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#1
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This is a little bit of a mystery to me, I hope someone can help me understand.
As I understand it now, F1 seeds are the premier seeds bred for desiese resistance of some form, or its super duper florific qualities. But I have also read or heard that seeds collected from plants, grown from F1 seeds might not grow true, so how can this be? How do these seed distributers obtain F1 seeds if they might now grow true? Regards Steve...
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Focal Planet - For Photographers by Photographers My Allotment Blog Last updated 05/05/10 My Garden Project Last updated 17/3/10 |
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#2
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I'm a bit limited on the laws of heredity, but this is how I see it.
F1 means that the seed is hand pollinated, with a known parent, ie the female plant and the male plant are both of know types, a kind of thoroughbred If you then grow those plants and they are open pollinated with who knows what, you end up with a mongrel. But a lot of F1 plants are actually sterile, so cant produce seed anyway. |
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#3
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Thanks Pete.
How about an F1 tomato...such as Sungold, would that yield suitable seed or be another "mongrel"? Steve...
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Focal Planet - For Photographers by Photographers My Allotment Blog Last updated 05/05/10 My Garden Project Last updated 17/3/10 |
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#4
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it would be another mongrol.. If Iunderstand it right parent plants are bred or stabilized so that when the (hand polllinated) cross between the two parents is made the F1 seeds are all uniform displaying the desired traits. So sungold Toms are made every year from the same stabilised parents. However the plants grown from the resulting f1 seeds could not be crossed to garauntee another identical plant as they are not as stable as the the original parents.
The breeding of the parents involves selecting dominanat traits< I seem to rember it not being too difficult to grasp unfortunatly thats all I remember) This is from my pretty shaky understanding its something I must read up on....heres a wiki link (i dint find it hugely helpful) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F1_hybrid |
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#5
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Would also add that I have growm toms, in particular, along with sweet peppers from supermarket fruit,
and I cant see any difference, between my fruit and the ones I bought. Probably because the parent furit was self pollinated. I think genetics , (if thats the right name), is full of surprises, and even the experts dont always get it right, it takes years sometimes to come up with a new variety. When you actually think about it, every seed grown plant is a potential "new variety", it contains different genes from the two parents. F1, is a way of cutting out most diversity and creating a seed of almost know performance. Not in the same way as a cutting but the closest you can get from seed. |
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Steve R (09-02-2010) | ||
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#6
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Quote:
So the OP you should go ahead with the sungold seeds if you have some, and let us know how it went, in august when the fruits are ready .
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Steve R (09-02-2010), theplantman (09-02-2010) | ||
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#7
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To confuse you more may I suggest you consider two pure bred lines of sweet pea - a red one and a blue one. I say sweet pea because all the first work was done on them, and their colour is controlled by only one gene.
Each plant carries two copies of every gene. One is received from the mother (in humans it comes from the egg) and the other copy comes from the father (the male sperm). Plants get their genes in a very similar way. The red plant will have two identical copies of the colour gene - RR. To ensure that both copies are the same the line must be very pure bred. The second plant (also pure bred) will have two identical blue genes bb. The two plants are then cross fertilised. Which, as Pete says, may have to be by hand to ensure that red only crosses with blue and they never fertilise a plant of their own colour. The first generation of children are called F1 (Filial 1). As the F1 child gets one gene from each parent, each F1 plants genes will be Rb, ie R from one parent and b from the other parent. So every F1 plant will be identical. When you have two different colour genes, one colour is always dominant. In this case I have made R dominant and have given it a capital letter and the other gene b is in small letters as it is recessive (ie always gives way to the dominant gene). So all our F1 plants will be red. If the identical F1 plants breed with each other, they will produce the next generation - F2. Each parent had identical genes Rb and the offspring will get one at random from each parent. But now four possible combinations exist RR, Rb, bR, and bb. Three of these will have red flowers as they have the dominant red gene, but the fourth plant will be blue, as it will have no red gene. What gave it away to Mendel, who did the first work was this constant 3: 1 ratio in the F2 community. This principle is repeated across all the different genes that plants have. And hopefully illustrates why F1 plants are all identical but F2 and later plants are not. The other aspect is that pure bred plants are frankly in-bred. When they cross, you get new blood and extra vigour. Have you ever seen a Ligre (a lion tiger cross) on television. The resulting cross I saw was massive, at least 50% larger than either of its parents. How this applies in practice to plants - I don't know. I sometimes think F1 is an overused word that simply means its more expensive. |
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#8
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Quote:
The one certainty about F1 (apart from extra cost) is that you know pretty well what you'll get. Which isn't to say that it's going to taste or look any better than a non-F1.
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The Good Old, Bad Old, days........But we survived them pretty well! >http://www.dj.warburton.btinternet.co.uk/50s60s.htm |
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#9
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Quote:
F1 plant parent stocks have to be carefully maintained and are often 'low vigour', in themselves quite useless as a crop. The growers then hand pollinate to get the F1 seed in the next season - thats why they are more expensive.
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John |
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#10
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F1 Hybrids are bred for vigour and uniformity
Whilst uniformity may be very useful for a commercial grower - enabling him to harvest the whole crop at the same time - I would suggest that most people growing for their own use would much prefer a crop to be spread over a longer period For flowers I also prefer the more natural look with variations of height and flower colour - others may prefer the absolute uniformity for that 'parks department' look |
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#11
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Lovage; I agree with you about harvesting times - as a grow you own fan I don't want that either, but I think that applies mainly to brassicas (cabbages etc). I always use F1 cucumber seed though, it's the only way I know of guaranteeing non-bitter fruit and good yields (and like F1 tomatoes they crop throughout the season not all at once).
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John |
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#12
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All the above are good explanations of the whys and wherefores of F1 hybrids. Having said that, there are a number of factors to take into account as to whether you wish to use the seed produced from last year's crop.
What type of plant is it? This is more important in some plants as John has said in reference to cucumbers. I have found something similar with stringless runner beans which normally manage to remain stringless in the second year but can be quite variable after that. Do you want or need uniformity? - Self-explanatory. How much do you need to grow and how much can you afford? These two questions are often interelated as F1's are proportionately much more expensive. Do you want a new type of plant? - As advertised with some F1 hybrids. Do you want to try and get something that may be different but entirely random? - Which is what you may get with keeping your own seed. Steve, with regard to tomatoes, we have found that they tend to be pretty close to true for a few generations. If you get your allotment it would be interesting to try one half of the allotment with F1's and the other half with collected seed. In successive years you can try 3rd or 4th generation as well. Comment for when you open your garden:- The veggie plants that we sell for our charity are always F1 unless otherwise stated as people that buy (if they are keen gardeners) seem to expect it.
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shiney. Age does not bring wisdom. Often it merely changes simple stupidity into arrogant conceit. Light travels faster than sound. That's why some people appear bright until you hear them speak. |
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Steve R (09-02-2010) | ||
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#13
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Thank you all...I feel very much informed on the subject now and understand it better.
Steve...
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Focal Planet - For Photographers by Photographers My Allotment Blog Last updated 05/05/10 My Garden Project Last updated 17/3/10 |
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#14
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Quote:
Interesting thanks....with regarde to the sungold though if you were growing other varieties with them..wouldnt there be a chance the seeds would be crosses..therefore leading to lots of variation (ok for some that may be exiting) but thats whats always put me off....(i could be way off as I said above itds a subject I ough to now more about) |
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#15
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F1 seeds are the first generation seeds from a cross-breed specially chosen by breeders for certain characteristics.
For example they might cross a heavy cropping tomato with a really tasty one. The first generation (F1) after that will be a tasty heavy cropper, and that's the seed you buy in the shop. If you then take seed from that plant, though, the dominant genes from the parents start coming through. So you might get a more heavy cropper, but it's starting to lose it's tastiness. And so on with subsequent generations. Also, some F1 plants are so heavily bred that the seed is sterile and won't germinate at all. |
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#16
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I'd like to ask a related question: how could I propagate heritage tomatoes? I recently bought some seeds to plant this year. I have read that in order to propagate squashes the pollination is done with a paint brush and the flower petals wrapped with an elastic band to stop insects getting in; would my best bet be something similar with the tomatoes?
Thanks, Matthew |
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#17
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Following on from my earlier question, how do these heritage varieties stay true? How could a new one be created? Am I right to deduce from what is written on this thread that if two varieties were crossed and the subsequent F1s bred over and over amongst themselves, in time the gene pool would be so restricted that throwbacks would be very unlikely and we would be left with a true-breed?
Matthew |
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#18
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MatthewJ wrote "Am I right to deduce from what is written on this thread that if two varieties were crossed and the subsequent F1s bred over and over amongst themselves, in time the gene pool would be so restricted that throwbacks would be very unlikely and we would be left with a true-breed?"
I think that's true Matthew. Always assuming that the original F1 seeds will breed. But its not a matter of continual breeding, which would leave the gene pool unchanged. Its selective breeding. Ie you only breed from the plants that show the characteristics that you want. If you do that for long enough you get a pure bred (in-bred) line. Its exactly the same as breeding dogs - you have to be very selective about the parents to get the offspring that you want. And with each generation the line gets purer. The bit about the paintbrush implies selective breeding, and you keep insects out to stop them producing random crosses. |
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MatthewJ (16-02-2010) | ||
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#19
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OK, thanks for that. So the heritage tomatoes that I plan to grow this year will be pure-bred (inbred), meaning that if I selectively breed plants of the same variety, the seeds that I save for next year should give me the same thing?
Matthew |
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#20
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Think so but as I said above if you grow more than one variety ......will they cross therefore not come true?
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