Re: Re: Pink X pink giving apricot



<<I haven't seen anything to suggest to me that the inheritance of
anthocyanin is parental influenced.>>

Not sure I understand.  Are you saying that the pod parent has no added or increased influence over the pollen parent when it comes to inheritance of anthocyanin?   

Do you consider this to be true with all color inheritance? 

Betty


-----Original Message-----
From: irischapman@aim.com
To: iris-photos@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sun, 11 Jan 2009 8:16 am
Subject: [iris-photos] Re: Pink X pink giving apricot

I have been finding that a lot of pinks, yellows , whites etc have more
then one dosage of "I", thus the reduced number of seedlings with
anthocyanin. Actually, sometimes none as in the cross of Celebration
Song X Big Squeeze which had 15 seedlings bloom and none had
anthocyanin, even though Celebration song has anthocyanin

I haven't seen anything to suggest to me that the inheritance of
anthocyanin is parental influenced.

The broken colour pollen parent (Autumn Years)of Eramosa Blushing
Bride, may not be fully plicata.It is a cross of Isn't This Something X
Goodbye Heart. It is possible that it is one of the rare non-plicat BC
plants. This would explain why EBB isn't a plicata. The pod parent was
a rich burgundy plicata-luminata

Chuck Chapman

Re: Pink X pink giving apricot

Posted by: "Autmirislvr@aol.com"
Autmirislvr@aol.com

Sat Jan 10, 2009 8:51 am (PST)

Chuck, when I look at the parents of EBB, I'm impressed
with the huge doses of anthocyanin in their background.? At first
glance, I'd expect a higher percentage of purple seedlings due to EBB
being the pod parent.?

Could the blocking, patterns of the plicatas, & possibly the broken
color irises, be responsible for the higher percentage of pink tinted
seedlings?? (due to the anthocyanin being blocked)=0
D

&lt;&lt;Here is a chart of a cross of Eramosa Blushing Bride X
Dreamsicle and their children. all &gt;&gt;

Betty Wilkerson

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