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Chris Fox's avatar

Angiosperms have both pistillate, stamenate, and combined flowers.

Gymnosperms have cones or not.

I was a champion marijuana grower; one of the problems is that since we take out the stamenate ("male") plants, sometimes the pistillates grow a few stamenates and the buds end up with seeds if we aren't vigilant. Plants have sexes, but it's not the same as higher animals.

Some amphibians can change sex, and there are hermaphroditic snakes.

Gender advocates insist that developmental defects prove that "gender is a social construct."

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Grow Some Labia's avatar

Yeah, cannabis is the only one I've ever heard of referred to as 'male' and 'female'. You defnitely don't want male plans to splooge all over your female plants unless you need more seeds.

I tell the gendernutzis that 100% sexually dimorphic mammals prove that for *all* mammals it's not.

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Chris Fox's avatar

Usually dimorphism reflects differing care of the young. Big exception in cats; males take no part in raising kittens yet the two sexes are all but indistinguishable.

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