Member discussion regarding the methods, varieties and merits of growing tomatoes.
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March 18, 2010 | #31 | |
Tomatovillian™
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Wouldn't all the F1 plants still be RL in this case? I guess I'll need more 101 on genetics My apologies for the dummy questions! Tania
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March 18, 2010 | #32 | |
Tomatovillian™
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The 50/50 split would be the F2 generation plants, F1's would all have the same leaf type.
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March 18, 2010 | #33 | |
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And yes, when you get an offtype leaf form it can be due to either a spontaneous mutation or a more compliceted mechanism and yes, the offtype plant can be a hybrid from the crossing of two different varieties. But there can also be an offtype leaf form without any crossing at all if it's a single spontaneous mutation that occurs in the DNA of a single seed and when that seed is sowed, the variety is the same with a different leaf type. Getting back to crossing now, the leaf type of the accidental hybrid will show the leaf type of the parent plant that had the dominant gene, the C gene. And your question was a perfectly reasonable one in asking what happens if a Cc crosses with a cc? And since none of us really know if a specific RL variety has a CC genotype or a Cc genotype, we can only predict the possibilities. Saved F1 seeds, now the F2, from fruits of an accidental cross can give you: cc X cc will always give you PL if two PL varieties cross. CC X CC will always give you RL if two CC varieties cross. Cc X Cc will give give you 3/4 PL and 1/4 RL CC X cc will give you all RL plants CC X Cc will give you 1/2 RL and 1/2 PL it's no different than saving F2 seeds from a deliberately bred F1 variety such as the many known commercial varieties or ones that many now days are doing in the back Yard. My friend Steve Draper crossed Black Krim ( RL) with Galina's Yellow (PL) and sent me 4 F1 seeds. While I didn't need to I sowed all 4 seeds and got 4 plants that were identical. All were RL and the fruits were all a dusky reddish color and intermediate in size between the fruit sizes of both parents. I described the results in the thread here about crossing Snow White X Galina's Yellow. I had expected to see some gene segregation with the F2 plants, but didn't after planting out 12 plants in two different years. So the predictions are statistical, and that's all they are. Tell that to the mom who knows that the statistics say that there's a 50% chance of having a boy and she's given birth to 5 little girls in a row, as it were. Is this a better way of saying this? Please don't hesitate to ask any questions and maybe I'll find even a better way of describing it.
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Carolyn |
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March 18, 2010 | #34 |
Tomatovillian™
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Carolyn, stormymater, Gobig_or_Gohome_toms
thank you so much - you got me fixed! It started to make sense for me again! Tania
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March 18, 2010 | #35 | |
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So I wasn't ignoring you, rather, you hadn't posted when I'd started doing my own post.
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Carolyn |
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March 18, 2010 | #36 | |
Tomatovillian™
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March 18, 2010 | #37 |
Tomatoville® Moderator
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I will get a sense of my offtypes as I transplant...the seedlings are just showing true leaves. This is really one of the more interesting parts for me, when I can check on my seed saving skill/crossing percentage....esp. when looking at the PL varieties.
Also looking to see what my "poodle factor" is on Stick, and Variegation incidence on Variegated....with about 4000 tomato seedlings to examine, it is quite a data dump!
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Craig |
March 19, 2010 | #38 |
Tomatovillian™
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Location: Tulsa, OK
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I began potting up my little guys last night, and so far, have not found any off-types. I still have a long way to go, but so far so good.
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Kevin without violins."- Laurie Colwin, Home Cooking
"A world without tomatoes is like a string quartet |
March 19, 2010 | #39 |
Tomatovillian™
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Location: PNW
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[Tania's question about all F1s being the same]
With F1 plants, if both parents were stable OP (all homozygous gene pairs, either CC or cc using the notation in the example above), then you get what you described, where every F1 plant is the same. But if one of the parents was not a stable OP (like a plant with the Cc heterozygous leaf type gene pair in the example), then the gene pairs in the offspring are not all the same. The not-stabilized parent with the Cc gene pair could have contributed either its C (RL) chromosome or its c (PL) chromosome to any given seed. (50% of each in the next generation offspring is only the probability; what you actually get in a small number of seeds can vary from that.) So, with seeds from an (F1 x stable OP) or (F1 x different F1) cross, you get variations in the next generation that fan out like plants from F2 seeds.
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-- alias Last edited by dice; March 19, 2010 at 01:03 PM. Reason: clarity |
March 20, 2010 | #40 |
Tomatovillian™
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"Cc X Cc will give give you 3/4 PL and 1/4 RL"
Were you saying that C was dominant for PL in your genotype for leaf variety?? C and C or c give CC Cc c and C or c give Cc cc which gives you 3/4 PL and 1/4 RL if C is dominant for PL or 3/4 RL and 1/4 PL if C is dominant for RL or am I reading this wrong Dennis |
March 20, 2010 | #41 | |
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I think your question is about two heterozygotes crossing, which would be Cc X Cc Above I listed all the possible crosses for almost all the genotypes and I also said that C is genetically dominant to c so the cross you ask about is: C c C CC Cc c Cc cc .......which gives 3/4 RL and 1/4 PL, as I said above. OK, I went back up and see that I wrote the following: Cc X Cc will give give you 3/4 PL and 1/4 RL An error on my part, as I illustrated above it should be 3/4 RL and 1/4 PL I got my PL's and RL's reversed. It happens! Everything OK now?
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March 20, 2010 | #42 |
Tomatovillian™
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Yeah I thought it was but it's been 40+ years since I took Microbiology of the gene and wanted to make sure I didn't goof
Thanks I get my p's and q's mixed up sometimes too - or is that C and c or RL and PL ha ha - guess you were tired Dennis Last edited by mtbigfish; March 20, 2010 at 04:05 AM. |
March 20, 2010 | #43 | |
Tomatovillian™
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Location: Alabama
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The Gary 'O Sena seed I got from you had a high percentage of RL with only one out of 4 being PL. I only planted 4 seeds on my first plant out and so I replanted in an attempt to get more true Gary 'O Senas. I am going to grow a couple of the regular leaf plants because they are the biggest healthiest looking plants of over 50 varieties I have potted up. I just hope they don't turn out to be cherries or some small tasteless tomato.
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March 20, 2010 | #44 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Alabama
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You might want to try something that I have had great success with; using the bottom of egg cartons and only planting one seed per cup. The good thing is you can use the flap to label them and when you spoon them out you don't damage the root system. They are also very cheap and if you want you can take the top and use duck tape to close the holes on the side and use them for a water reservoir that the bottom can set in when it gets warm and you need to keep the water level higher.
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March 23, 2010 | #45 |
Tomatovillian™
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Location: Ohio
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Not too many off types this time and a couple that i am not sure if they should be RL or PL.
Justine Heart 2 seeds planted 1RL 1PL Hunt Family Pink 2 seeds planted 2RL Schmatzfien 3 seeds planted 1PL 2RL Indiana Heirloom(this one puzzles me) I saved the RL's last year because I liked it better than the PL's...planted 2 seeds and have 1 PL?? I looked at my Mrs. Benson seedlings and said oh no, they all PL's than OH yes...they are suppose to be PL's!! Nicholaeva PL ABC PL PL Orlov Yellow PL Hillbilly PL PL English Rose too soon to tell but should be PL Elbe no show |
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