Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Editors' note and acknowledgements
- Introduction
- The development of potato varieties in Europe
- Genetic Resources
- Breeding Strategies
- Selection and Screening Methods
- Variety Assessment
- Semi-conventional Breeding Methods
- Efficient utilization of wild and primitive species in potato breeding
- Advances and limitations in the utilization of Neotuberosum in potato breeding
- Breeding at the 2x level and sexual polyploidization
- Haploids extracted from four European potato varieties
- Heterosis for tuber yields and total solids content in 4x x 2x FDR-CO crosses
- Variability of F1 progeny derived from interploidy (4x x 2x) crossing
- Unreduced gametes in the breeding of potatoes at the diploid level
- Desynapsis and FDR 2n-egg formation in potato: its significance to the experimental induction of diplosporic apomixis in potato
- Utilizing wild potato species via Solanum phureja crosses
- The use of diploid Solanum phureja germplasm
- Advances in population breeding and its potential impact on the efficiency of breeding potatoes for developing countries
- True Potato Seed
- Unconventional Breeding Methods
- Commentary
- Index
Efficient utilization of wild and primitive species in potato breeding
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Editors' note and acknowledgements
- Introduction
- The development of potato varieties in Europe
- Genetic Resources
- Breeding Strategies
- Selection and Screening Methods
- Variety Assessment
- Semi-conventional Breeding Methods
- Efficient utilization of wild and primitive species in potato breeding
- Advances and limitations in the utilization of Neotuberosum in potato breeding
- Breeding at the 2x level and sexual polyploidization
- Haploids extracted from four European potato varieties
- Heterosis for tuber yields and total solids content in 4x x 2x FDR-CO crosses
- Variability of F1 progeny derived from interploidy (4x x 2x) crossing
- Unreduced gametes in the breeding of potatoes at the diploid level
- Desynapsis and FDR 2n-egg formation in potato: its significance to the experimental induction of diplosporic apomixis in potato
- Utilizing wild potato species via Solanum phureja crosses
- The use of diploid Solanum phureja germplasm
- Advances in population breeding and its potential impact on the efficiency of breeding potatoes for developing countries
- True Potato Seed
- Unconventional Breeding Methods
- Commentary
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
Wild species are products of natural evolution in centres of diversity. They are not manipulated on purpose or used by man. Their evolution is brought about by the interaction of abiotic and biotic factors with the genetically variable plant populations. This has resulted in the wealth of variation found among and within species. In the centres of diversity the species may coexist but remain largely separated by external and internal barriers developed in the course of evolution.
Domesticated or cultivated plants have derived from the wild species and are manipulated by man both agronomically and genetically in order to improve their adaptation to human needs. The potato has its main centre of diversity in the mountainous regions of Latin American countries. Here the potato was domesticated and has been grown for several millennia. These primitively cultivated potatoes comprise eight Solanum species: the diploids S. phureja, S. stenotomum, S. goniocalyx and S. ajanhuiri, the triploids S. chaucha and S. juzepczukii, the important tetraploid S. tuberosum ssp. andigena and the pentaploid S. curtilobum.
Not until the latter half of the 16th century was the potato introduced into countries outside Latin America, first into Europe, from there into North America and later on all over the world. The immediate ancestor of our present-day autotetraploid S. tuberosum ssp. tuberosum cultivars is the autotetraploid S. tuberosum ssp. andigena. Although initially only few genotypes of S. tuberosum ssp. andigena were introduced, a large number of different S. tuberosum ssp. tuberosum cultivars adapted to various conditions has been derived from that material.
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- Information
- The Production of New Potato VarietiesTechnological Advances, pp. 172 - 185Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1987
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