Quote:
Originally Posted by estación seca
The best way would be to find the best-grown plants in cultivation and measure the light they receive.
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Thats the wrong attempt, from my perspektiv.
I think, the best would be, to place some data-logger to log temperature, light intensitsy, spektrum and humidity/rain and place these next to 2 or 3 big Plants in the wild (one species).
After a year, we have some data and than we can start with the trials, with variation from "best known cultivation variant" up to "simulated nature".
The problem could be, that every cultivation-form has a sweet spot for fertilizing > more light but not enough of something other (nitrogen, CO2, whatever) can be cause, that we don't need a benefit with more light or maybe a step back.
It is a complex system, modifying one thing influences another.
So the Informations from books are not wrong all the way, it is a sweetspot to grow the plants in a greenhouse in the northern hemisphere far away from equator.
With todays posibilitys, I would go the other way, collecting so much data as possible, simulate this climate as best as possible (with LED, Growtents and co, it should be possible) and see how it works and compare it to known cultivation-forms.
Sorry, I am a phd. in mechanical engineering :P I love to collect datas