Leaves tacoing/canoeing and/or rotating around the petiole (like a Venetian blind). I've also ended up with a cola that was slightly bent at the top. And you may end up with foxtails.
The tacoing/canoeing is a result of auxins moving from the illuminated side of the leaf to the shaded side. The the additional auxins, the shaded side of the leaf expands and/or grows (that's a supposition on my part) and the top part of the leaf curls around, reducing exposure.
In the case where the cola bent, it was a large cola (I grow in hydro so plants tend to be larger) and there was an obvious bend about 2" down the cola.
In one grow, where I was trying to light a 3' tall plant and a 1' tall plant with the same light, I ended up with foxtails on the larger plant. That was a dumbshit move on my part. I did buy an XS 1500 for the little plant but the larger plant didn't revert.
These are the lights values for my most recent grow.
View attachment 5460751
I went back through that journal, searched for "drop" and read through the first couple of months of commentary. Here's what I found:
Day 23, PPFD of 798, DLI 60
"Dropped PPFD. Center plant at 708 was starting to taco. Set Dehu to 40. VPD slowly climbing. But temp dropped almost…"
I reduced input wattage, probably by 10% since it was 10%± PPFD reduction. New PPFD 634 DLI 55.
Day 24
I lowered the light a bit, PPFD 671 DLI 58
Later that day "Nice to see PPFD. I'll bump it tomorrow AM.. Next stop 750?"
"Increased wattage to 198 but looked at the plants and some of the leaves on Left look like the they're shallow V-shaped.
Dropped wattage back to 180. PPFD is a little higher today but they did grow overnight so that could be that I'm measuring differently. Only one value is different so I'm guessing is a measurement error. "
That's the only mention of a light issue but, in the spirit of full disclosure, it's routine for me to have to drop PPFD a little during the course of a grow. I see no downside to this. The plant reacts to…an error condition and I resolve it.
One behavior that's common is for leaves to "pray". My belief is that this occurs when the plants are on the cusp of their LSP but found no research on that and I've never tried to manipulate light levels to see if that's the case.
I've read that posts that growers conclude that plants "have had enough light" if they droop just before lights out. I do not believe that to be correct. The light saturation point is a function of PPFD, not of DLI. Second, I suspect that drooping leaves are a function of turgor. Finally, we know that plants respond to a circadian rhythm and I suspect drooping leaves one of the behaviors.