This is exactly what I originally read. The problem is... if there is no male chromosome present, then how did the plant make male parts in the first place? I really don't know the answer to this, I'm hoping I'll learn something here.
It was a true "bisexual" (or more literally hermaphrodite), a handful of male parts in a plant that otherwise fully finished as a flowering female.
In all classes at the college level, the term used was "bisexual" in all text books. I never saw the term "Hermaphrodite" used in any plant science class.
You state that you had "a few male parts around the bottom of the plant". If it had balls and not "banana" stamen on a few buds.
Then you had a true bisexual plant. They are rare........Now I'm interested. I know that if you "reverse" a female. the resulting pollen when used to create S1 or feminized seeds. Will come back at the rate of around 1:3000 being Full on Male. Some breeders call this a "Super Male." They
are safe to use in breeding programs.
Now that I think on this more.
I'm betting on Mendalian genetics actually carrying on
some percentage of the bisexual trait (as it is an actual expressed trait in this plant. Thus being passed on in the genetic code more predominately) to the off spring. This would, more then likely, radically change those 1;3000 ratios to much
closer to the more normal 1:4
or some factor there of. (1:8 - 1:16 - 1:32 etc)
These would NOT be seeds I would use for any breeding program!
If these were from "banana" stamen or your "late season male expression. These are stress feminized seeds. They are not stable and are likely to carry on the trait of throwing banana's at a higher ratio.
^not true
there is a difference between a hermaphrodite expression and a late flower male expression. The first will produce seed stock of more hermaphrodite likely plants, while the late flower yellow finger in the bud will 99% of the time give you seeds that produce females. the pollen from these can be used on any other females that are ready to be pollinated for the same feminised results
Your 180 deg.
wrong on this one Chemy.. Sorry! The ONLY "stable" selfed seed, is from chemical reversing...
When you treat a plant to go male (or part of it). You use that pollen on a whole different female plant cloned of the same mother of the "reversed" plant. Another way to put it is that, You use two clones of the same plant. One you treat and the other you use the harvested pollen on....understand?