This article is the only scientific report detailing the effects of UVB I can find, in fact it's the only scientific report of any kind I can find to do with UVB effects on cannabis plants of any type let alone just Sativas.
Lydon, J., Teramura, A. H. and Coffman, C. B. (1987), UV-B RADIATION E
ECTS ON PHOTOSYNTHESIS, GROWTH and CANNABINOID PRODUCTION OF TWO Cannabis sativa CHEMOTYPES. Photochemistry and Photobiology, 46: 201–206. doi: 10.1111/j.1751-1097.1987.tb04757.x
It is cited in other interesting sounding studies such as
The Effect of Electrical Lighting Power and Irradiance on Indoor-Grown Cannabis Potency and Yield.
I'm a bit cynical so I'm not going to pay to read two studies that have been available for 6 and 3 years respectively but have not appeared as groundbreaking news anywhere I can find inside or outside the world of cannabis growing.
As always when you're online looking for something to do with cannabis growing, there are endless forum threads citing the abstract of the 1st study as proof of the theory. I have the feeling they have mistaken the meaning of the word "equivocal" for the meaning of the word "unequivocal"!
Here is the abstract;
I notice nobody appears to have paid to read the full results of the study. $6 for
48 hours access here btw.
The basic gist I got from the above was that the drug type Sativas might produce more THC as protection against UVB but it's ambiguous at best.
Before I could even dream of adding UVB my scientific side would love to know the answers to a few questions raised by the abstract.
How many plants each of drug and fiber type were grown?
What were the growing conditions, growing medium and vitally what type/spec of lighting was used as the main grow lighting?
How were they irradiated so accurately at that specific dose?
The first above ground terminal meristem can be the only one or one of many depending where you look, the definition seems quite loose as some botanist/biologists use it to describe the top of sideshoots as well but some don't so were all colas zapped or just the main stem?
What type of UVB lighting was used?
What was the increase? For me a minimum of 2% in all the floral tissues would be needed to make it worth a dedicated UVB lamp but if that was the case we'd have heard about it by now.
I'd rather add a cfl as I'd still end up with more THC than the UVB treated plant if I managed to add 5% extra yield to the floral tissues at the expense of not getting the THC rich leaves of the UVB one.
Ok so the scientist's results are equivocal as I said earlier and for me that's enough to see the UVB dedicated light as an unnecessary and inefficient use of energy/space that could be better used adding more proven bandwidths such as red, blue or white depending on what stage you want to boost growth.
I know that last sentence came across like something a robot would say, I'd really love to see a barrage of links to published and accredited scientific testing proving me wrong, especially as Indica's might benefit more from UVB if it really does encourage THC rich trichome production as a sort of biological sunscreen, it being a plant that prefers more temperate climes than Sativas.
Until science does it's magic and proves it works I'll be filing UVB in the "At Best Not Disproved" folder in my brain along with magnetized water.