Live Stoner Chat acclimate, wait nope plasticity nope epigenetics ummm dam learning

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I will post this here as I find this site to be the most productive site for discussion

I was reading X forum winter rabbit hole reading and came across a post and reply that got me thinking and was a case of yea, oh drr, to then hmmm

I am para phrasing as I forget where I read

a poster w/i a post mentioned growing 2 strains crossing so next year the resulting seeds were acclimated this was not even regarding main point just a mention w/i a message

another quoted and said yea cuz you can certainly change ions of dna/evolution to that extent in one season

implying sarcastically the naivety of previous poster

funny how you go from nodding head yea yea to ohhh dam that really doesn't make sense how dare I think I can change something in one short season

or can we

so first one must learn that the word acclimate is not really the proper definition here anyways as that would be short term

and then we go to plasticity and I kinda don't fully get that but what I read researching that

It's true that acclimation has viewed traditionally as a mere reversible and temporal response. Plants endure phenotypic changes in response to the media in pursuit of the highest degree of homeostasis under the new environmental conditions. On many cases, and after returning to the initial conditions, they recover fully the same state (I thinking for instance in the functional response). But in the last years, the matter has acquired a renewed interest with the outbreak of epigenetics in many fields of biology. Many functional responses leave an imprinting in the individual. These have carry over effects after the organism return to the initial conditions before the environmental change (e.g. drought vs. well-watered). The imprinting can last for some months to the full life of the organism; even it may be translated to future generations in the clearest cases of epigenetic printing. All these modifications in the phenotype are regulated at the molecular level for different kinds of epigenetics processes. I think that the tinge would be in the reversibility of the acclimation process. That is, if the final response is elastic or plastic in a bio physic sense.

Ismael Aranda
Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria

so then epigenetics oh my

I have been trying out cures already today so before I lose this thought

can this type of imprinting be done on weed plants to create a desirable/undesirable affect on future generations of seed

if so would it not be wise to introduce normal healthy plants to be bred to undesirable area/region specific conditions along with breeding for resistance?

I think generally breeding for "acclimation"(as people use the context of word) is broad but also thinking no affect is to broad

so how long would it take

my grow room is an island how long before you evolve plant

yea I would say cure is done on that jar

discuss ya get me? yea some of you will
 
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