Abstract

Pollen selection experiments were conducted in tomato to determine the effects of low temperature conditions during pollination on the rate of root elongation of the progeny. Pollen was harvested from an F1 interspecific hybrid between a high altitude Lycopersicon hirsutum accession and the cultivated tomato L. esculentum. The pollen was applied to stigmas of malesterile L. esculentum plants maintained in growth chambers set at either 12°C/7°C or 24°C/18°C. BC1 seeds from the low and normal temperature crosses were germinated and root elongation rate was measured at either 9°C or 24°C. At 9°C, the rate of root elongation for progeny of the low temperature crosses was higher than for progeny of crosses at normal temperatures; at 24°C the rate of root elongation was similar for the two crossing treatments. To compare the temperature responses of the two backcross populations we also calculated the relative inhibitory effect of low temperature on the rate of root elongation: the ratio between the rate of root elongation at 9°C to that at 24°C. Root elongation of seedlings from the low temperature crosses was less inhibited by the cold than root elongation for progeny of the normal temperature crosses. These results suggest a relationship between pollen selection at low temperatures and the expression of a sporophytic trait under the same environmental stress.

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