If a female plant hermies it was quite obviously not totally female, most strains can hermie.
Explain hermie in xy for not treated plant?
How can a non treated female make male and visa versa, i thought you were either XY or XX by your definition but i see plenty of nannas and female flowers on the opposite Cannabis sex.
Kingrow1,
I did not explain this well or completely, my apologies. Here is what I hope is a better and more detailed explanation.
Let's start at the bottom line. The x and y chromosomes have nothing to do with hermaphrodites.
It is natural to think that somehow a female that becomes a hermaphrodite is responding to some hidden y-chromosome or that an x-chromosome somehow becomes a y-chromosome. Not so, hermaphrodism is the result of growth regulators.
Logically, the y-chromosome can't have anything to do with female hermaphrodites because a female has only x-chromosomes so nothing that happens to a female, including hermaphrodism, can be the result of a y-chromosome, because there aren't any.
From this same train of logic the presence alone of an x-chromosome can't be the cause of hermaphrodism because all female plants have x-chromosomes but not all female plants become hermaphrodites.
Hermaphrodism is caused by growth regulators. Also known as hormones or auxins these are substances produced by the plant itself. These substances affect growth in many ways. You are probably familiar with some. Indole butyric acid (IBA) is growth regulator that stimulates root formation. IBA is the most common rooting 'hormone'.
Another you might be familiar with is Gibberellins (GAs). These substances regulate a lot of plant activity such as stem length, seed germination and dormancy.
Female Cannabis hermaphrodism can occur when the growth regulator ethylene is inhibited by substances such a silver nitrate or colloidal silver. Ethylene keeps a female female. As the effect of ethylene is reduced or eliminated females can respond by producing male characteristics such as male flowers and male growth patterns.
Hermaphrodism can be triggered by a lot of things, not just ethylene inhibitors. Many forms of stress can do it. Before ethylene inhibitors became common growers would starve plants, change light patterns, vary temperature, vary ph and many other things in the hopes of producing hermaphrodism. All of these techniques produce some sort of 'shock' to the plant that disrupts the existing growth regulator production, growth regulator receptors or both.
A form of this shock that is familiar to everyone is the move from 18/6 to 12/12. Why do you think this results in flowering? Because the different day/night length causes different growth regulators to either be produced or inhibited.
Producing hermaphrodites is just one of many ways we manipulate growth regulators to influence plant behavior. pinching, topping, LST and SOG training are all examples of manipulating growth regulators to defeat a tendency known as 'apical dominance', the tendency to grow with a single upright stem and a few much smaller side branches.