Bangaman
Active Member
Many people have said over cloning will result in a reduced potency. I was one of the few that said it is impossible, that the biology shows if this did happen, it would be 1 in many million.
The trouble is that many people including some growers I know personally have claimed potency loss. I even tried some from a friend who called me over just to prove his point. Indeed he was right.
So, as usual, where there is smoke...So i cracked the books, browsed the net, and shot some emails around.
Chimerism from cuttings made no biological sense, none what so ever, at least not to my limited knowledge at the time. I have cloned for years, once ran the same mother for two years straight a d never once had a Chimera. After all, I knew that in plants, only grafts produced chimeras.
Without turning this into a genetics lesson I will keep it simple. This is why everyone on either side of this argument is correct:
Chimeras is a genetic mutation, where the same organism has 2 different sets of DNA. Most common in animals and only in plants as a result of grafting one plant on another.
However, when flowering plants "prepare" to flower, they change the use of parts of their stems from leaf type cells to flower type cells (keeping it simple). This process is in itself is like a mutation and very delicate because of the many cell divisions that take place. The plant's DNA is very "vulnerable" when this change takes place.
So how are chimeras formed resulting in lost potency?
It is a bummer as many use large clones saves time, and someone recommended sterilizing tools with all kinds of OH producing ions and other oxidizing agents. That said, using Sterilizers when trimming may result in chimerism and loss or different potencies within buds of the same plant
Take smaller cuttings, and boil your tools if you feel inclined to sterilize.
Happy Gardening
The trouble is that many people including some growers I know personally have claimed potency loss. I even tried some from a friend who called me over just to prove his point. Indeed he was right.
So, as usual, where there is smoke...So i cracked the books, browsed the net, and shot some emails around.
Chimerism from cuttings made no biological sense, none what so ever, at least not to my limited knowledge at the time. I have cloned for years, once ran the same mother for two years straight a d never once had a Chimera. After all, I knew that in plants, only grafts produced chimeras.
Without turning this into a genetics lesson I will keep it simple. This is why everyone on either side of this argument is correct:
Chimeras is a genetic mutation, where the same organism has 2 different sets of DNA. Most common in animals and only in plants as a result of grafting one plant on another.
However, when flowering plants "prepare" to flower, they change the use of parts of their stems from leaf type cells to flower type cells (keeping it simple). This process is in itself is like a mutation and very delicate because of the many cell divisions that take place. The plant's DNA is very "vulnerable" when this change takes place.
So how are chimeras formed resulting in lost potency?
- The size of the cutting: The more cells in a cutting the greater the odds that there will be a mutation because the plant will draw cells from a greater number of previously specialized cells. In other words the further your cut is from the apex or the bigger your clone, the more likely you will experience a loss in potency.
- The use of sterilizers like rubbing alcohol, hydrogen peroxide etc. Sterilizers kill germs because of an ion they create that reacts in solution much like nutrients except this free radical ends up in places it should not and binds to plant DNA, MESSING IT UP.
It is a bummer as many use large clones saves time, and someone recommended sterilizing tools with all kinds of OH producing ions and other oxidizing agents. That said, using Sterilizers when trimming may result in chimerism and loss or different potencies within buds of the same plant
Take smaller cuttings, and boil your tools if you feel inclined to sterilize.
Happy Gardening
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