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saskafarian
05-10-2006, 08:49 PM
DAY LENGTH AND FLOWERING - HEMP

Pubdate: 1947 Source: The Yearbook of Agriculture; 1943-1947, United States Department of Agriculture Author: H.A. Borthwick, USDA Senior Botanist in the Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering Pages: 282-283

New practices that can be used in breeding hemp have resulted from recent photoperiodic studies. Hemp is a short-day plant. It flowers promptly when day lengths are less than 14 hours and very slowly or not at all when day lengths are greater than 14 hours. Under average field conditions about half of the plants are female and half are male. Under some circumstances, however, female plants, each of which may produce a very large number of female flowers, will also produce a few typical male flowers. The opposite condition occurs in the males; that is, a male plant will form an occasional female flower in addition to a great number of male flowers. This tendency for hemp plants to produce these extra flowers of the opposite sex is increased by subjecting them to photoperiods of 14 hours or less and to cool nights when flowers are being formed.

Most rapid progress in breeding plants can be made with those that can be self-pollinated. Hemp, obviously, can be self-pollinated only when it produces these occasional additional flowers of the opposite sex. The advantage of being able to increase their tendency to form these flowers is apparent.

Dr. Hugh C. McPhee of the Department made use of this behavior of hemp several years ago. He used the pollen of the male flowers that were produced in small numbers on certain of the female plants to self-pollinate those plants. When he grew the resulting seeds he made the important discovery that all of the plants were female. We have recently produced several thousand seeds in this way and have not obtained a single male plant, thus thoroughly confirming Dr. McPhee's observations.

Under greenhouse conditions, with proper control of temperature and day length, a very high percentage of female plants produced enough male flowers so that self-pollination could be effected, and in certain experimental lots of female plants produced out-of-doors in late summer when days were short and nights were cool, enough male flowers were formed so that natural pollination occurred and a quantity of pure "female" seed was produced. These results suggest that a locality can be found in which the conditions are favorable to the formation of these intersex male flowers on female plants in sufficient quantity that a good crop of seed could be obtained. If this could be done, a means would be at hand to produce commercial quantities of "female" seed, thereby enabling growers to produce a pure stand of female plants. Such pure stands would result in a more uniform fiber crop and eliminate certain harvest problems. The basis for developing such a procedure lies in finding in nature a combination of environmental factors similar to that which, under experimental conditions, has resulted in formation of abundant male flowers.

hydrorascal
05-11-2006, 02:27 AM
Dr. Hugh C. McPhee of the Department made use of this behavior of hemp several years ago. He used the pollen of the male flowers that were produced in small numbers on certain of the female plants to self-pollinate those plants. When he grew the resulting seeds he made the important discovery that all of the plants were female. We have recently produced several thousand seeds in this way and have not obtained a single male plant, thus thoroughly confirming Dr. McPhee's observations.


Sure sounds like a 'how to make feminized seeds' to me....

Very nice post... thanks....

suzy cremecheese
05-14-2006, 12:03 AM
I would imagine it may work but then hermaphroites become an issue.

vapor
01-14-2012, 03:18 AM
"This tendency for hemp plants to produce these extra flowers of the opposite sex is increased by subjecting them to photoperiods of 14 hours or less and to cool nights when flowers are being formed."

thought this was interesting i always get a few nanners late in flower on my sweetskunk, i have no light leaks etc this kinda makes me wonder, some real cold nights my temps get down to 55 or 60 degrees c...

Lrus007
01-14-2012, 05:29 AM
that was a good read. my hashplant on the
other hand will put out a few nanners in
late bud when we have a heat wave in summer.
so i guess what few seeds i have got from it
should be female. i kind of doubt it tho because
many of the thai's i have grown have self seeded.
i would think a hermi plant would make hemi seeds.
tho i could be wrong :bong2:

it does remind me of a story. was 1 summer few years
ago was in chat with subcool and i told him i was going
to make 1 female seed from a11. my Lhp had a few nanners
on it at the time middle of summer. so i plucked the nanners
that i saw while trimming and set them on a budding a11.
well i got 1 seed lol so after it dryed i planted it and it grew
a a11xLhp plant it grew like a11 small and slow but had a
hashyness to it. i grew it about 4 runs and then i had clones
not root. i tried to revege but it did not make it so is gone.
when it showed female tho subcool was like no fucking way
but i had photo's of it from when i put nanners on till i had
dry bud. lol good times :smoker:

then long ago i was told if you want your plant to seed it's self
to add 10 silver dimes into soil when potting plant. some how
the silver will make the plant hermi and make seed. i tried it
1 time and did get 10 or so seeds from the plant.

there is so much we don't know about this plant :stir:

vapor
01-14-2012, 06:11 AM
interesting story lruss, makes me think of soma and his female seeds///
Makes me think we should have our own country cannaba or something who knows, if we all got together and stated smoking possibly we could get the rest of em baked muhahahah, we could send our seal team to free marc etc.