Cannabis Nutrient Burn and Light Stress
Sierra Langston
Cultivatrice & Spécialiste des Graines
The reason nutrient burn light stress deserves its own focused discussion is that it behaves differently from the general nutrient principles that most guides cover. The symptoms have a specific presentation, the causes have a specific pattern, and the correction requires a targeted approach that blanket advice does not provide.
How This Differs from General Nutrient Management
What makes nutrient burn light stress distinct from the broader nutrient picture is where and when symptoms appear, how they progress, and what underlying condition they most commonly indicate. General nutrient advice says "check pH and adjust feed." Topic-specific advice tells you what pH range triggers this specific issue, what medium conditions exacerbate it, and why the symptom pattern you are seeing points here rather than at a dozen other possibilities.
Nutrient uptake depends on pH, medium type, and growth stage — factors that interact in ways most feeding charts do not account for. Our complete nutrient guide breaks down macro and micronutrient function, lockout patterns, and diagnostic methods in full detail.
Identifying the Specific Problem
One reliable diagnostic trick for nutrient burn light stress: observe whether the issue is progressing or stable. A deficiency that is getting worse daily despite normal feeding points to lockout — the nutrient is present but unavailable. A deficiency that stabilized after your last feed adjustment suggests the correction is working and the plant needs time to show recovery on new growth (old damaged tissue does not heal).
What Triggers This Issue in Practice
Environmental interactions that trigger nutrient burn light stress issues: high-intensity LED lighting increasing calcium demand beyond what the feed provides, cold root-zone temperatures reducing uptake efficiency, and overwatering reducing oxygen in the root zone and impairing the active nutrient transport that roots require.
The Correction — Step by Step
Step 1: Check pH. If it is outside the optimal range for your medium (6.0-6.8 soil, 5.5-6.5 coco/hydro), correct pH before doing anything else. This single step resolves the majority of nutrient burn light stress presentations. Step 2: If pH is correct, check runoff EC. If EC is significantly higher than input, flush with pH-adjusted water at 3x pot volume, then resume feeding at 60-70% of previous strength. Step 3: If both pH and EC are normal, the issue is likely a genuine depletion — add the specific nutrient at half strength and observe for 5-7 days.
How Strain Choice Relates to This Issue
Genetics influence how sensitive a plant is to nutrient burn light stress disruption. Heavy-feeding high-THC seeds strains with aggressive growth patterns demand more precise nutrient management and are quicker to show problems when feeding falls behind their appetite. Lighter-feeding autoflower seeds and moderate hybrids provide more margin for error. If you consistently encounter nutrient burn light stress issues, consider whether your genetics match your feeding style and skill level — sometimes the simplest fix is choosing a cultivar that aligns with how you prefer to manage nutrients rather than fighting a strain that demands a level of precision you are still developing.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How quickly will the plant recover after I correct this?
- New growth should show improvement within 5-10 days. Old damaged leaves will not heal — they are the record of the problem, not the indicator of current health. If new growth continues to show symptoms after 10 days of correction, the diagnosis or correction may need revision.
- Can this issue reduce my final yield?
- Yes. Any nutrient disruption during flower directly affects bud development. The earlier in flower the issue occurs and the longer it persists, the greater the yield impact. Disruptions in the final 2 weeks have less yield impact but can affect trichome maturation and terpene development.
- Is this more common in certain growing media?
- Coco coir tends to surface nutrient burn light stress issues faster than soil because there is no buffering — problems in the root zone reach the plant within days. Soil buffers problems for longer but can mask accumulating issues until they become severe. Hydro surfaces problems fastest of all but also allows the fastest correction.
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