If a plant grown from a feminized seed becomes a hermaphrodite and pollinates the female plant, will the seeds produced be feminized?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Hermaphrodite
Collapse
X
-
-
9fingerleafs kingfish My understanding is that hermaphrodism isn't necessarily genetic: it can occur because of stressors like light exposure during flower dark period, etc.
So what are the hermie genes?
My understanding is also that hermies produce female seeds in the pollinated plants.
-
Well it’s kinda like diseases. Some plants will hermie at the slightest light leak during flower. Some don’t. Some will hermie under heat or other stress. Others don’t. So it is also a genetic predisposition to hermie under certain conditions. Some strains don’t go back. After going hermie the offspring can be all hermie without any stress. Kinda like evolution. The plant realizes it’s he only way to survive. That’s why they’re not used to breed even when it was an environmental factor. DNA is always changing
-
9fingerleafs THANK YOU for the clarification!!!
-
-
alltatup here's a quick read that may answer that foryou.
https://forum.growweedeasy.com/forum...-she-s-a-beast
https://forum.growweedeasy.com/forum...1424-shop-grow
Wise man say."Always someone who know more."
- Likes 1
Comment
-
THANK YOU Chef!!! That article was good and distinguished between environmental and genetic hermaphroditism. I learned that Thai Sativas are prone to it. I have read conflicting info about the seeds, though. Some say the seeds will all be female, but the article says not.
-
alltatup, I know back in the day, growing in buckets outdoors, when we first grew a hermie, all the seeds we used were females from the hermie.
-
D.A.A.S.69 So I'm confused. It's so strange how both ideas--all fem seeds, hermie seeds--are all over the place...
Comment