Breeding Cultivars from Blueberry × Deerberry Hybrids: Progress and Prospects

Vaccinium stamineum (deerberry) is a highly variable diploid species in section Polycodium. Deerberry is native on excessively drained sandy soils from southeastern Ontario, south through the Florida peninsula to Lake Okeechobee, west to eastern Texas and southeastern Kansas. The V. stamineum used i...

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Main Author: Paul M. Lyrene
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS) 2021-02-01
Series:HortScience
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ashs.org/hortsci/view/journals/hortsci/56/4/article-p439.xml
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author Paul M. Lyrene
author_facet Paul M. Lyrene
author_sort Paul M. Lyrene
collection DOAJ
description Vaccinium stamineum (deerberry) is a highly variable diploid species in section Polycodium. Deerberry is native on excessively drained sandy soils from southeastern Ontario, south through the Florida peninsula to Lake Okeechobee, west to eastern Texas and southeastern Kansas. The V. stamineum used in this study were tall plants (2–4 m) native in north Florida, with a plant architecture similar to rabbiteye blueberry (V. virgatum). Starting in 2013 with crosses between tetraploid highbush cultivars (section Cyanococcus) and colchicine-doubled V. stamineum, hundreds of F1 and thousands of later-generation seedlings were grown and evaluated in high-density field nurseries at Citra in North Florida. The populations studied included F1, F2, backcrosses to each parent species, and BC1 × BC1 seedlings. The goal of the study was to assess the feasibility of introgressing into highbush blueberry cultivars desirable traits from V. stamineum (drought tolerance, red-flesh berries, new flavor components, open flowers with short corolla cups and exserted anthers and stigmas) without introducing horticulturally problematic characteristics (bitter skin, berries that shatter when ripe, difficult vegetative propagation). Vigor averaged very low in F1 seedlings, higher in F2 seedlings and in seedlings from backcrosses to V. stamineum, and highest in seedlings from backcrosses to highbush. Most crosses yielded numerous plump seeds, but crosses to produce F1 hybrids yielded fewer than 10% as many seeds as highbush × highbush crosses. Most vegetative, flower, and fruit traits that differentiate highbush from V. stamineum were intermediate in F1 seedlings. Backcross seedlings more closely resembled the recurrent parent. Variability in morphological characters was high in every generation, giving much opportunity for selection. Some seedlings from backcrosses to highbush (≈5%) appeared to have the vigor, berry quality, and yield potential required in commercial cultivars. Producing highbush cultivars that strongly express a particular V. stamineum trait might best be accomplished by growing large, segregating F2 populations from which parents for backcrosses can be selected.
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spelling doaj.art-3f7699ecebf04541862376b95010413f2022-12-21T22:09:42ZengAmerican Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS)HortScience2327-98342021-02-01564439446https://doi.org/10.21273/HORTSCI15619-20Breeding Cultivars from Blueberry × Deerberry Hybrids: Progress and ProspectsPaul M. LyreneVaccinium stamineum (deerberry) is a highly variable diploid species in section Polycodium. Deerberry is native on excessively drained sandy soils from southeastern Ontario, south through the Florida peninsula to Lake Okeechobee, west to eastern Texas and southeastern Kansas. The V. stamineum used in this study were tall plants (2–4 m) native in north Florida, with a plant architecture similar to rabbiteye blueberry (V. virgatum). Starting in 2013 with crosses between tetraploid highbush cultivars (section Cyanococcus) and colchicine-doubled V. stamineum, hundreds of F1 and thousands of later-generation seedlings were grown and evaluated in high-density field nurseries at Citra in North Florida. The populations studied included F1, F2, backcrosses to each parent species, and BC1 × BC1 seedlings. The goal of the study was to assess the feasibility of introgressing into highbush blueberry cultivars desirable traits from V. stamineum (drought tolerance, red-flesh berries, new flavor components, open flowers with short corolla cups and exserted anthers and stigmas) without introducing horticulturally problematic characteristics (bitter skin, berries that shatter when ripe, difficult vegetative propagation). Vigor averaged very low in F1 seedlings, higher in F2 seedlings and in seedlings from backcrosses to V. stamineum, and highest in seedlings from backcrosses to highbush. Most crosses yielded numerous plump seeds, but crosses to produce F1 hybrids yielded fewer than 10% as many seeds as highbush × highbush crosses. Most vegetative, flower, and fruit traits that differentiate highbush from V. stamineum were intermediate in F1 seedlings. Backcross seedlings more closely resembled the recurrent parent. Variability in morphological characters was high in every generation, giving much opportunity for selection. Some seedlings from backcrosses to highbush (≈5%) appeared to have the vigor, berry quality, and yield potential required in commercial cultivars. Producing highbush cultivars that strongly express a particular V. stamineum trait might best be accomplished by growing large, segregating F2 populations from which parents for backcrosses can be selected.https://journals.ashs.org/hortsci/view/journals/hortsci/56/4/article-p439.xmlblueberry breedingintersectional hybridsintrogressiontetraploid highbush blueberriesvaccinium stamineumwide hybridization
spellingShingle Paul M. Lyrene
Breeding Cultivars from Blueberry × Deerberry Hybrids: Progress and Prospects
HortScience
blueberry breeding
intersectional hybrids
introgression
tetraploid highbush blueberries
vaccinium stamineum
wide hybridization
title Breeding Cultivars from Blueberry × Deerberry Hybrids: Progress and Prospects
title_full Breeding Cultivars from Blueberry × Deerberry Hybrids: Progress and Prospects
title_fullStr Breeding Cultivars from Blueberry × Deerberry Hybrids: Progress and Prospects
title_full_unstemmed Breeding Cultivars from Blueberry × Deerberry Hybrids: Progress and Prospects
title_short Breeding Cultivars from Blueberry × Deerberry Hybrids: Progress and Prospects
title_sort breeding cultivars from blueberry deerberry hybrids progress and prospects
topic blueberry breeding
intersectional hybrids
introgression
tetraploid highbush blueberries
vaccinium stamineum
wide hybridization
url https://journals.ashs.org/hortsci/view/journals/hortsci/56/4/article-p439.xml
work_keys_str_mv AT paulmlyrene breedingcultivarsfromblueberrydeerberryhybridsprogressandprospects