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lichtperiode

Lichtperiode, often translated as photoperiod, is the daily duration of exposure to light within a 24-hour cycle. It varies with latitude, season, weather, and local geography, and is typically measured as the number of hours of daylight in a day. The length of light and dark periods acts as an important temporal cue for a wide range of biological processes, from physiology and behavior to growth and development.

In botany, photoperiodism describes how plants respond to the length of day and night. The length of

In ecology and agriculture, the lichtperiode influences life cycles and ecosystem dynamics. Natural seasonal changes in

the
night
is
a
key
trigger
for
processes
such
as
flowering
and
seed
germination.
Plants
are
commonly
classified
as
short-day
(requiring
long
nights
to
flower),
long-day
(flowering
when
nights
are
short),
or
day-neutral
(flowering
independent
of
day
length).
The
underlying
mechanisms
involve
light
receptors,
primarily
phytochromes,
which
sense
red
and
far-red
light
and
regulate
gene
networks
that
control
flowering
and
other
seasonal
responses.
photoperiod
help
synchronize
migration,
reproduction,
and
dormancy
in
many
species.
In
cultivated
settings,
farmers
and
horticulturists
manipulate
photoperiod
using
artificial
lighting
to
optimize
crop
yield,
flowering,
or
vegetative
growth.
This
is
common
in
greenhouses
and
intensive
farming,
where
extending
or
shortening
the
light
period
can
accelerate
development
or
coordinate
harvests,
especially
in
higher
latitudes
with
pronounced
seasonal
variation.
In
animals,
circadian
and
circannual
rhythms
adapt
to
the
prevailing
light-dark
cycle,
linking
behavior,
metabolism,
and
hormonal
regulation
to
the
lichtperiode.