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Old January 26, 2015   #1
mohoghead
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Default seed germination inside tomato

I have never seen this happen before. these are store bought tomatoes on a vine. any explanation is appreciated. [/IMG]
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Old January 26, 2015   #2
Darren Abbey
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Many modern store-bought tomatoes have a gene called RIN (Ripening Inhibition) and will remain green until they've been exposed to ethylene gas. Ethylene gas is the natural hormone used by the plant to trigger ripening and the RIN mutation inhibits the fruit's ability to produce the hormone.

Because of this, the fruits can sit in storage for an extended time and then be ripened just in time to be put out at the grocery.

An unexpected consequence of this process seems to be the seedling issue you note. When fruit/seeds initially grow, the plant makes hormones that inhibit seed germination, but these hormones break down with time. The longer the RIN tomatoes sit in their green state, the more likely the seeds are to wake up once you get the red tomatoes home.

There are research papers out there about the RIN gene and ethylene, but I'm not sure if any address the seed germination issue.
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Old January 26, 2015   #3
4season
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I have had pumpkin seeds sprout inside a freshly harvested naked seed pumkin, but have never seen it happen a tomato.
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Old January 26, 2015   #4
Darren Abbey
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If you were to grow some of the seeds from the variety, you would get a bunch of hard green tomatoes that would never ripen on their own. They will store well and you could ripen them on command by placing a few bananas with them. Bananas use the same ripening hormone and produce a large excess of it into the air around them.

This would be the perfect long-storage tomato, so long as you could get some bananas from time to time.
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Old January 26, 2015   #5
jmsieglaff
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Return them to the store, see what they say.
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Old January 26, 2015   #6
mohoghead
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Thank you for the response, I passed it on to my friend, definite wake up call for her, and bolstered my argument about growing your own and canning for the winter.
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Old January 26, 2015   #7
mohoghead
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Along this line I do have another question, my understanding is the gel sac around the seed was to prevent them from germinating, how did they get around that?
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Old January 26, 2015   #8
Worth1
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mohoghead View Post
Along this line I do have another question, my understanding is the gel sac around the seed was to prevent them from germinating, how did they get around that?
The hormones in the gel broke down because they have been sitting around for months.

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Old January 26, 2015   #9
mohoghead
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Worth1 View Post
The hormones in the gel broke down because they have been sitting around for months.

Worth
Thank you.
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Old January 26, 2015   #10
JJJessee
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Ask Monsanto.
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Old January 26, 2015   #11
Darren Abbey
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The RIN mutation was discovered in a farm field in 1960s. Monsanto had nothing to do with it and it isn't in any way a GMO.

The early analysis of the trait in 1974: http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/...8#.VMaFIktNLwJ
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Old January 26, 2015   #12
Worth1
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Darren Abbey View Post
The RIN mutation was discovered in a farm field in 1960s. Monsanto had nothing to do with it and it isn't in any way a GMO.

The early analysis of the trait in 1974: http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/...8#.VMaFIktNLwJ

I bet a flying saucer caused the mutation.
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Old January 27, 2015   #13
Cole_Robbie
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They look like tomato Chia-Pets.
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Old January 27, 2015   #14
ddsack
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What's amazing to me is that the sprouts can punch their way through the tough skin. Guess they have no lack of moisture and nutrients.
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Old January 27, 2015   #15
Labradors2
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About the gel inhibiting ripening. I don't know about that. I've sprouted seeds from fresh tomatoes (grown by me) which were not bad or over-ripe. I wanted some seeds from those varieties, dug them out to plant, and ate the rest of the tomato. I have also had seedlings sprout in my garden from fruit that had fallen and sat around for a while.

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