- Thread starter
- #581
Hmmmm...Interesting!I have not seen any hollow stems since switching to high brix. Granted I only did 1 grow with synthetics but I flowered 10 plants and every one of them had hollow stems. As far as deficiencies go, poor calcium uptake and boron deficiencies cause hollow stems. I suppose it could be genetic but out of the hundred or more high brix plants I've done, I've never seen hollow stems in any of them.
Checkout this article on Pith Autolysis: Pith Autolysis in Herbaceous, Dicotyledonous Plants: Experimental Manipulation of Pith Autolysis in Several Cultivated Species
Note:
Our central hypothesis concerning the aetiology of pith autolysis states that the carbon from the pith is transported to the growth regions of the plant and used at times when the plant cannot meet its carbon needs by photosynthesis alone.
And:
Also in support of the central hypothesis is the prevention of pith autolysis by the addition of extra carbon to the plant, in the form of an increased CO2 concentration of the surrounding air.
I'm pretty sure it's related to CO2 availability and, if I had to guess, my plants would be more prone since I'm drawing air in the flower tent from the veg tent. In other words, I think the plants in the (packed!) veg tent are sucking up a lot of the CO2 from the air before it makes it to the flower tent; and the lower concentration is what caused the hollow stems.