Abiqua
Well-Known Member
Great thread SDS, wondering when you were going to get around again....miss the reading a little bit, just a teensie bit.
I am of two opinion with gmo's.
1, is that the technology and science behind GMO's, is very intriguing. Is it merely another tool, like when Linus Pauling was able to start isolating the molecular structure of chemical substances? Mutagenic mutation has been around for a while [Colchine treatments, silver sprays, etc etc] The strict structure of delineating genes [and there are a bunch] of every single strand of dna contained in each chromosome is fascinating imho....
2 What is done with GMO's, seems to teeter on the non-humanity scale. Food mainly being created as a by-product of genetic engineering seems to be created in the image of profit and not quality. Gmo food has never been touted as feeding the world, which I find ironic.
Correct me if am wrong though, that the dirty work is really the how and why genes are identified and then modified. It seems that gene sequencing is the main driver in this effort and it is coming along slowly, even for what has been identified. Knowing where and how the gene is located and turned on is due to the efforts of sequencing, then cutting a gene out with a lymase, is the byproduct of that knowledge.
....
And on top of that, I didn't see polyploidy discussed in the parts of the paper I did read and to sequence a triploid or tetraploid individual will be that much more work.
I honestly feel that part of the solution of eventual degradation of diploid Cannabis [if it ever occurs] is to branch into polyploidy species. RC Clarke mentions scientists that were modifying diploid individuals into polyploidy thru Colchine treatments, were getting higher yields of the monoterpenes in these varities.
Clarke also declares that polyploidy has not been found to be natural, but his work might be outdated in that area?
Very interesting stuff, especially when you come across this:
Here she/he is 2 weeks later, still throwing triple nodes after I cut a few of the leaves away and replanted this evening. Just trying to throw a little stress, to see how it reacts. I have heard this can be a phenotypic effect after a few nodes, so I am making sure, but hasn't thrown it yet.
I haven't pulled a male yet in this batch of seeds, good Fems.
I am of two opinion with gmo's.
1, is that the technology and science behind GMO's, is very intriguing. Is it merely another tool, like when Linus Pauling was able to start isolating the molecular structure of chemical substances? Mutagenic mutation has been around for a while [Colchine treatments, silver sprays, etc etc] The strict structure of delineating genes [and there are a bunch] of every single strand of dna contained in each chromosome is fascinating imho....
2 What is done with GMO's, seems to teeter on the non-humanity scale. Food mainly being created as a by-product of genetic engineering seems to be created in the image of profit and not quality. Gmo food has never been touted as feeding the world, which I find ironic.
Correct me if am wrong though, that the dirty work is really the how and why genes are identified and then modified. It seems that gene sequencing is the main driver in this effort and it is coming along slowly, even for what has been identified. Knowing where and how the gene is located and turned on is due to the efforts of sequencing, then cutting a gene out with a lymase, is the byproduct of that knowledge.
....
And on top of that, I didn't see polyploidy discussed in the parts of the paper I did read and to sequence a triploid or tetraploid individual will be that much more work.
I honestly feel that part of the solution of eventual degradation of diploid Cannabis [if it ever occurs] is to branch into polyploidy species. RC Clarke mentions scientists that were modifying diploid individuals into polyploidy thru Colchine treatments, were getting higher yields of the monoterpenes in these varities.
Clarke also declares that polyploidy has not been found to be natural, but his work might be outdated in that area?
Very interesting stuff, especially when you come across this:
Here she/he is 2 weeks later, still throwing triple nodes after I cut a few of the leaves away and replanted this evening. Just trying to throw a little stress, to see how it reacts. I have heard this can be a phenotypic effect after a few nodes, so I am making sure, but hasn't thrown it yet.
I haven't pulled a male yet in this batch of seeds, good Fems.