Four tetraploid potato genotypes (194.10, 199.13, 201.5, 201.12) were examined in anther culture. The androgenic responses were in general high. Cv. 199.13 contributed with the best response, varying between 0.38 and 0.55 embryoids per anther. Gellan gum or potato starch were used as gelling agents in a double-layer medium. Anthers incubated on potato starch gave a higher embryo yield in the beginning of the culture period, compared to anthers cultivated on gellan gum. The number ofembryoids per anther, however, was higher on gellan gum at the end of the culture period. Anther cultures of potato were incubated in two different temperatures (20 °C and 25 °C), and the highest embryo yield was obtained in 25 °C except for genotype 201.12 where no difference was found between the two temperatures. Experiments with pollen germination in various temperatures (10 °C and 20 °C) were correlated to anther culture experiments. Also in case of pollen germination, genotype 201.12 was temperatureindependent, while germination was stimulated by higher temperatures in the other genotypes.
The main purpose of the research reported in this article was to see if the biomass maintenance of parental potato clones was correlated with the growth and yield of their progeny. Seedling populations with parents of European and of Andean origin were cultivated at a temperature of 10 ° C during the day and 4 ° C at night. The biomass maintenance of the parents was defined as the ratio between the total biomass yield at 20°C day/10 ° C night and the total biomass yield at 10 ° C day/4° C night. The Andean parents had good maintenance ability at the lower regime compared to the Eurpean parents.Biomass maintenance appears to be hereditary. Significant correlation was found between the dry matter maintenance of the parents and the growth rate of seedlings, especially during the second month after potting. In populations with only Andean or only European parents, differences in height increase and leaf formation rate between seedling populations were correlated to the dry matter maintenance of the parents cultivated at the temperature regime 10/4 ° C. In the hybrid population between an Andean and an European parent only differences in height increase during the second month after potting correlated well to the average dry matter maintenance of the parents. It appears therefore that the rate of height increase during the second month after potting can be used as a criterion for selection.
Confined design combined with use of tolerance ratio was used to compare pollen germination capacity at low and high temperature in Andean and European potato material. Four clones of Solanum tuberosum from the European gene pool were compared with four Andean potato clones derived from the breeding program for frost resistance at the International Potato Center (CIP), Lima, Peru. For each clone, the same pollen lot was used throughout each replication. Pollen were germinated at 9 °C and 21 °C. Fortification of media with potato starch and 14 min preincubation at 25 °C were used as variables. The Andean material maintained its germination capacity better than the European material when temperature was decreased. It was possible significantly to distinguish potato clones with low temperature requirement for pollen germination if incubation proceeded germination at 21 °C, but not at 9 °C. Fortification with starch had no significant effect.
Low-temperature adapted Andean potato clones and low-temperature sensitive European clones cultivated at 20/10 °C were compared during stress occurring as the result of low-temperature treatments.The stress response of leaf tissue was assessed by measuring the decrease in chlorophyll fluorescence (Fv/Fm) in detached leaves during a period of six days. After temperature stress combined with Hght Fv/Fm decreased only slightly in the Andean clones, but was markedly lower than the initial values in the European clones. However, after a 2 °C treatment in darkness no difference between clones of different origins was detected.In general, chlorophyll and carotenoid contents of the Andean clones were higher than those of the European clones. They were markedly lower in all clones in treatments where low temperature was combined with light, than at 20/10 °C and at 2 °C in the dark. The contents of carotenoids and total chlorophylls decreased more in the European than in the Andean clones when leaves were transferred to a higher light intensity and when the lowest temperature used was combined with light. Thus carotenoids and chlorophylls in the European clones were more sensitive to photo-oxidation at low temperatures than in the Andean clones.The changes in chlorophyll fluorescence in illuminated, detached leaves induced by a decrease in temperature were found to correlate with the low temperature performance of the genotypes. The correlation between low temperature performance and photosynthetic activity was highly significant and could be used by plant breeders to identify plants that perform well at low temperatures.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.