Abstract

Data from measurements of optical density of intact tissue and of anthocyanins in extracts resolved on cellulose thin layer plates were compared with visual evaluations of color quality and intensity in poinsettia, rose, and snapdragon. Visual evaluation was in good agreement with both instrumental and chemical determinations. However, the number or kinds of anthocyanins present could not be predicted from the visual evaluation or from the spectra of the fresh tissue. Data from the resolved extracts did not provide a basis for predicting the optical‐density spectrum or the color of the intact tissue. In addition to the genetic factors which have been shown to control (1) the type of anthocyanin, (2) the amount of anthocyanin, and (3) the distribution of anthocyanins within the flower, we suggest another group of genes which apparently affect color through control of structural modification of individual anthocyanins in the living cell through shift in pH, metal chelation, and/or copigmentation. Such genes are apparently responsible for the modification of red color within the Wh Wh genotype of poinsettias containing both pelargonidin and cyanidin glycosides and for a very similar pink color in a snapdragon and a rose, each containing a single anthocyanin, a pelargonidin glycoside, and a cyanidin glycoside, respectively.

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