Allele Inheritance Compilation

Apical Bud

Well-Known Member
I don't have much to share yet but I will. If anyone else knows if, for instance, the trait of purple leaves, or pink flowers, or orange hairs, is dominant, recessive, incomplete, etc, by posting it here we could slowly build a list. Or if anyone knows of a list already started we can start there and add to it. Any takers?
 

bf80255

Well-Known Member
I think for this to work we would all have to grow the same genetics from the same parents and grow with 100% uniformity between the. Bunch of us as far as pots liggts temps ph of soil you know it just wouldnt be a very accurate list. I mean if anyone thinks im wrong please let me know i would love to have a list like this but i know how hard it would be to do this the right way with any real world application. I thithink its a pretty cool idea and i hope. I can help contribute to it if you can figure how to work out the kinks.
 

Apical Bud

Well-Known Member
I think for this to work we would all have to grow the same genetics from the same parents and grow with 100% uniformity between the. Bunch of us as far as pots liggts temps ph of soil you know it just wouldnt be a very accurate list. I mean if anyone thinks im wrong please let me know i would love to have a list like this but i know how hard it would be to do this the right way with any real world application. I thithink its a pretty cool idea and i hope. I can help contribute to it if you can figure how to work out the kinks.
That's a good point. I think we could still do it for common traits, still. Color, for example, or leaf patterns. Hopefully even smell, because there seem to be common smells, like pine, skunk, grass, fruit, citrus, bubblegum, grape, pepper, vanilla, mint, basil spice. I'm no odologist lol but I've grown a few strain in my day and each one was both unique and familiar in some way. Being that they have, if not common smells, similar notes, there's probably a similar genotype for it, right? We could seek to find commonality in phenotypes that share commonality.
 

Apical Bud

Well-Known Member
The Inheritance of Chemical Phenotype in

Cannabis sativa L.


http://www.genetics.org/content/163/1/335.full.pdf

this reminded me of your post when I was looking for other information
That's a great article. It claims cbd-thc ratios are dependent on codominance, and usually come in 3 models: all cbd, a 1:1 mix, or all thc. That's interesting because some strains test in at, say, CBD 2% thc 8% (though most I’ve seen are roughly 1:1 if they have any cbd at all).
I’d like to run some theories by you guys and see if any bounce off the right way. To explain the ratios which wander off the 1:1 marker one would expect from a purely codominant inheritance pattern, could the anomalous ratios be due to the time at which the crop was harvested, the intensity of the lighting, and the curing process?
There are potent strains of high THC weed everywhere these days, but there are also many that have medium or low THC. However, the vast majority have a ratio of 1:0 THC:CBD. Does anyone know if the genotype for high overall resin production (regardless of whether it’s THC or CBD in that resin) is independent of the genotype for ratio? That is, will a dank plant mixed with a weak plant make half weak offspring and half dank? Or would their resin production be a mix, somewhere in between the parents?
If it IS independent then in order to make a 20% CBD 0% THC strain, my hypothesis is, mixing a strain of 1:1 low yield with a high yield 1:0 THC:CBD, half the offspring would have high yield THC and CBD, and half low. So…
…the mother, 1:1, passes on both genotypes (CBD and THC) and the gene for low or moderate resin production; the father, 1:0, passes on the genotype for only THC, but also has the chance to pass on the genotype for high resin production. Half the offspring would get the gene for high production, half for low or moderate, depending on from which parent they derived the genes for that train. Independently from this allele, half the offspring would get the codominant phenotype of 1:1 ratio, and half would get the codominant phenotype for 1:0 (though one of the genes would be missing, the cbd gene, so only thc would be produced). So at this point, the half of the plants that don’t have the desired 1:1 ratio would be rejected from the gene pool, and the half that have low yield would be too. What would be left to breed in this generation would be all high yield plants, half of which would be 1:1 and half 1:0. One more generation would be needed to take the ¼ of the offspring that would inherit the 1:0 CBD:THC (not to be confused with 1:0 THC:CBD) and breed them together.
If the high yield 1:1s were bred together they should all be high yield, and follow the same 1:2:1 ratio pattern that hexthat’s link described. That would mean a stable, high yield CBD strain should be only 4 generations away for the average breeder! Would it not? That’s less than a year away from THC-less weed for all!
 
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