F2s S1s BXs or IBL what does the community prefer?

what do you want!

  • tru F1(ibl x ibl) or (ibl x landrace)

    Votes: 20 47.6%
  • S1 selfed mother seeds

    Votes: 8 19.0%
  • backcrosses

    Votes: 11 26.2%
  • inbred lines

    Votes: 23 54.8%
  • F2s

    Votes: 8 19.0%
  • these crazy F1s you get today(poly x poly)

    Votes: 8 19.0%

  • Total voters
    42

Jogro

Well-Known Member
Jogro-Thanks!
Not sure what you're thanking me for, but whatever it is, you're welcome.

With respect to Mr. Factsordie, despite our "disagreement", I think he does (albeit tangentially) raise a good point by Tom Hill.

Most breeders claim that they won't breed with feminized genetics, and say doing so is bad practice. I've heard any number take this position: The guys from DNA, Subcool from TGA, Kyle Kushman, Reddog of Sickmeds, etc. Kushman in particular is fairly hysterical about this. . .he says doing it is ruining the gene pool, etc.

Its my OPINION that there is no fundamental genetic reason why doing so should make any difference, so long as you otherwise use proper breeding practice along the way. I've stated this in the past in other threads, and its nice to see at least one knowledgeable pro in agreement.

Apparently not only does Hill hold this position, that its OK to breed with fems (including S1s), but that there can be certain advantages to doing so. Note that Hill is NOT saying that all S1s are automatically superior to the parent; clearly this is NOT true and even he says so explicitly. He's saying, in effect, that there can be some advantages to using S1s in breeding.

On his releasing "elites" in "clone" form, I looked a bit, but haven't been able to find any information on that. Again, if anyone has any, I'd love to see a reference. Instead, Hill has said that he is working on offering S1s of "elite" lines that if not absolutely inbred, offer minimal variation when released as S1s. Here is the scoop from his own mouth from last year:

https://forum.seeddepot.nl/showthread.php?408-Welcome&p=1336&viewfull=1#post1336

Hello and welcome, I am Tom Hill. I have grown and bred cannabis in Northern California for decades. I offer seed of pure lines from that region as well as hybrid seed bred from those lines.

Examples of the above past and current include Deep Chunk (aka Monkey Balls), Pine Tar Kush, X18, Original Haze (by way of Positronic), Northern India, Cripple Creek, Deep Skunk 9, CalJax, Monkey Haze, Salmon Creek Big Bud hybrids and many more.

Currently I am building a genetic library consisting of S1 seedlots from some of the more popular elite clones in the past decade. Seed from these efforts will be made available as well.

More explanation here:

https://forum.seeddepot.nl/showthread.php?408-Welcome&p=1416&viewfull=1#post1416
Hi CannaBlazer, I am mostly focusing on selfing individuals that do not segregate into multiple varying phenotypes and there have been many over the past decade+. The goal is to provide myself (as well as others) relatively easily obtained homozygous individuals for breeding purposes. Individuals that will not be considered would be those we know to be mostly heterozygous.
So to be clear for those who might not understand what he's saying, Hill is collecting either inbred or nearly inbred "elite" lines, selfing them, and is going to release THOSE as S1s. He is deliberately avoiding making S1s from any "unstable" (ie heterozygous) lines, because those throw off multiple phenos and the results of that type of cross aren't compatible with his goals.
 

FactsorDie

New Member
JOGRO you skipped the most important question....WHAT STRAINS HAVE YOU CREATED and WHAT CLONE ONLYS YOU GOT IN YOUR GARDEN????

Your like a guy that works at car parts store and knows all the parts of a car but has know idea how to actually work on them.....
 

skunkd0c

Well-Known Member
JOGRO you skipped the most important question....WHAT STRAINS HAVE YOU CREATED and WHAT CLONE ONLYS YOU GOT IN YOUR GARDEN????

Your like a guy that works at car parts store and knows all the parts of a car but has know idea how to actually work on them.....
Misspelled heckle from an elite hood-rat ... nothing new here.
 

OGEvilgenius

Well-Known Member
For Jogro:

Reverse breeding -

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2784905/

[h=3]Reverse breeding and doubled haploids (DH)[/h] See also main article on Doubled haploidy. A method for efficiently producing homozygous plants from a heterozygous starting plant, which has all desirable traits. This starting plant is induced to produce doubled haploid from haploid cells, and later on creating homozygous/doubled haploid plants from those cells. While in natural offspring genetic recombination occurs and traits can be unlinked from each other, in doubled haploid cells and in the resulting DH plants recombination is no longer an issue. There, a recombination between two corresponding chromosomes does not lead to un-linkage of alleles or traits, since it just leads to recombination with its identical copy. Thus, traits on one chromosome stay linked. Selecting those offspring having the desired set of chromosomes and crossing them will result in a final F1 hybrid plant, having exactly the same set of chromosomes, genes and traits as the starting hybrid plant. The homozygous parental lines can reconstitute the original heterozygous plant by crossing, if desired even in a large quantity. An individual heterozygous plant can be converted into a heterozygous variety (F1 hybrid) without the necessity of vegetative propagation but as the result of the cross of two homozygous/doubled haploid lines derived from the originally selected plant. patent
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plant_breeding#Reverse_breeding_and_doubled_haploids_.28DH.29
 

Jogro

Well-Known Member
Wow, thanks for posting that.

The concept here is totally mind boggling to me. I didn't know anyone had managed to actually pull anything like this off with cannabis or anything else.

For those who don't quite understand the biology talk here I'll vastly oversimplify.

This is a sophisticated chromosomal trick that tries to artificially split the chromosomes of a "clone only" hybrid without altering them, then double each half to create novel new homozygous "parents". Assuming the process and selection are done correctly, not only will these separate parents themselves be perfectly true breeding, but crossing them will exactly replicate the original hybrid in as many copies (se-eds) as you like.

The first part of this is doubling chromosome counts in gametes (eg pollen), which is a trick to help prevent ordinary genetic recombination that occurs during gamete formation.

Anyway, this technique "should" be able to exactly replicate hybrid/heterozygous "clone only" lines in se-ed form. . .assuming anyone could get it to work.

I don't know if anyone has a proposed (let alone functional) protocol for actually doing this in cannabis, but as suggested earlier, doing this in the real world will have to to require a fairly complex set of techniques to pull off (possibly including tissue culture), specialized knowledge and some real lab infrastructure. A "legit" lab setting would probably make this a heck of a lot easier to do.

Anyway, my hat is off to Tom Hill and colleagues or anyone else for even TRYING to do this on their own outside of a legit research lab setting (assuming they are, actually trying it).

So far as I can tell, the approach is still mostly theoretical, but if anyone can actually pull it off, they deserve whatever the equivalent in the cannabis world is to the "Nobel Prize"!
 

OGEvilgenius

Well-Known Member
Well, I hypothesized it would be hypothetically possible before I ever heard about this technique (however I imagined growing out billions+ of plants, maybe in a test tube setting, to find these hypothetical pairs the really old fashioned way), the problem I see with it - and I think it's a potentially big one - are lethal recessives on one half of the chromosome. There's a pretty good chance that they will exist and as a result the potential parents might never be able to grow.
 

OGEvilgenius

Well-Known Member
Yup, like a recessive genetic combination where, for example, the stems cannot support any weight. That's lethal. I've seen it too. If you fuck your cousin approximately 1/6 of your offspring will die from a lethal recessive genetic trait - either immediately or somewhat down the road.
 

MrEDuck

Well-Known Member
lethal recessives? that reverse engineering would change alot of shit.
Some can be quite lethal. To use examples from human genetics the normal dominant gene that is responsible for red blood cell production is dominant while the sickle cell anemia gene is recessive. Individuals who are heterozygous for this gene has a marked increase in resistance to malaria. Individuals who are homozygous for teh recessive gene get an incredibly painful disease.
So hopefully we don't get too many recessives that are nasty stacked into one of the parents.

As far as S1s being like F3s S1s are like what you would get by crossing the parent with an almost identical sibling. While most F1s are true breeding for a few traits they're mostly going to be heterozygous so you'll get some stability in your F2s. But if you make an S1 from an already true breeding line you'll get the same traits that were true breeding in the selfed plant.

There's a reason inbreeding isn't recommended to maintain good health.
But when you cross the ibls you'd probably get some crazy hybrid vigor!
 

Jogro

Well-Known Member
Well, I hypothesized it would be hypothetically possible before I ever heard about this technique (however I imagined growing out billions+ of plants, maybe in a test tube setting, to find these hypothetical pairs the really old fashioned way), the problem I see with it - and I think it's a potentially big one - are lethal recessives on one half of the chromosome. There's a pretty good chance that they will exist and as a result the potential parents might never be able to grow.
In terms of theory, I think there is more than one way to skin this cat, but this way is particularly elegant, and relatively straightforward (if not actually easy). The reverse breeding technique to create artificial homogygous "parents" is just brilliant (or would be, assuming anyone could get it to work in the real world!).

Interference by lethal recessive gene combinations is certainly a possibility, but I don't think in practice that most strains carry them. If this were the case, these recessive phenotypes "should" come out in preliminary self-crossing to determine the suitability of doing this with any given strain. While there also could be workarounds to bad recessives in individual strain cases, probably the smarter thing is just to move onto genetically healthier "elite" lines that don't have them.

My biggest issue with this is that doing this would require a tremendous amount of technical knowledge, infrastructure, skilled labor, and time. Working out the protocol is going to be a technical challenge and expensive. . .and it might not work at all. . .at least not for years to come. Who is going to subsidize the cost of development here?

Industry certainly *could* do it, and the technique would have incredible commercial value (especially since it would be patentable), but not until there were some sort of legal framework so they could recoup their investment. It could also be done in a research setting with grant money, but again, not until there were some sort of legal framework allowing it. Either way, cost of beans is going to be absolutely astronomical for quite a while. Like any of these technologies eventually cost would come down to mass production/consumer viable levels, but I wouldn't expect that for a while.
 

bf80255

Well-Known Member
Jogro, mr e duck, and ogevil
I would have given a like to at least 1 post from each of you had i the ability
Glad to see people on the forums that know there s**t.
Too bad the "like" button is missing.
 
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