Abstract

European plum cultivars (Prunus domestica L.) are hexaploid and partially self-fertile or self-sterile requiring compatible pollinizers with overlapping bloom times. Therefore, inter-planting of different pollinizer cultivars is recommended. In order to identify successful pollinizers of the plum cultivars ‘Edda’, ‘Opal’ (self-fertile), ‘Jubileum’, ‘Reeves’, ‘Mallard’, ‘Avalon’, ‘Cacanska Lepotica’ (self-fertile), and ‘Valor’, 60 fruits per cultivar were collected from nine orchards in 2017 and 2018, all of which were located in Ullensvang, western Norway. DNA extraction was subsequently conducted from the obtained embryos, followed by genetic characterization using seven microsatellite markers. Tissue samples from all possible pollinizers were collected during the summer of 2017 and the same DNA approach was conducted. Results showed that ‘Opal’ was the most successful pollinizer among the investigated plum cultivars. The main exception was ‘Cacanska Lepotica’, which consistently displayed very high level of self-pollination. The most successful foreign pollinizer of ‘Opal’ was ‘Mallard’. However, in more than two thirds of embryos extracted from ‘Opal’ fruits self-fertilization was determined. ‘Reeves’ was identified as the most successful pollinizer among embryos collected from ‘Valor’. Among the five cultivars (‘Edda’, ‘Jubileum’, ‘Reeves’, ‘Mallard’, and ‘Avalon’) that did not display self-pollination, the pollinizer success rate of ‘Opal’, ranged from 36.5% (‘Mallard’) to 93.5% (‘Edda’) in 2017, while in 2018 this rate ranged from 43.5% (‘Jubileum’ and ‘Reeves’) up to 96.5% (‘Edda’). Overall, genotyping embryos using SSRs (simple sequence repeats) proved an effective method in determining the success rate of individual pollinizers among European plum cultivars.

Highlights

  • Plum production in Norway is located in the most suitable climatic regions, along fjordside in western Norway and around lakes in Eastern Norway

  • The hexaploid (2n = 6x = 48) European plum (Prunus domestica L.) is cultivated and it relies on the use of high yielding cultivars

  • Agronomy 2020, 10, 264 on the success of pollination and fertilization [1] which in turn depend on degree of self-fertility [2], certain pollen performance traits [3,4], as well as pollen tube growth and ovule longevity [5]

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Summary

Introduction

Plum production in Norway is located in the most suitable climatic regions, along fjordside in western Norway and around lakes in Eastern Norway. The hexaploid (2n = 6x = 48) European plum (Prunus domestica L.) is cultivated and it relies on the use of high yielding cultivars. These genotypes are well adapted to the production in the Nordic climate, where moderate to low temperatures and precipitation during spring can be a limiting factor for good pollination and fruit set. There is a wide variation in the self-fertility among European plum genotypes and some are completely self-incompatible [6,7,8]. Self-fertile and self-sterile cultivars require compatible pollinizer with overlapping bloom times to produce high, stable yields [9]

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