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Old August 21, 2016   #1
Kongobongo
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Default Breeding a bi color

Am wondering how difficult it is to make your own bi color? What are some of the first basic steps? Thanks.
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Old August 22, 2016   #2
PaddyMc
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Super easy. Any cross that invloves at least one bicolor parent will produce bicolor offspring.
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Old August 22, 2016   #3
KarenO
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Agreed. Use a bicolour as one of the parents and then grow out quit a few F2 plants. You should find a bicolour or two among them. The more F2 plants you grow, the higher the odds of finding something you like. Good luck
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Old August 22, 2016   #4
carolyn137
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And an example

http://tatianastomatobase.com/wiki/Orange_Russian_117

The deliberate cross by Jeff Dawson was between

Russian 117,which is a large red heart

and

Georgia Streak,which is a bicolor

http://tatianastomatobase.com/wiki/Georgia_Streak

... and then grow out saved F2 seeds to start with and then make selections and keep doing that until you have something genetically stable.

It can take several years to do that.

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Old August 22, 2016   #5
Kongobongo
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Thanks for the replies everyone.what I really meant is to start from scratch with no bi color parent.do you just cross two colors and keep growing out the seeds in hopes of finding a mix color somewhere?that's what I'd really like to try.
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Old August 22, 2016   #6
PaddyMc
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kongobongo View Post
Thanks for the replies everyone.what I really meant is to start from scratch with no bi color parent.do you just cross two colors and keep growing out the seeds in hopes of finding a mix color somewhere?that's what I'd really like to try.
Without the 'bicolor' gene, you'll never get bicolor offspring, just a segregation of solid colors (though you can get colors "in-between" the original two).
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Old August 22, 2016   #7
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What (bi) color combo are you hoping for?
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Old August 22, 2016   #8
carolyn137
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PaddyMc View Post
Without the 'bicolor' gene, you'll never get bicolor offspring, just a segregation of solid colors (though you can get colors "in-between" the original two).
I tried to find more info about the gentics of bicolored fruits,not striped fruits,and here's what I came up with

https://www.google.com/#q=genetics+o...tomatoes&hl=en

Last I knew the genetics of bicoloredness was not known in it's entirety, but I could certainly be wrong.

Paddy,you speak of a bi color gene,does it have a name,or are your comments based on observations of all the wonderful crosses that you have made?

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Old August 22, 2016   #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by carolyn137 View Post
I tried to find more info about the gentics of bicolored fruits,not striped fruits,and here's what I came up with

https://www.google.com/#q=genetics+o...tomatoes&hl=en

Last I knew the genetics of bicoloredness was not known in it's entirety, but I could certainly be wrong.

Paddy,you speak of a bi color gene,does it have a name,or are your comments based on observations of all the wonderful crosses that you have made?

Carolyn
No, I was over-simplifying. I'm pretty sure there are multiple genes involved. Personal observation has been that you'll never get bicolor tomatoes out of a non-bicolor involved cross. I have, however gotten bicolor F2 watermelons out of a white fleshed x red fleshed cross.
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Old August 22, 2016   #10
Kongobongo
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I just wanted to use what I have.yellow and red.I thought a bi color must have come from a mix of two colors.sounds more complicated than I thought.
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Old November 23, 2016   #11
korney19
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Cherokee Bi-Color! (Cherokee Green was one parent, the other parent was NOT a bi-color!
Attached Images
File Type: jpg CGXbi-color1b.jpg (44.1 KB, 106 views)
File Type: jpg CGXbi-color1a.jpg (44.7 KB, 108 views)
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Old November 24, 2016   #12
Fred Hempel
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Based on it's coloring, I think Cherokee Green may be a subtle bicolor, and that the bicolor trait is enhanced when a yellow parent is combined with Cherokee Green.
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Old November 24, 2016   #13
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Cherokee Green certainly seems different from the other GWR varieties I have grown. I think of it more as a yellow tomato with zing. Maybe it's a green and yellow bicolor?
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Old December 18, 2016   #14
korney19
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Another segregate from a Cherokee Green cross...
It ripened fully from the first pic to the 2nd if you waited long enough!
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File Type: jpg CGXgreen1a.jpg (52.0 KB, 49 views)
File Type: jpg CGXgreen1b.jpg (46.1 KB, 52 views)

Last edited by korney19; December 18, 2016 at 01:39 AM.
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Old December 18, 2016   #15
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You get things happening above when you save seeds from fruits like these...
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File Type: jpg CherokeeGreen35_1a.jpg (43.3 KB, 50 views)
File Type: jpg CherokeeGreen35_1b.jpg (45.8 KB, 51 views)
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