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  • 0000010100063564000635880069092209218500093082340930831409310118
    benedict glasscock 20.04.2026 - 09:01:14 (modif: 20.04.2026 - 09:10:21) level: 1 UP New Content changed
    dik, to je divne ze tie rastliny v podstate v darkroome bez UVecka vyrastli na pekne planty

    toto by ma zaujimalo ako to je mozne

    OK uz som si odpovedal:

    how is it possible that plants can grow without UV A/B in a dark room without windows only on stock lightbulbs?

    Short answer: most plants don’t actually need UV light to grow.

    What they really need is light in the visible spectrum—especially red and blue wavelengths—because that’s what drives Photosynthesis. Standard “stock” lightbulbs (like LEDs or fluorescents) emit plenty of visible light, even if they produce little or no UV.

    Here’s what’s going on:

    1. Photosynthesis uses visible light, not UV
    Plants mainly absorb:

    Blue light (~400–500 nm) → supports leaf growth
    Red light (~600–700 nm) → supports flowering and energy production

    UV-A and UV-B sit outside this main usable range. They’re not essential for the core energy process.

    2. UV is more like a bonus, not a requirement
    Small amounts of UV can influence things like:

    pigment production (e.g., deeper colors)
    stress responses
    production of certain protective compounds

    But plants can complete their full life cycle without it.

    3. Regular bulbs still provide usable light
    Even a basic LED bulb emits enough red and blue light for plants to survive and often grow reasonably well—especially low-light plants like pothos or snake plants.

    4. Intensity and duration matter more than UV
    If plants are doing okay under room lighting, it’s usually because:

    the light is on long enough (e.g., 10–16 hours/day)
    the bulb is close enough to the plant
    the plant species tolerates low light

    If you tried to grow something demanding (like tomatoes), a normal bulb probably wouldn’t cut it—not because of missing UV, but because it lacks intensity.

    So: plants in a windowless room under regular bulbs aren’t breaking the rules—they’re just using the part of light they actually need.
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