Who's Got The Fostiest Buds? Let's See How Frosty A Bud Can Really Get?

Sativied

Well-Known Member
No ,it's a polyploid. There is no fusion happening ,this plat has 3 times the chromosomes than a diploid which results in more plant matter being produced . thanks for chiming In tho!
I can see where this is going but let me try this one more time:
No, clearly fasciation. Not that uncommon. Not a polyploid, not a sextaploid with 2 extra set of chromosome/ as you claim without posting the dna analysis and would results in something very different than what you're showing. Still a fine plant, but no polyploid. And you're welcome.
 

Dreadloc Ganga Farmer

Well-Known Member
I can see where this is going but let me try this one more time:
No, clearly fasciation. Not that uncommon. Not a polyploid, not a sextaploid with 2 extra set of chromosome/ as you claim without posting the dna analysis and would results in something very different than what you're showing. Still a fine plant, but no polyploid. And you're welcome.
Thank you for the information! I don't know everything! And I'm always willing to learn. The only thing is Google is confusing.
 

Sativied

Well-Known Member
Thank you for the information! I don't know everything! And I'm always willing to learn. The only thing is Google is confusing.
I don't know everything either, I don't even know how much I don't know but I bet it's a lot. But this I happen to know. I've grown several of them too, it's a mutation I consider undesirable (gets too leafy inside that mohawk), it happens with some plants in my whorled phyllotaxy crosses. Those as well as the father (tetrawhorled) were also labelled by many as a polyploid. It's a very common misconception. A triploid is likely to be whorled (3leaves per node) but a plant that is whorled is not likely a triploid. Same for fasciation. A polyploid would likely produce fasciated buds and other weird deformations, but a plant with fasciation is not likely a polyploid. There are just much more likely explanations (hormone regulation malfunction). Besides that there is no way of knowing sure without a dna analysis, if you would really have a polyploid, with tripple the normal chromosomes, you'd possibly have the most valuable plant on the planet and you'd have men in black showing up at your door or get a call from bayer.

Pck x sh
image.jpeg
 

Dreadloc Ganga Farmer

Well-Known Member
I don't know everything either, I don't even know how much I don't know but I bet it's a lot. But this I happen to know. I've grown several of them too, it's a mutation I consider undesirable (gets too leafy inside that mohawk), it happens with some plants in my whorled phyllotaxy crosses. Those as well as the father (tetrawhorled) were also labelled by many as a polyploid. It's a very common misconception. A triploid is likely to be whorled (3leaves per node) but a plant that is whorled is not likely a triploid. Same for fasciation. A polyploid would likely produce fasciated buds and other weird deformations, but a plant with fasciation is not likely a polyploid. There are just much more likely explanations (hormone regulation malfunction). Besides that there is no way of knowing sure without a dna analysis, if you would really have a polyploid, with tripple the normal chromosomes, you'd possibly have the most valuable plant on the planet and you'd have men in black showing up at your door or get a call from bayer.

Pck x sh
View attachment 3793686
So like I said it is a polyploid because this is how it started..... So based on your own words I'm right! Boom!
 

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Sativied

Well-Known Member
So like I said it is a polyploid because this is how it started..... So based on your own words I'm right! Boom!
I can see now how "google is confusing" to you... Good luck finding your car. I hope it has a very unique color because according to your logic if yours is red, all red cars are yours.

That is a trifoliate.
Actually, no, that is...

I give up lol.
 
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