K
kopite
I think we are getting at the same point, just using different terminology.
That covers it for me :}
I think we are getting at the same point, just using different terminology.
Why not...? 1000 plants that grow the same, look the same and flower at the same time.. That amazes me..
BC1 X BC1 = B1F2 and then B1F3 etc
another example, Strawberry cough S1s, a male was found in the population, seed made and called F2, couldnt be called a S2, as the line wasnt selfed again.
did 2 filial gens, then a BC1 back to a F2 cut, then a BC2 back to the same cut.
now take both the BC1 and BC2 plants and go back to the F2, usin all males and females from both gens, which is the 3rd BC in the breeding which results in F7 or 7 generations in the work.
thats how it has been explained to me bro, mating plants from a BC1, results in the BC1f2 and so on.
what do ya call this???
(SCremeF2 X PHaze) X (PHaze X SCreme BC1) the 2 PHaze plants came from different generations
i call it Strawberry Hill
CBF
S1xS1=S1F2
so after 2 gens = S1F4 then F2(recurrent)xS1F4 = BC1 then F2(recurrent)xBC1 = BC2
I'm unsure why you would then take BC1 and BC2 I would of thought just BC2 would be needed for F2(recurrent)xBC2 = BC3
unless you meant you did 2 lines of BC1 ? perhaps I have read it wrong
but thats just how I see it, perhaps someone can corect it
Kopite
right on, the reason I use the Ix/Ic terms is so folks dont misunderstand it with F1,F2 etc, that Id only Designate on offspring derived from two unrelated IBL/Landrace strains.
as I said, same theory, different terminology.
that would be a kick ass polyhybrid imo!
Hi Guys,
You've clearly gone beyond my understanding...
But OG Bub, this statement concerns me.
"Incross. "IC or IX"
I would use the term incross, when breeding inwardly from Polyhybrid offspring, an accurate way to keep track of inbred generations that would not be represented by "filial" generations. IE, inbreeding two unrelated Hybrids.."
"inbreeding" by all definitions is within a family. How can you use that term to describe a cross of two unrelated hybrids? So your statement here seems illogical to me. I don't mean to be a nitpicker...but without appropriate use of terms, nobody will ever come to any understanding.
Peace,
ET
F2 = incross..........eg,,,(Haxe x SK1) x (Haze x SK1) ,,,,,,,,"crossing related lines"
yep you got it imo.still learning,,,,,sorry guys
F1 = outcross .......eg,,,Haze x SK1................."crossing 2 unrelated M/F IBL seedlines"
F2 = incross..........eg,,,(Haxe x SK1) x (Haze x SK1) ,,,,,,,,"crossing related lines"
well I'd use the term inbred like the folk in some places(Isle of man) or the royal family....
well I'd use the term inbred like the folk in some places(Isle of man) or the royal family....
Backcrossing, would be breeding a Hybrid father of (A x B) back to the original clone mother:
whereas Incrossing would be breeding amongst the siblings in a Filial manner
If I said that right.....lol
Greetings
My God....it's like Christmas in July.
(what a fantastic present....thanks GMT)
My mens them reppin' in full on this thread...Big ups (yous know who yous is)
First: one absolutely needs to bear in mind that breeding is goal oriented and directed. Acknowledging this distinction, is akin to the Rosetta Stone.
It has been my experience that a technically accurate definition of an Incross (IC or IX) is best supported by example:
In a field in Afghanistan there is an Afghan cultivar. All the plants share specific traits which are passed on to the progeny making this population a true breeding inbred population i.e. a strain.
One year, the farmer (and this is important: there needs be a farmer for the full definition to be realized) notices two specimens in the field. In addition to all the shared traits, one specimen forms purple colas by maturation, the other specimen matures earlier than the rest.
The farmer decides: purple is pretty and early maturation is advantageous, and so he creates line bred populations of Purple Afghans and Early Afghans
One year, winter came early and harshly. The farmer notices: The purple specimens handle cold better than the green specimens and the early specimens did not offer so huge a loss, as they were close to being fully mature when the first snows whirled over the mountain.
The farmer slapped his forehead, danced a jig and resolved to create a plant that not only retained all the traits the strain was know for, but also to be purple and early maturing. He decided to cross an Early female with a Purple male, both specimens selected from divergent line bred populations within the same inbred genome.
That's an Incross.
Sincerely,
Charles.
Glad to see you posting again! Your wisdom and knowledge is always a welcome addition to these kind of threads.....blynx
What do you mean by 'he creates line bred populations'?
Do you mean he takes a regular afgan and the purple specimen, crosses them to make seeds, and then takes another regular afghan and the early specimen and crosses them to make seeds?....blynx
Are you saying he then has to work those 2 batches of seeds to create these populations?....blynx
...or just the creation of those 2 batches of seeds is the creation of said line bred population?...blynx
What is the difference between doing the incross in your example above, and just crossing the purple specimen and early specimen?...blynx
If you are dealing with true breeding populations, wouldn't the end results be the same/very similar?....blynx