yes from memory his plan goes to BC3 F2 to attain 93% of the recurrent parent
Have you thought about using STS Rick ..?
Im digging this thread its very informational just need the spray now i guess and you can start testing...
Naturally less fitness accompanies the move towards homozygosity during all inbreeding programs regarding most outcrossing plants - yin and yang, both are a given. One may delay inbreeding depression by using less intense forms of inbreeding, but very likely be simultaneously delaying the move towards homozygosity along with it. Selfing to the point of homozygosity coupled with crossing to others from different lines is standard in breeding of outcrossing plants and has been for quite a while.
wow,,,your way sounds like a grate idea for makin a STUD seedline,,,,,your % are well high
why did Chimera choose to go a differnt way?,,,,,,an why does he say "nothing is achived after X amount of BackCrossing" ??
just to recap,,,
has anyone noticed anything ive said to be incorrect
it would be a big help if anyone can point out something ive said witch is incorrect
many thanks..
Chimera has categorically stated that the mathematical basis for "cubing" or multiple backcrosses to a single parent is far too simple a model for any remotely practical use in plant breeding. The recombination of multiple alleles to form the offspring simply does NOT conform to the 1'st gen backcross being 50/50 mother and father, and 2'nd gen backcross will be 75% mother and 25% father, etc...
Search for "chimera myth cubing", you'll get the whole scoop.
Also, multiple generations of inbreeding at the level you are talking about...a single individual, would most likely result in serious problems. I would guess extreme lack of vigor, and increasing percentages of sterile seeds and pollen as lethal alleles accumulate due to the extreme bottlenecking lack of genetic diversity.
FWIW, only pot growers talk about plant breeding with individual plants. In the commercial world of legal genetics, inbred lines are created within a population, not from single plant.
Octavian
I will leave you now with a cut and paste from Robert W. Allards "Principles of Plant Breeding"
" the most useful measure of homozygosity is the inbreeding coefficient, F. This coefficient takes a value near zero in most large random-mating populations, and the coefficient increases toward unity under sustained genetic assortive mating. Self-fertilization (one individual in each generation in each family) leads to very rapid increases in homozygosity. Starting with a heterozygote (F=0.50), F takes the values 0.75, 0.875, 0.9375, 0.9688, 0.9844, 0.9922, ... in successive generations of selfing, thus exceeding 0.90 in the third generation. Under continued mating of 2 individuals per family (full sibs) each generation, F is not expected to exceed 0.90 until the eighth generation. With continued mating of 4 individuals per family (double first cousins), F is not expected to exceed 0.90 until the seventeenth generation and rates of increase in F with 8 individuals per family (quadruple second cousins) and 16 individuals per family (octuple third cousins) are much slower yet. The rate of increase in F is so slow with more than 16 mating individuals per family per generation that such matings are of essentially no consequence in concentrating favorable alleles in selection programs in outcrossing species. It is therefore not at all surprising that breeders of plant species nearly always choose schemes featuring very close inbreeding. Selfing schemes (one parent/generation) are by far the most common in breeding outcrossing plants, and the usual goal is to develop numerous highly homozygous lines that are first evaluated by top crossing to identify lines with good general combining ability, followed by testing specific combinations of pairs of lines to identify the very few pairs that have the potential to produce truly excellent single-cross hybrids."
Hello Octavian,
It is funny how folks can read the same exact same thing, or get the exact same dirt under their fingernails, and take away vastly differing conclusions, is it not?
The practicality of cubing depends almost entirely upon the genetics of the recurrent parent.
Inbreeding depression is conceded, what also needs to be conceded is that breeders use this technique anyway and for very good reason, we (some of us at least) have come quite a ways since Darwins "nature abhors self-fertilization". Very much will depend not only on selection, but the original source of the material being worked. If a previously open pollinated line is selfed, chances are many deleterious recessives have been sheltered in heterozygotes and will rise to the surface in early generations of selfing. A line such as Skunk1 on the other hand, one would think many of these would have been previously weeded from the population, and is over that hump so to speak.
In my opinion, bottlenecking is bad only when crap pours out the neck. When nothing is left but outstanding plants, then this is advancement under selection.
It seems to me quite the contrary as well - indeed many pot growers are the only folks having a problem talking about and taking advantage of selfing in breeding as I see it.
I will leave you now with a cut and paste from Robert W. Allards "Principles of Plant Breeding", FWIW, in the hope that you might consider altering -at least somewhat- future comments on the subject of what goes down in the commercial world of legal genetics.
" the most useful measure of homozygosity is the inbreeding coefficient, F. This coefficient takes a value near zero in most large random-mating populations, and the coefficient increases toward unity under sustained genetic assortive mating. Self-fertilization (one individual in each generation in each family) leads to very rapid increases in homozygosity. Starting with a heterozygote (F=0.50), F takes the values 0.75, 0.875, 0.9375, 0.9688, 0.9844, 0.9922, ... in successive generations of selfing, thus exceeding 0.90 in the third generation. Under continued mating of 2 individuals per family (full sibs) each generation, F is not expected to exceed 0.90 until the eighth generation. With continued mating of 4 individuals per family (double first cousins), F is not expected to exceed 0.90 until the seventeenth generation and rates of increase in F with 8 individuals per family (quadruple second cousins) and 16 individuals per family (octuple third cousins) are much slower yet. The rate of increase in F is so slow with more than 16 mating individuals per family per generation that such matings are of essentially no consequence in concentrating favorable alleles in selection programs in outcrossing species. It is therefore not at all surprising that breeders of plant species nearly always choose schemes featuring very close inbreeding. Selfing schemes (one parent/generation) are by far the most common in breeding outcrossing plants, and the usual goal is to develop numerous highly homozygous lines that are first evaluated by top crossing to identify lines with good general combining ability, followed by testing specific combinations of pairs of lines to identify the very few pairs that have the potential to produce truly excellent single-cross hybrids. "
Here's an unrelated question along the same lines, (Hope you don't mind Rick).
Would we see the same F1 hybrid vigour in a DCxPetrolia Headstash as we would a DCxHaze? Can lines of genes that are related be recombined to produce vigour in the same way that unrelated lines can?
Page 169 if I'm not mistaken I prefer page 190 and 207/208
Each to own
Kopite
Here's an unrelated question along the same lines, (Hope you don't mind Rick).
Would we see the same F1 hybrid vigour in a DCxPetrolia Headstash as we would a DCxHaze? Can lines of genes that are related be recombined to produce vigour in the same way that unrelated lines can?
I disagree that S1s will be genetically very different from each other. An S1 can only have the genes that the P1 had and re-writing errors. The rna may however turn some genes on and off in various plants createing different expressions of those genes.
Page 169 if I'm not mistaken I prefer page 190 and 207/208
Each to own
Kopite