The 12 hour split comes from wild cannabis needing to flower and produce seed before winter arrives.
During the spring and summer, the days are lengthening and nights shortening so the plants just grow in size and mature under ideal conditions. Then the summer solstice occurs and the nights begin to lengthen and the days shorten. At the autumnal equinox, both night and day length is the same (12/12). At this point, the 12+ hours of darkness allows specific hormones, that are only produced in darkness, to build up to high enough levels to induce flower formation. The timing of this starting at the equinox allows the plants to finish breeding and produce seeds before winter conditions become too severe and they are killed.
In equatorial regions, night and day length doesn't vary as much throughout the year so equatorial strains have to be more sensitive to the lesser variations in night/day length but they have longer to reproduce (winter conditions aren't usually going to kill them). The further away from the equator, plants may have to begin flowering sooner in order to beat severe winter conditions (which will kill them), so they may even begin flowering when night length is more along the lines of 11 hours long and before the autumnal equinox occurs in. The specific difference in when they begin flowering according to night length is inherited genetically and expressed as a part of their 24-hour circadian rhythms.