As to a definitive answer to if a "feminized" seed is predisposed to produce a hermaphrodite (which I guess is the question you folks are trying to address?).
Yes, that's what this thread is supposed to be about. If not a definitive answer, at least a reasonable discussion.
I doesn't matter (to me) however the hell they decide to make the seed in the first place. That is whether they use chemicals to force the plant to EXPRESS genes it already posses anyways (but are normally suppressed by genetic coding), or they allow the plant to do it naturally and down the line select only the plants who don't show visual signs of male reproductive organs. Anyways, to answer the question it appears your asking... I think there is no scientific anwser for any plant species at this time. You could [take] 1000 "naturally feminized" seeds from 10 different populations and not end up with consistent results. However for more than 100 years science has studied photoperiodic responses in plant and been able to find realitivly consistent results with respect to enviroment and affect on sex expression (as well as a world of other things). That information has been consistent.
I didn't ask the question; I just responded to it. Again, the question is, are feminized seeds more likely to result in "hermie" plants than non-feminized seeds of the same lineage? (Or at least, that's my take on the question).
Your opinion, I guess, is "nobody knows"?
I say "no".
As you say above, since every cannabis plant should contain the innate genetic ability to make male or female flowers, and since treatments with the chemical agents used to create feminized seeds effectively just flip this already existing "switch" without (so far as I know) causing other genetic alterations, I don't see a reason why the genotype of the feminized seeds should be divergent from the parent plants. The feminized seeds still ought to contain exact copies of genetic material lifted from each parent, analogous to what would have happened with a natural cross, and therefore should be no more. . .or less. . .likely to "go hermie".
This opinion, obviously, is based on a fundamental biologic/genetic perspective, not empirical data, so its theoretical, not "definitive". But if you disagree, feel free to state why. . .that would be a lot more interesting than simply dismissing what I'm saying as "baseless".
Responding to the above, even stipulating that nobody really "knows" the answer to the question, I don't think the answer is "unknowable". Its certainly should be possible to perform empiric testing on a variety of otherwise similar feminized vs. non-feminized seeds to see if the feminized ones are more likely to be phenotypically hermaphroditic. Whether or not such testing is practical or even necessary are different issues, but there does appear to be a lot of interest in the answer here.
You were correct when you said pollen in this "business" is a problem. Your absolutely correct, I don't entirely diagree. What your forgetting though is for the last 50 years or more this plant has been bred and cultivated with ill-intent.
Bluntly, I'm not entirely sure what you mean by that term here, but whatever you might mean, I think "ill-intent" is a normative opinion.
Again stipulating for the sake of discussion that indoor cultivation and selective breeding of cannabis for medical/recreational purposes constitutes "ill intent", its still been done outdoors literally throughout recorded human history, as long as. . .if not quite a bit longer than. . .just about every other plant species deliberately grown by people.
You seem to "forget" that people have been breeding cannabis for a "little" longer than 50 years, and that for the overwhelming majority of the roughly 10,000 years that human cannabis cultivation has been documented, such cultivation and ensuing genetic selection has not only been perfectly legal, but often encouraged and/or celebrated for its fiber, nutritional, and medicinal value.
The only reason males and or pollen producing plants are considered undesireable is because they influence seed production and that is perceived "bad" in the illicit market.
Not so; male plants are also considered undesirable because they manufacture far fewer cannabinoids.
Next, its not just a "perception" that seeds are bad; if you're trying to make medicine, its a reality. Specifically, if you're trying to create smokable cannabis flowers for medical or recreational use, and/or maximize cannabinoid production, then for multiple reasons you don't want them to be full of seeds.
This is true irrespective of the legal status of said flowers. Specifically, production of seedless cannabis flowers is still a main goal of cannabis cultivation in the many parts of the world where such cultivation is either overtly or de facto legal, including including many parts of the United States today.
Regarding the excert you did post though. You cited it entirely wrong. Chemical treatments (I beleive) are used in hyrbid corn production to render the male organs sterile. Years and years ago they use to manually go out and chop off every tassel by hand. Real talk!
I posted an abstract (not an excerpt), and I most certainly did cite the article correctly, with name and authors. To complete the citation, its from the May 3rd 1975 edition of
Crop Science, and I chose it because it appears to be a seminal work in its area. I guess what you disagree with is not my citation, but my interpretation.
My point was that GA can also alter sexual expression in other plants, and its sometimes used to do so; cannabis isn't the only plant where this is true. I stand by that, and I see you agree.
Now, specifically, the abstract I referenced states that with the appropriate application of GA the authors could make corn tassels pistillate (ie no tassels/stamens; female parts only), male fertile (stamens and pistils), or male infertile (infertile stamens and pistils). The authors stated that they couldn't get a male-only phenotype using GA on corn, but that's besides the point. Presumably you don't disagree.
No, obviously people aren't try to do the exact same thing with corn as they are cannabis and I didn't mean to imply it.
As I said and you then you must have google confirmed... corn already has male and female orgrans as 90% of all living plants. First of all, it appears to me excert purpose is to states the realitivly poor affects the acid had in relation to overall plant growth. But anyways, yes GA and CS treatments do have a confirmed ability to help a plant express/supress male and female - just as hormone treatments in humans do. You CAN use this to your advantage like they do in that industry (remember I said I have cited the corn indsutry for their techniques and determination) however just like a hormone treatment you can't turn a male into a female or vice versa or "manipulate gender" as you said. It says it right in your citation... "to facilitate hybrid seed production".
You're mistaken if you think I didn't know that cannabis is dioecious and corn monoecious prior to making my post or what the difference between the two is.
I believe I used the term "sex reversal" and I was just being colloquial about turning a phenotypically female plant into one with male flowers.
Obviously spraying GA on female plants doesn't make them male; it just makes them express staminate/male flowers.
You're right, it would have been more precise to say "manipulate sexual expression" or "sex phenotype" instead.
Seriously. It seems like folks get mad at me for trying to stop the "rumors and bs" you all complain about. I also think it's ironic who the person who started this mess of a thread (and wanted a pat on the back for it) doesn't have anything to say for themselves.
I'm not that person, and I'm not asking for a pat on the back.
However, I'd suggest that things may not be quite what they "seem".
Why are people getting mad at you? Hint:
This is the worst post I've ever seen. Don't try to randomly make a topic and force feed people with information that you, with no formal training and what appears not much knowledge at all in how biology works, created as a result of running a "30 day test". You've got to be kidding.
THIS IS HOW THE MISCONCEPTIONS ARE SPREAD. BECAUSE OF DB'S LIKE YOU. And yes, I did work like this (not with mj) for 10 years. So I CAN come in here and tell you that your a complete fool.
Gee. . .why would a post like that rub anyone the wrong way?
Why would stating fundamentally wrong assumptions about what people know seem irritating?
Are you aware that sometimes reasonably intelligent people can make some pretty "foolish" errors?
Believe it or not, its possible to disagree with someone, or even correct their mistakes without resorting to invective.
Some might even suggest that its generally more effective to do so (a la Dale Carnegie).