Between 1880 and 1920, plant breeding was HUGE business. They named cities after plant breeders (Burbank, Ca. Hazen, N.D.). It was a very big deal.
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Wealthy apple. Plants from the mid-West tend to be have a lot more red. |
At the beginning of that same timeframe Peter Gideon, an apple breeder near Lake Minnetonka, Minnesota released the Wealthy Apple. He reported the pedigree as Sops-of-Wine and "Cherry Crab" which was a generic name given to a swarm of similar Malus X robusta hybrid crabapples.
Gideon went on to be the head of the apple-breeding effort in Excelsior. That venture, which was associated with the University of Minnesota went on to release about 30 apple varieties including the Honeycrisp apple.
The story
Breeders typically report the parents of the apple they release. Unless they are using mass-breeding techniques, that isn't too hard to do. The breeder (or his grad students) bag unopened apple blossoms. When they open, they gently move pollen from the flower of the chosen male parent to the pistil of the female parent. The bag is replaced and they move on to the next bunch of blossoms. Typically, a colored twist-tie will be used to identify the male parent.
As a percentage of seedlings planted, what do you suppose the "misidentification rate" be? Consider that sometimes blocks of seedlings might get intermingled. 1%? 5%? 20%? 0.01%?
The majority of the data cited in this post came from this article |
DNA testing suggests that the failure rate might be enormous.
Cultivar |
Year Introduced |
Reported Pedigree |
DNA Pedigree |
Wealthy |
1868 |
Sops-of-Wine X Cherry Crab |
Jonathan x Dutchess* |
Haralson |
1922 |
Malinda open-pollinated |
Malinda x Wealthy** |
Wedge |
1921 |
Ben Davis open-pollinated |
(Malinda x Duchess) X Northwest Greening |
Folwell |
1921 |
Malinda open-pollinated |
Duchess x (Alexander x Golden Russet) |
Chestnut |
1949 |
Malinda open-pollinated |
Wealthy x (Kewick Codlin x Ukn.) |
Minnehaha |
1920 |
Malinda open-pollinated |
Wealthy x (Ben Davis x Snow) |
Victory |
1943 |
McIntosh open-pollinated |
McIntosh x Wealthy |
Beacon |
1936 |
Malinda open-pollinated*** |
(Malinda x Duchess) x (Malinda x Tetofsky) |
Frostbite |
2008 |
Unknown |
(Duchess x Utter’s Large Red) x Ukn. |
Redwell |
1946 |
Scott Winter open-pollinated |
Wealthy x (Alexander x Ukn.) |
Minjon |
1942 |
Unknown |
Wealthy x Malinda |
Oriole |
1949 |
Unknown |
Wealthy x Ukn. |
Lakeland |
1950 |
Malinda open-pollinated |
Wealthy x Malinda |
Fireside |
1943 |
Unknown |
Wealthy x Northwest Greening |
Prairie Spy |
1940 |
Unknown |
Wealthy x Northwest Greening |
Northland |
1957 |
McIntosh x Dolgo |
McIntosh x Dolgo |
Regent |
1964 |
Duchess x Red Delicious |
Harlason x McIntosh |
Centennial |
1957 |
Dolgo x Wealthy |
Dolgo x Chestnut |
Red Baron |
1970 |
Duchess x Golden Delicious |
Duchess x Golden Delicious |
Keepsake |
1978 |
Frostbite x Northern Spy |
Frostbite x Northern Spy |
Honeygold |
1970 |
Golden Delicious x Haralson |
Golden Delicious x Haralson |
Sweet Sixteen |
1977 |
Frostbite x Northern Spy |
Frostbite x Northern Spy |
State Fair |
1977 |
Mantet x Oriole |
Mantet x Haralson |
Honeycrisp |
1991 |
Macoun x Honeygold |
Keepsake x (Duchess x Golden Delicious) |
Wildung |
2006 |
Fireside x Sharon |
Fireside x Sharon |
Minnewashta |
1998 |
State Fair x MN1691 |
State Fair x MN1691 |
Minneiska |
2006 |
Honeycrisp x Minnewashta |
Honeycrisp x Minnewashta |
MN55 |
2016 |
Honeycrisp AA44 |
Honeycrisp x AA44 |
MN80 |
2021 |
Honeycrisp x Liberty |
Honeycrisp x Liberty |
DNA evidence suggests that eleven of the twenty-eight releases (almost 40%) were reported to have pedigrees that DNA testing disproved.
Those disproved pedigrees are in the Bold Red font and Pink font in the reported pedigree column.
Wealthy, shown in Bold Green font shows up in far more crosses than it was credited with. How could that happen?
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Malinda apple |
Suppose you are a grad student and one of the projects you have been assigned is to produce 100 seeds of Malinda (which shows up in many pedigrees) crossed by Ben Davis (a fairly disease resistant apple). You figure that you will get 5 seeds per apple so you pollinate the "king blossom" in twenty clusters and call it good.
When it is time to harvest the apples you can only find five good apples. What do you do? You make up the difference with apples from the tree next to it! One thing I remember about Wealthy apples is that they can sit on the ground for weeks and not be rotten.
Or maybe the row of Malinda the five trees in that were closest to the lane were actually Wealthy. Or maybe the professor leading the breeding was intentionally misinforming his competitors regarding the pedigrees of his "home runs".
Why this information might matter
Old-time breeding programs tested very few seeds because of the expense of raising a tree to fruiting. While a program in 1920 might think 100 seeds of a cross was plenty, modern programs can easily rip through 100,000 seedlings. That much larger number allows the researchers to find and select for mutually-reinforcing recessive genes and for interactions between genes.
The modern researcher gets around the economics by culling at incredible rates while the seedlings are still tiny. They can cull for phytophthoria before the seedling has its first true leaves. They can cull for fireblight resistance at three weeks of age. They can cull for cold hardiness at eight weeks of age.
They test for phytophthoria by submerging the emerging seedlings in water that has been inoculated with several strains of the causal agent for collar-rot and letting them sit for a week.
They test for fireblight by running a sand-blaster to expose growing tissue beneath the bark and spraying the injured seedlings with a solution with three-to-five strains of the most virulent strains of fireblight.
They can test for coldhardiness by putting the survivors into a chiller set at 30F for two days to acclimate them, then by submerging the above-ground stems into a slurry of antifreeze-and-water at -40.
Tough? You darned betchya! But it is extremely economical compared to releasing a variety and having farmers plant hundreds of acres of it only to have it collapse due to some biotic or climate stress.
So, just scanning through the list of what was released, if I were a betting man I would do a remake on the Wealthy x Northwest Greening and use modern, intensive culling techniques to see what happened.
* Published articles claim Wealthy is Jonathan x Duchess. I pulled the SSRI data from the ARS/GRIN website for those three apples. The Jonathan is a solid match. The data for Duchess is not. One of the issues that can happen with Heritage/old apples is that there can be a swarm of seedlings that have been marketed as "Duchess" and it is possible that the sample pulled for the ARS/GRIN SSRI data was not the Duchess used by the breeder who created Wealthy.
**Convention lists the maternal/seed parent as the first in a cross with the paternal/pollen parent second. In mammals, it is possible to determine which was the maternal parent based on the RNA in the mitochondria. That RNA is not present in the sperm. In plants (to the best of my knowledge) it is not possible to determine which parent was maternal and which was paternal.
***Listed in pink because neither parent was actually Malinda. They may have been tentatively labeled "Improved Malinda" but that is just one more way things can go south in the breeding orchard.
Interesting, ERJ. I wonder if it is true for other plant breeding programs.
ReplyDeleteNiels Ebbesen Hansen was rumored to tell fibs about parentage of his introductions.
DeleteMost of the recently introduced plums and peaches were probably from mass selection. Essentially, the breeder doesn't care about the source of the parents and counts on the efficiency of his sorting protocols.
Another example of how little we know of the world around us and how non rigorous much of "science" is.
ReplyDeleteJonathan
Joe Two weeks ago I dug a hole twenty inch's deep, threw away the sub dirt and filled the hole with black topsoil. I cut off three vertical branches of a wolf river and poked them in the hole, added water, and have two inch leaves now. Woody
ReplyDelete