Random
Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE Β»

Life has become so complicated πŸ₯”πŸ₯΄

So I had ordered materials for a kitchen reno project which I aim to start today. Materials arrived but it was missing a main ingredient! I called the store and customer service said while referring to the store assistant who helped with the order when I visited β€œshe”. Me: Actually, I don’t think you got the right person, it was a β€œhe”! Then I paused and in my head was like, could it have been a he who identifies as a she and I just offended the entire store? Hmmmm.. Then she responded, after you left he gave the order to his colleague to enter. Me: *phew* πŸ₯”πŸ₯΄
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies Β»
JoyfulSilence Β· 51-55, M
I asked Google, "Do potatoes have genders?"

No, potatoes don't have genders in the human or animal sense; they are plants that reproduce primarily asexually (cloning) via tubers, but their flowers contain both male and female parts (hermaphroditic) for sexual reproduction, making them neither strictly male nor female, but rather self-sufficient or capable of both methods.

Why Potatoes Don't Have "Gender" (Like Us)

*Asexual Reproduction (Main Method): When you plant a potato tuber (the "potato" you eat), it sprouts new, genetically identical plantsβ€”a process called vegetative propagation. This is cloning, not sexual reproduction, so the tuber itself has no gender, says Forbes.

*Sexual Reproduction (Flowers): Potato plants do produce flowers, which contain both male (pollen-producing) and female (egg-producing) parts within the same flower, making them hermaphroditic.

The Botanical Reality

*Hermaphrodite Flowers: Each flower has both male and female reproductive organs, allowing for self-pollination or cross-pollination.

*True Seeds & Berries: Successful pollination leads to small, tomato-like berries containing true potato seeds (TPS), which can grow into genetically unique new plants, explains Cultivariable.

So, while the flowers have both sexes, the common potato tuber we plant is essentially a clone, and the plant itself isn't categorized as male or female like humans or animals.
BittersweetPotato Β· 31-35, F
@JoyfulSilence No need to google. We do have genders and I am a potato girlie ! πŸ₯”πŸ˜š