business, it would seem to me that the root growth could (should?) be expected to mimic the specific needs (and of course are a function of the genetics)....so if you are able to achieve this balance the availability of all the nutrients (water included), then the root will grow according to other variables - and not be responding to the need to "seek" out the source of its sustenence.

But then....ok ok ok...I know I'm sortof talking out of my brain directly here...but...then....that takes me to how incredibly intricate the connections and reliances and feedback loops are all dependet upon eachother. I have often viewed this in my brain as a massive collective of interconnecting cogs that changing the teeth on any one of them has the potential to have even a minute change to every other cog in the process.

So the extent of root development is not just a function of one or three or ten variables, but all the intricate aspects that are present when a plant grows. its like saying the current attempts to model climate have taken everything into account - in my view - impossible. we have grown in love with our modeling capacity. And my personal experience includes the following example....one of the things that I will do on a regular basis is habitat modeling for wildlife. we development habitat maps depicting areas where all the factors that we consider important to a particular species come together and create the ideal habitat for that species. Then we go an talk to the native elders, they look at the map and say...hmmm...interesting....never actaully ever seen a moose over there.....we actually hunt over here....pointing to the map.

I guess I 'm not sure what I'm really trying to say...I love these experiments and it is the only way that we can actually gain insight into what/why/how/when/where things happen as they do. so.....what am I trying to say? I don't know any more...another ones gone, another ones gone....and another one bites the dust! I really felt like I was going somewhere with this....but.....I'll try this....we are trying to understand the drivers to root development and its relationship with aboveground production - and based on the scary thinking that I all tried to put down above - I am not sure that we can separate the two in that one is dependent upon the other, and it is a circular process. Adjusting the variables and keeping others constant (at least the ones we know about) means you will adjust the output and the needs of others (i.e., these are not indepedent variables), and may actually be almost infinite. it would seem that I am suggesting that we are wasting our time...but experimenting is NEVER a waste of time....and this is not what I want to say. So maybe I should just shutup....and think so more.....:mrgreen:
 

newbutpersistent

Well-Known Member
Not sure if any one has seen this before.

This plant had a rough childhood. It was the last of the 3 out of 4 seeds that germinated. I put it in the soil and when it didn't pop up in a couple of days I investigated. Just as I had expected, the thing was upside-down, with the root growing up and the plant growing down. Not good. So I carefully flipped it over and put some more soil on top. In a couple of days it had popped the surface, however for the first week or two, it was growing very slow, much behind the 2 other seeds I planted at the same time (within a couple of days). then this happened, the first two sunleaves are HUGE! 3 1/2" long.
Well, you can pretty much see from the pics. If anyone has seen this let me know, I don't think it's a problem, just means more leaf area for photosynthesis, but I just had to show you guys. Look at how big they are compared to the rest of the plant, they're also very smooth, don't really look like marijuana leaves.
 

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tahoe58

Well-Known Member
like fdd...says to me when I raised a similar question....you've been on here for over a year and you have to ask if too big is a problem...hehehehehe.....I dunno...but I've come to the conclusion that is not a prob.
 

skunkushybrid

New Member
As soon as you bring a plant indoors it comes into an environment of your design.

We already play god, we can make ligers... probably even half man half pig if we wanted to.

Nature is a fight for life, which is the driving force behind evolution. The plant has evolved this way because of environmental factors. That is all. In the wild there are many places the roots will not be able to go due to other larger plants, or ones with good defences or attacks.

The fight is not just above ground but under it... even roots must fight for their bit of space. I believe this is the reason roots instinctually spread. They hit a barrier, they go somewhere else. By putting the roots into a pot, we are merely providing our own barriers. The plant does not realise that we are not nature, it just knows its root boundaries. Once a plant knows these boundaries, and settles down, and is getting enough nutes, who knows how much root space they really need?
 

newbutpersistent

Well-Known Member
well, from what I got from Tahoe's post. Not sure on most of it, but yes I think that what happens above ground probably does affect the roots in some way. And no, none of these variables are independent, they all affect each other and are all symbiotic, both within individual organisms and with interacting with other organisms.
 

skunkushybrid

New Member
Not sure if any one has seen this before.

This plant had a rough childhood. It was the last of the 3 out of 4 seeds that germinated. I put it in the soil and when it didn't pop up in a couple of days I investigated. Just as I had expected, the thing was upside-down, with the root growing up and the plant growing down. Not good. So I carefully flipped it over and put some more soil on top. In a couple of days it had popped the surface, however for the first week or two, it was growing very slow, much behind the 2 other seeds I planted at the same time (within a couple of days). then this happened, the first two sunleaves are HUGE! 3 1/2" long.
Well, you can pretty much see from the pics. If anyone has seen this let me know, I don't think it's a problem, just means more leaf area for photosynthesis, but I just had to show you guys. Look at how big they are compared to the rest of the plant, they're also very smooth, don't really look like marijuana leaves.
Yeah it's normal. Nice looking plant... reminds me of vortex. Is it an indica?
 

newbutpersistent

Well-Known Member
Not to steer the subject away, I have been having a little(<---- sarcasm) problem with my plants. They get these light brown/copper colored spots on some of the leaves, not all just a few. Then the spots in a few days get bigger and end up covering the whole leaf, then the leaf dries up and falls off. Not sure if it's some kind of fungus or mold, but I need to do something ASAP!

That's why I'm posting it here, I know it belongs in the plant problems section, however, I know there are A lot more knowledgeable people subscribed to this thread and time is of the essence.

The first 3 pics are of my flowering plants. One of which had this problem a couple of weeks ago but it had gone away, now it is back and meaner than ever! The 4th pic is of one of my plants still in veg. It has picked up the problem too. The other 2 plants I have in veg (they are in the flower room, just haven't started flowering yet) haven't shown signs of it, however I'm afraid they will pick it up too if I don't correct the situation.

Fortunately it hasn't affected the bud production (yet!!!), as you can see in the last pic.

PLEASE HELP: SITUATION CRITICAL! ALERT! ALERT!
 

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newbutpersistent

Well-Known Member
not sure, random bag seed, just like the other ones. Other than this problem they seem to be doing good. I'm going to start them on molasses today. Actual I'm going to feed one molasses and one "Green Light" Super Bloom (12-55-6). And see how the bud production and esp. trichome production pics up.

Yeha, I wasn't real worried about the big leaves, just hadn't seen it before. Thanks.
 

newbutpersistent

Well-Known Member
okay, another quick question, my mother/clone room is set up, I don't have a whole lot of lights in there (actually only one small cfl) which I figured would be fine, however while it does keep the plant alive, the growth is very slow. I'm going to put the good (no spots) vegging plant from my flower room in there so hopefully i will get some clones sooner. Also, if it is a mold or something on the other plants maybe this will protect it till I can get it figured out. I'm going to put another cfl in there, so hopefully that will help a bit too with the growth. My only problem is that until I checked today, there were no signs of sex, but when I just went to go check one last time, i saw those beautiful first set of pistils. I'm planning on still turning it into a mother, it's not too late right? it should revert pretty smoothly I would assume, considering that it's only been in flower cycle for one day. And at least this way I know it's a mom and not a dad.
 

silk

Well-Known Member
not sure, random bag seed, just like the other ones. Other than this problem they seem to be doing good. I'm going to start them on molasses today. Actual I'm going to feed one molasses and one "Green Light" Super Bloom (12-55-6). And see how the bud production and esp. trichome production pics up.

Yeha, I wasn't real worried about the big leaves, just hadn't seen it before. Thanks.
That's a nutrient burn from potassium toxicity. Please don't forget your manners and address your issues in the proper forums. There is also live chat... I'm there now...
 

skunkushybrid

New Member
The feed for this week. They'll get it again on wednesday.

Sensi Bloom A, 26.25ml (2.91ml per litre)
Sensi Bloom B, 26.25ml (2.91ml per litre)
MET Bloom, 16ml (1.77ml per litre)
Fulvic Acid, 16ml (1.77ml per litre)
Barricade, 1.5ml (0.16ml per litre)
B52, 20ml (2.22ml per litre)
Carboload, 8ml (0.88ml per litre)
Cannazym, 18ml (2ml per litre)
Overdrive, 32.5ml (3.61ml per litre)

EC, 1.6 (1120 PPM)

I've been thinking that I won't need to flush as much in these tiny pots...
 

skunkushybrid

New Member
Here's a couple of branches (that have just been turned into oil) from the mom plant at 6.5 weeks flower... 3 weeks to go. These branches were hanging loose from the rest, almost inviting me to harvest them, so I did...
 

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tahoe58

Well-Known Member
hahahaha...calling out to you...please liqufy me...please liquify me...hahahahaha....looking sweet!
 

tahoe58

Well-Known Member
and ya know skunk....in the transplant....same thing, almost none in the center....and lots all the way to the outside and down....I was amazed at the amount of root that had migrated that way....and that was completely the opposite to "my logic" ..... go figure??
 

silk

Well-Known Member
What truly amazes me though, is that there is so little substantial root on the inside of the medium...
Supposedly the roots will keep growing out over time to find nutrients to sustain the size of the plant. Clearly you can see the roots have taken the shape of your container. I would suspect that over longer periods of growth you would find more density in the center of the medium.
 
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