Abstract

SummaryTwo carrot cultivars, ‘Sytan’ and ‘Long Chantenay’, representing commercially important carrot types and selected for their partial resistance to the carrot fly (Psila rosae) were crossed as the basis for a single seed descent programme. The resulting F1 progeny were mass pollinated to produce an F2 generation and approximately 2000 plants were raised from this segregating family in the glasshouse in 1981. By careful choice of sowing date and glasshouse temperatures it was possible to stimulate the plants to flower within 10 months. Individual king umbels were enclosed within bags and pollinated with blowflies. Resulting seed was sown in pots in the following August and the process of seed production repeated in a 12 month cycle. Each inbred line was selfed in this way over three generations until the F5 stage. Stocks of seed were then multiplied. A total of 753 inbreds were produced by 1987. The vigour of each inbred was evaluated in glasshouse tests and the level of chlorogenic acid was determined by a fluorescence technique. The most vigorous lines with the lowest levels of chlorogenic acid were tested in field experiments against carrot fly at Wellesbourne. Nine inbreds with promising agronomic quality and moderate resistance to carrot fly were selected and seeded. These nine lines were submitted to seed companies with the aim of developing new cultivars of carrot.

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