how many generations do you need to go to start seeing vigor loss and depression?
xIt depends on context.
If you are using the insane vigor that can be seen in the first gen in wider crosses as your standard, that drops off right away.
Aside from that, it depends on what you are working with. In some examples it is not really much of a problem, but some are a bitch. Its all in the selection process, that relies on having enough to choose from. Once you clean something up, it is pretty smooth sailing.
All things considered, IMO, this is a trivial problem (inbreeding depression) compared to carrying out selections on a truly large scale. In fact, I think that the ability to properly evaluate many many individuals is the only non-trivial obstacle in weed breeding.
It is not trivial when you self a single plant, line for 3+ generations you get so many problems that some times the work can not be completed, I should know.
-SamS
Guys grow huge numbers all over the world, all the time, that's not a problem. All the breeding techniques necessary are found in books, they had been developed for the most part before I was born and I'm 50, so that is not a problem.
How do you accurately sift through 1,000,000 individuals for non-visible traits? Wow all I can come up with is refining machine testing until it can accurately identify the same one I would if I had the lifetime to spend smoking each one.
You might be able to find something linked to what ever you are looking for with genome tilling?
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC514099/pdf/pp1350630.pdf
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC514099/
-SamS
Selection, selection, selection.
Plant Breeding = Variation + Selection
These are two very different, but complimentary things.
Variation implies presevation of raw material, and generation of new traits through epistatic interaction, and with enough numbers, mutation. This requires techniques that are tailored to this end. There are a number of them, and they are well known to anyone versed in the art.
Selection is just that. It's corollary is rejection. It too requires methods tailored to end up with what you want. These methods are also well developed and not that complicated.
I shake my head when I see people saying "xxxxx breeding technique is bad". There is no "bad" technique (within reason of course) just ones improperly applied in a context that is inappropriate.
One to one mating is an inappropriate method of preserving diversity. Random open pollination is an inappropriate method of creating homozygous lines. A screwdriver is not "bad" because it doesn't drive a nail very well.
Do people even want homozygous lines? I know of none created except for our experimental work.
-SamS
(ha ha I just thought I would put in some of my thoughts that were more than tangentially related to the OP, although they are more along the lines of "Basic Breeding Explained")
It is not trivial when you self a single plant, line for 3+ generations you get so many problems that some times the work can not be completed, I should know.
-SamS
You might be able to find something linked to what ever you are looking for with genome tilling?
Do people even want homozygous lines? I know of none created except for our experimental work.
Yes we would like homozygous plants that breed true. Not everyone is a cash cropper.
from what I've seen they have been in "fem" lines. It seems to pop up in a some s1/s2s of bubba and a few other plants. I think the peyote purple had one generation that was almost 90% male. I don't know about hybrids using reversed pollen in that regards it seems to have been on inbred lines.
They say with feral hemp crops that they will revert back to normal sexual ratios after a few generations as well, mathematically it seems possible to do with intersexed plants if your breeding for that trait, unless i'm completely off base with that.
Hemp (Cannabis sativa) has a highly variable sexual phenotype. In dioecious hemp, the sex is controlled by heteromorphic sex chromosomes according to an X-to-autosomes equilibrium. However, in monoecious hemp, the sex determinism remains widely unknown and has never been related to a quantitative approach of sex expression. The present paper aims to contribute to the comprehension of the sex determinism in monoecious hemp by assessing the genotypic variability of its sex expression and establishing its sex chromosomes. Five monoecious and one dioecious cultivars were grown in controlled conditions under several photoperiods. The monoecy degree of 194 monoecious plants was recorded at each node by a figure ranging from 0 (male flowers only) to 6 (female flowers only). The genome size of 55 plants was determined by flow cytometry. The DNA of 115 monoecious plants was screened with the male-associated marker MADC2. The monoecy degree varied significantly among monoecious cultivars from 3.36 ± 2.28 in ‘Uso 31’ to 5.70 ± 0.81 in the most feminised ‘Epsilon 68’. The variation of monoecy degree among cultivars remained consistent across trials despite a significant “cultivar × trial” interaction and partly agreed with their earliness. The genome size of monoecious plants (1.791 ± 0.017 pg) was not different from that of females (1.789 ± 0.019 pg) but significantly lower than that of males (1.835 ± 0.019 pg). MADC2 was absent from all monoecious plants. These results strongly support that cultivars of monoecious hemp have the XX constitution and that their sex expression has a genetic basis.
Use the forum search, there are quite a few good threads about advantages and disadvantages of whorled leaf pattern aka whorled phylloxaty/phyllotaxis .Is Tri-foliate growth good ?
I have a tri-foliate TH Seeds "Sage & Sour". Their Sativa-Afghani cross, crossed with Diesel.
She was feminized and is Trifoliate.
View Image
Is Tri-foliate growth good ?
I have a tri-foliate TH Seeds "Sage & Sour". Their Sativa-Afghani cross, crossed with Diesel.
She was feminized and is Trifoliate.
View Image