RE: Iris seeds germinating


 

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Hi Walter, I. tectorum is probably our favorite iris. We grow the species, alba, variegated, WOOLONG (collected by Jim Waddick in the Wolong Valley China), FRECKLETEC, SUN MOON LAKE and a variety that Joan Cooper brought back as seed from Taiwan which looks identical to SUN MOON LAKE. We also grow the tectorum/bearded cross PALTEC. Tom Silvers in Maryland has been working on bearded/tectorum crosses for years now. Please keep us appraised of your progress with them....
 
Greg McCullough
Iris City Gardens
Primm Springs, TN (just southwest of Nashville)
 
-----Original Message-----
From: iris-species@yahoogroups.com [mailto:iris-species@yahoogroups.com]On Behalf Of Walter Pickett
Sent: Friday, January 04, 2013 1:36 PM
To: iris-species@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [iris-species] Iris seeds germinating

 

 
It has been a long time, much of a year if not more, since I ordered some old I. tectorum seeds from the SIGNA website.
Then things went bad, my mother turned 99 and is not mentally what she was a year ago, and other things occupied my time.
But about 3 months ago, I retired and started trying tissue cultuer culture, along with my older brother, and I finaly got to where I was willing to risk some iris seeds. 
I. tectorum is one that the seed list never runs out of, and it is something I have been interested in chromosome doubling and crossing with TBs.  So I. tectorum was what I decided to start with.
I sterilized some seeds about a month ago and put them on sterile tissue culture medium, MS medium gelled with agar.  I used my oldest seeds, 25 of them, 5 to a jar.  Yesterday I saw that 6, from 3 different jars are germinated.  There has been no contamination in any of the jars.  This is a big deal to me, as getting good sterilization, without killing the seeds or plant material I've been using, has been my problem.
In reading through the back issues of the Signa and ASI publications, I have found that several people used to do sterile seed work, both to double chromosomes and to just get germination with difficult crosses.  It isn't so common any more.
Anyone who does want to do this sort of thing should check out the home tissue culture group.  It is amazing how this has progressed since I last tried embryo culture about 1978.  Or I supose yuo could wait until I publish my results, but that means waiting a while, maybe another year.  But things are finally moving along here.
I am about to start germinating my precious oncyclus seeds, and start trying to double chromosomes of I. tectorum.
Walter Pickett



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