-
Here are a random selection of pictures of apples known to be triploid, which haven't already been shown in my two previous topics.
Pictures from NFC will follow in subsequent posts (limited to four pictures per post).
Golden Delicious - a very fertile diploid widely used for breeding new varieties and has been used for producing seedling rootstocks - is included in every set of pictures to contrast with the known triploids.
What do you notice about the core and the seeds?
How many of the fine triploid varieties still being grown have produced lots of good seedlings?
Not many.
Why?
Probably because the abnormal genetics of triploids (which makes them poor pollinators of others) probably means genetic abnormalities in the offspring produced from those same triploids (abnormal pips/seeds) which would be expected to result in a very low proportion of high-quality seeds and lots of low-quality seeds.
So while a diploid might produce a full ten seeds which are all healthy in each fruit, a triploid might produce no truly healthy seeds in its fruit.
Clearly it's going to take a lot longer to produce lots of good-quality offspring from a triploid than a diploid.
So while triploids are valuable for their health, vigour and longevity (often growing where ordinary diploid apples cannot survive); triploids are not good pollinators or breeding partners.
Triploids are almost a kind of genetic dead-end.
Here are a random selection of pictures of apples known to be triploid, which haven't already been shown in my two previous topics.
Pictures from NFC will follow in subsequent posts (limited to four pictures per post).
Golden Delicious - a very fertile diploid widely used for breeding new varieties and has been used for producing seedling rootstocks - is included in every set of pictures to contrast with the known triploids.
What do you notice about the core and the seeds?
How many of the fine triploid varieties still being grown have produced lots of good seedlings?
Not many.
Why?
Probably because the abnormal genetics of triploids (which makes them poor pollinators of others) probably means genetic abnormalities in the offspring produced from those same triploids (abnormal pips/seeds) which would be expected to result in a very low proportion of high-quality seeds and lots of low-quality seeds.
So while a diploid might produce a full ten seeds which are all healthy in each fruit, a triploid might produce no truly healthy seeds in its fruit.
Clearly it's going to take a lot longer to produce lots of good-quality offspring from a triploid than a diploid.
So while triploids are valuable for their health, vigour and longevity (often growing where ordinary diploid apples cannot survive); triploids are not good pollinators or breeding partners.
Triploids are almost a kind of genetic dead-end.
Comment