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J Hered ; 95(3): 265-7, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15220395

ABSTRACT

Safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) flowers are used for coloring and flavoring food and also as fresh-cut and dried flowers. The most important characteristics which contribute to the ornamental value of safflower are flower color and spinelessness. The objective of this study was to determine the inheritance mode and the number of genes controlling spininess and flower color in some Iranian genotypes of safflower. The results indicated that the existence of spines on the leaves and bracts of safflower is controlled by a single dominant gene in which the spiny phenotype was completely dominant to spineless. In some crosses, flower color was controlled by two epistatic loci each with two alleles, resulting in a ratio of 13:3 in the segregating F2 population for plants with orange and yellow flowers. Also, other mechanisms of genetic control, such as duplicate dominance and duplicate recessive types of epistasis, were observed for flower color in other crosses that led to ratios of 7:9 and 15:1 for plants with orange and yellow flowers, respectively. The results suggest that for ornamental use or in the food dying industry, genotypes with orange or yellow flowers and without spines on the leaves and bracts can be produced.


Subject(s)
Carthamus tinctorius/genetics , Flowers/genetics , Genes, Dominant/genetics , Pigmentation/genetics , Plant Stems/genetics , Carthamus tinctorius/anatomy & histology , Carthamus tinctorius/physiology , Crosses, Genetic , Epistasis, Genetic , Flowers/physiology , Iran , Pigmentation/physiology , Plant Stems/anatomy & histology
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