Hot Diggity Sog
Well-Known Member
If I took a genetic female, took some clones, forced one of the clones to turn male and then pollinated the female with this pollen, would the seeds yield plants that are genetically identical?
I've never done this but I have the materials for STS (Silver Thiosulfate) and figured I would try this approach first.How are you going to force herm????!????
When do you apply it.I've never done this but I have the materials for STS (Silver Thiosulfate) and figured I would try this approach first.
Easier to send you the link to where my information came from rather than explain it:When do you apply it.
I cant read.Easier to send you the link to where my information came from rather than explain it:
http://forum.grasscity.com/advanced-growing-techniques/1179921-diy-sts-silver-thiosulfate-solution-how-guide-reversing-plants.html
That's why I asked here...figured someone would have the answer. Tried googling but did have not much luck. Knowing nothing about genetics I guess I don't know the correct terminology to search for. If the answer is no, then that's all I needed. Thanks.Short answer, no.
long answer, study genetics. There are plenty of available links on this site, you could also just google medelian inheritance.
So are tou adding nothing to this form as far as applied knowledge goes? Your just hoping for help from another websites link and you dont know? Cool. Good luck.Easier to send you the link to where my information came from rather than explain it:
http://forum.grasscity.com/advanced-growing-techniques/1179921-diy-sts-silver-thiosulfate-solution-how-guide-reversing-plants.html
Dude...this discussion was not about *how* to make feminized seeds. My question was simply if pollen from a genetic female pollinated said female, would the yielding seeds be genetic identicals. A simple yes or no is all I was looking for.So are tou adding nothing to this form as far as applied knowledge goes? Your just hoping for help from another websites link and you dont know? Cool. Good luck.
This thread will get no where.So they would be close to identical if the plant you made self pollinate was a stable inbred line.
For instance, if you somehow had a female plant from the hindu kush mountains in the 60's that had a very small genetic pool for hundreds of years, you may get close to phenotypes expressing very little variability. From my understanding at least.
If you take some random clone and breed her with herself, there could be a wide range of phenotypes that could appear in her offspring. I could be wrong though, im no geneticist
All of them, then take the least herming sets of offspring. Sell em on the net, easy millionair.Hot I'd say go for it and see for yourself of the variations of selfing. you could even get close to damn near your clone. how many seeds you'd have to pop, well thats a whole different ball game.