Applesauceisgood
Well-Known Member
I'm going to say slim chance that is 'genetic drift'. You have cultivars going on hundreds of years old that remain extremely uniform and in commercial production. Phenol difference brought on by environmental factors is the reason you see plants that can look vastly different from one grow to the next, one grower to the next. Did you expose your plants to excessive background radiation? Even vigor loss in old clones can be explained away by the accumulation of pathogens before genetic drift. Let alone a plant completely changing the way it looks in a year due to genetic mutation. .000001% mutated cells are not getting pink box off the hook. This is cloning and not sexual reproduction. For what it's worth, I still think both the GMO and Trop Cherry could be legitimate cuts. The GMO is a stretchy plant but also seems to dislike excessive N. The plant pictured above looks over-ferted which could cause a height stunting effect whereas the other strain that went verticle had no issue with feed stress.
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