Glossary (A - K)
Plant Breeding Methods (CS, GN, HS 741)
- ACQUIRED CHARACTER
- Modification impressed on an organism by environmental
influences during development.
- ADAPTATION
- The process by which individuals (or parts of individuals),
populations, or species change in form or function in
such a way to better survive under given environmental
conditions. Also the result of this process.
- ADDITIVE GENETIC VARIANCE
- That genetic variation (variance) which is due to additive
effects of genes.
- ADVANCED GENERATIONS SYNTHETIC VARIETIES (beyond Syn-1)
- Advanced generations derived from an initial intercrossing
of a specific set of clones or seed-propagated lines;
usually stable for only limited number of generations.
Examples: `Ranger' and Moapa alfalfa, `Saratoga' bromegrass,
`Pennlate' orchardgrass
- AGAMEON
- A species that contains only apomictic individuals.
- ALLELE = ALLEL, ALLELIC, ALLELOMORPH, ALLELOMORPHIC.
- One of a pair or a series of factors that occur at the
same locus on homologous chromosomes and is inherited
in alternative pairs for this reason; one alternative
form of a gene.
- ALLOPLOIDION
- A species derived from allopolyploidy; individuals are
usually highly variable and apomixis is not present.
- ALLOPOLYPLOID
- Polyploid having chromosome sets from different sources
such as different species; a polyploid that contains genetically
different chromosome sets e.g., from two or more species.
- AMPHIDIPLOID
- Plant possessing the somatic chromosomes of two species;
the latter is definitely known in the case of an amphidiploid
but not in that of an allopolyploid.
- AMPHIHAPLOID
- Plant having a haploid (1n) set of chromosomes from
each parent of an interspecific hybrid, thus being (2x)
rather than (4x), as in the case of an amphidiploid.
- AMPHIPOLYPLOID
- Polyploid that arises by the addition of the complete
somatic chromosome sets of two or more known species.
- ANDROECIOUS
- A plant having staminate flowers (sometimes called all-male).
SEE andromonoecious, dioecious, gynoecious, gynomonoecious,
hermaphroditic, monoecious, trimonoecious.
- ANDROGENETIC HAPLOID
- Plant having chromosomes from the male parent only.
- ANDROMONOECIOUS
- A plant having staminate and perfect flowers. SEE androecious,
dioecious, gynoecious, gynomonoecious, hermaphroditic,
monoecious, trimonoecious.
- ANEUPLOID
- Organism or cell having a chromosome number other than
an exact multiple of the monoploid or basic number; hyperploid
= higher, hypoploid = lower = nullisome.
- ANGIOSPERMS (Angiospermae)
- Flowering plants characterized by the presence of vessels
(lacking in a few families) in the wood, ovules enclosed
in a megasporophyll (ovary), microsporangia (anthers)
borne on a microsporophyll (filament), and a perianth
of sepals and petals, either or both of which may be absent.
Two major subdivisions are dicotyledons and monocotyledons.
- ANISOGAMETE, ANISOGAMETIC
- A gamete of either of two kinds sexually differentiated
in size or structure; the condition in which two such
kinds of gametes are present.
- ANISOGAMOUS
- Gametes of unequal size.
- ANISOGENY
- Production of ovules and pollen that exhibit a consistent
difference in genetic constitution,
- ANISOPLOID
- Unequal ploidy levels (e.g., 2x and 4x) among progeny
of a polyploid cross.
- APOGAMEON
- A species that contains both apomictic and nonapomictic
individuals.
- APOMIXIS
- Reproduction in which sexual organs or related structures
take part but fertilization does not occur, so that the
resulting seed is vegetatively produced.
- ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION
- Reproduction which does not involve the union of gametes.
- ASYNAPSIS
- Failure of pairing of homologous chromosomes during
meiosis.
- AUTOGAMY
- Reproduction by self-fertilization.
- AUTOPOLYPLOID
- Polyploid that arises by the multiplication of the complete
haploid genome of a single species.
- BACKCROSS BREEDING
- A system of breeding whereby recurrent backcrosses are
made to one of the parents of a hybrid accompanied by
selection for a specific character or characters.
- BACKCROSS
- A cross of a hybrid to either of its parents. In genetics,
a cross of a heterozygote to a homozygous recessive. SEE
test cross.
- BALANCE
- The condition in which genetic components are adjusted
in proportions that give satisfactory development. Balance
applies to individuals and populations.
- BASIC NUMBER
- The number of chromosomes in ancestral diploid ancestors
of polyploids, represented by "x".
- BASIC SEED
- Means the seed planted to produce certified or commercial
seed.Provenance:
- BIAS
- A consistent and false departure of a statistic from
its proper value.
- BIOMETRY
- The branch of science which deals with statistical procedures
in biology.
- BIOTYPE
- A group of individuals with the same genotype. Biotypes
may be homozygous or heterozygous.
- BIOTYPE
- Distinct physiological races or strains within morphological
species; a population of individuals with identical genetic
constitution; may be made up of homozygotes or heterozygotes,
of which the former would be expected to breed true.
- BIVALENT
- A pair of homologous chromosomes united in the first
meiotic division.
- BREEDER SEED
- A class of certified seed directly controlled by the
originating or sponsoring plant breeding institution,
or person, or designee thereof, and is the source for
the production of seed of the other classes of certified
seed.
- BREEDING CYCLE (BREEDING ROTATION)
- The shortest period between successive generations from
germination of a seed to reproduction of the progeny;
i.e., the seed-to-seed cycle.
- BREEDING ROTATION
- SEE Breeding cycle.
- BREEDING SYSTEM
- A particular mating system that involves a certain type
or types of plant material, together with the necessary
selection procedures; different strategies are used to
improve self-pollinated crops to extract inbred pure lines
and to improve cross-pollinated crops for population performance
per se for the selection of superior heterozygous individuals
to be vegetatively reproduced as clones or for the extraction
of improved inbreds for use in hybrid production.
- BREEDING
- Propagation of plants for the purpose of improvement
by deliberate selfings or hybridizations and subsequent
testing and selection for desired criteria and objectives.
The art and science of changing plants or animals genetically.
- BUD SPORT
- Branch, flower, or fruit that differs genetically from
the remainder of the plant SEE also Chimera.
- BULK BREEDING
- The growing of genetically diverse populations of self-pollinated
crops in a bulk plot with or without mass selection, followed
by single-plant selection.
- CENTROMERE
- SEE kinetochore.
- CERTIFIED SEED
- A class of certified seed that is the progeny of Breeder,
Foundation, or Registered seed...and is produced and handled
under procedures established by the certifying agency
for the purpose of maintaining genetic purity and identity.
Seed used for commercial crop production produced from
foundation, registered, or certified seed under the regulation
of a legally constituted agency.
- CHARACTER (CHARACTERISTIC)
- Expression of a gene or group of genes
- An attribute of an organism resulting from the interaction
of a gene or genes with environment.
- CHARACTERISTIC
- SEE Character.
- CHIASMA
- An exchange of partners between paired chromatids in
the first division of meiosis.
- CHIMERA (CHIMAERA)
- Mixture of tissues of genetically different constitution
in the same part of a plant; may result from mutation,
irregular mitosis, somatic crossing-over, or artificial
fusion of unlike tissues (e.g., a "graft hybrid").
- CHROMATID
- Longitudinal half-chromosome that appears between the
early prophase and metaphase stages of somatic mitosis
and between the diplotene (at least) and the second metaphase
stage in meiotic mitosis. One of two threadlike structures
formed by the longitudinal division of a chromosome during
meiotic prophase and known as a daughter chromosome during
anaphase.
- CHROMOSOMES
- Microscopically small, dark-staining bodies visible
in the nucleus of a cell at the time of nuclear division;
the number in any species is usually constant; carriers
of the genes, which are arranged in linear order. Structural
units of the nucleus which carry the genes in linear order.
Chromosomes undergo a typical cycle in which their morphology
changes drastically in various phases of the life cycles
of organisms.
- CLEISTOGAMEON
- A species that reproduces in part, by cleistogamy; apomixis
is not present.
- CLONAL VARIETIES
- Consist of one clone or several closely similar clones
propagated by asexual means, such as cuttings, tubers,
corms, bulbs , rhizomes, divisions, grafts, or seed produced
by obligate apomixis.)Examples:'Meyer' zoysiagrass, `Elberta'
peach, `Russet Burbank' potato, `Coastal'bermudagrass,
`Peace' rose, `Iceberg' chrysanthemum. Examples of obligate
apomicts: `Troyer' citrange (rootstock), `Higgins' buffelgrass.
- CLONE
- A group of organisms descended by mitosis from a common
ancestor Individuals derived by vegetative propagation
or apomixis from a single original parent.
- CLONES
- Outbreeding mating system that involves perennial or
quasi-annual vegetative material; homogeneous, heterozygous,
isolated by selection of superior recombinants or transgressive
segregates in the F1, between heterozygous parental clones
and subsequently multiplied by vegetative propagation
(monogenotypic); examples are potato, cassava, sweetpotato,
rubber, mango, avocado, apple, pear, banana pineapple,
strawberry, brambles, grape, peach, cherry, almond, citrus,
date, Jerusalem, artichoke, yams, black pepper (Piper),
olive, fig, pistachio, and edible aroids.
- COLCHIPLOID
- Colchicine-induced polyploid.
- COMBINING ABILITY (CA)
- "General combining ability" is the average progeny performance
of a cultivar in a series of crosses;"specific combining
ability" is the deviation from the performance predicted
from general combining ability. GENERAL CA: average performance
of a strain in a series of crosses. SPECIFIC CA: deviation
from performance predicted on the basis of general combining
ability.
- COMPLEMENTARY GENES
- Genes that are similar in phenotypic effect when present
separately but react to produce new characters when they
are combined; a 9:7 ratio results in the F2 if two such
genes are complementary for a dominant effect and a 15:1
ratio if they are complementary for a recessive effect
- SEE Duplicate factors).
- COMPOSITE-CROSS POPULATIONS
- A population generated by hybridizing more than two
varieties and/or lines of normally self-fertilizing plants
and propagating successive generations of the segregating
population in bulk in specific environments so that natural
selection is the principal force acting to produce genetic
change; artificial selection may also be imposed on the
population, the resulting population is expected to have
a continuously changing genetic makeup; breeder seed is
not maintained as originally released
- Examples: `Harlan' barley, `Mezcla' lima bean.
- COUPLING
- Linked recessive alleles occur in one homologous chromosome
and their dominant alternatives occur in the other chromosome
- Opposed to repulsion in which one dominant and one recessive
occur in each member of the pair of homologous chromosome.
- COVARIANCE
- The mean of the product of the deviation of two variates
from their individual means. A statistical measure of
the interrelation between variables.
- CROSS-OVER UNIT
- An exchange frequency of 1% between two pairs of linked
genes.
- CROSSING OVER
- The exchange of corresponding segments between chromatids
of paired (homologous) chromosomes; it is a process inferred
cytologically from new associations of parts of chromosomes,
both of which may be observed in an exchange of factors
and in combinations of factors differing from those that
came in with the parents; the term "genetic cross-over"
may be applied to these new gene combinations
- SEE Recombination. Its genetic consequence is the recombination
of linked genes.
- CULTIGEN
- Plant or group of plants known only in cultivation;
presumed to have originated under domestication.
- CULTIVAR (abbrev cv.)
- A term contracted from "cultivated variety" defined
under the International Code of Nomenclature of Cultivated
Plants (1969) as "an assemblage of cultivated plants which
is clearly distinguished by any characters (morphological,
physiological, cytological, chemical, or others), and
which, when reproduced (sexually or asexually), retains
its distinguishing characters." This term is essentially
different from the concept of botanical variety, which
is always in the Latin form prescribed by the International
Code of Botanical Nomenclature. These plants are named
at three main levels: Genus, species, and cultivar, of
which the first two are governed by the Botanical Code
and the last is a "fancy name" in a modern language with
capital initial letters and distinguished clearly from
the botanical name or accepted common name by being enclosed
in single quotation marks (e.g.,'Hamlin' sweet orange)
or preceded by cv (e.g., Citrus sinensis Osbeck
cv. Hamlin. Examples of cultivar categories distinguished
under the Cultivated Plant Code follow: A clone or several
closely similar clones, including distinguishable bud
mutations derived from a clone. Note, however, that neither
a clone nor any other category listed is designated as
a cultivar (=variety) until it has been released; i.e.,
when the name is validly published under prescribed rules.
One or more lines of normally self-pollinating individuals
or inbred lines of normally cross-pollinating individuals.
Cross-pollinated individuals that may show genetic differences
but have one or more characters by which they can be differentiated
from other cultivars of like or different origin. An assemblage
of individuals reconstituted on each occasion by crossing,including
single crosses, double crosses, three-way crosses, top
crosses, and intervarietal hybrids the primary difficulty
in the foregoing categories, which refer to cultivated
plants produced principally by systematic breeding and
release to growers, is the necessity for continual redefinition
of guidelines for classifying populations (i.e.,the establishment
of precise criteria), particularly those of cultivated
plants produced by sexual means such as agricultural agronomic),
vegetable, tree, shrub, and flower seeds. General practice
for the latter includes the substitution of common for
scientific names and variety for cultivar, variety being
specifically defined as the International Code of Nomenclature
of Cultivated Plants. SEE Federal Seed Act of 1938 as
Amended and Regulations (1976). Guidelines for classifying
cultivated plant populations (1978), and Plant patents.
- CYBRID
- Hybrid cytoplasm from protoplast fusion.
- CYTOCHIMERA
- Chromosomal chimera; e.g., one having different chromosome
numbers in the layers; similar but not necessarily identical
to a mixoploid.
- CYTOKINESIS
- The division of cytoplasm into cells.
- CYTOPLASMIC INHERITANCE
- Transmission of hereditary characters through the cytoplasm
as distinct from transmission by genes carried by chromosomes
- Detected by differing contribution of male and female
parents in reciprocal crosses.
- DEFICIENCY
- The absence or deletion of a segment of chromosome.
- DEGREES OF FREEDOM, NUMBER OF
- The number of independent comparisons that can be made
in a set of data.
- DETASSEL
- Remove the tassel (male inflorescence) as in maize.
- DEVIATION
- Departure of an observation from its expected value.
- DIALLEL CROSS, COMPLETE
- The crossing in all possible combinations of a series
of genotypes.
- DICOTYLEDONS (Dicotyledoneae)
- Plants woody or herbaceous, stems with vascular elements
like a hollow cylinder or in bundles in a single circle
(rarely scattered), leaves typically netted and veined
in palmate or pinnate form, flowers basically with parts
in fours or fives or multiples thereof, or numerous, embryos
typically with two cotyledons.
- DIHAPLOID
- Haploid (2x) derived from a tetraploid (4x).
- DIHYBRID
- Heterozygous with respect to two genes.
- DIOECIOUS
- A population consisting of gynoecious and androecious
plants
- SEE androecious, andromonoecious, dioecious, gynomonoecious,
hermaphroditic, monoecious, trimonoecious.
- DIPLOID
- Having two chromosomes of each kind; somatic tissues
of higher plants and animals are ordinarily diploid in
chromosomal constitution in contrast to haploid (monoploid)
gametes or the rare instances of haploid plants.
- DIPLOTENE
- The stage of meiosis which follows pachytene and during
which the four chromatids of each bivalent move apart
in two pairs but remain attached in the region of chiasmata.
- DISJUNCTION
- The separation of chromosomes at anaphase.
- DISOME
- SEE Monosomic.
- DOMINANCE
- Intra-allelic interaction such that one allele manifests
itself more or less, when heterozygous, than its alternative
allele.
- DOMINANT
- Applied to a member of an allelomorphic pair of characters
with the quality of manifesting itself wholly or largely
to the exclusion of the other member, or recessive.
- DONOR PARENT
- The parent from which one or a few genes are transferred
to the recurrent parent in backcross breeding.
- DOUBLE CROSS
- The first generation hybrid between two single crosses.
The mating of two different sets of inbred lines to produce
two different single crosses which are then mated, as
in double-cross hybrid corn and the like.
- DRIFT
- Changes in gene and genotypic frequencies in small populations
due to random processes.
- DUPLEX
- SEE nulliplex.
- DUPLICATE FACTORS (GENES)
- Different or independent factors with the same expression;
the reverse of a multiple allelomorphic series in which
changes in the same gene produce different effects.
- DUPLICATION
- Occurrence of a segment of a chromosome twice in the
haploid set.
- DYSGENIC
- Detrimental to hereditary qualities in a stock (e.g.,
a cultivar or population); biologically defective or deficient.
- DYSPLOID
- A plant or species in which the chromosome number is
more or less than the expected normal euploid number.
- DYSPLOIDION
- A species of morphologically similar members of a dysploid
series; all members are sexually reproductive (i.e., apomixis
is not present).
- DYSPLOIDY
- Abnormal ploidy as in the appearance of diploid (2x)
or triploid (3x) individuals in a normally tetraploid
(4x) population or of triploid and tetraploid ones in
a normally diploid population.
- ELITE TREE
- Plant of proved good combining ability.
- EMASCULATION
- Removal of the anthers from a flower.
- EMBRYOGENETICS
- Heredity and variation of embryos; the genetics of embryos.
- ENVIRONMENT
- The sum total of the external conditions which affect
growth and development of an organism.
- EPIGENETIC
- A change in some morphological character as a result
of localized influences different from the normal or usual
pattern that occurs after development of an organism is
initiated; a term used in connection with changes that
result from plant tissue culture or animal embryological
studies (used in apposition to Genetic).
- EPIPHYTOTIC
- An unarrested spread of a plant disease.
- EPISTASIS
- Dominance of one gene over a nonallelic gene The gene
suppressed is said to be hypostatic More generally, the
term epistasis is used to describe all types of interallelic
interaction whereby manifestation at any locus is affected
by genetic phase at any or all other loci Interallelic
interaction; the suppression of the action of a gene or
genes by a gene or genes not allelomorphic to those suppressed;
suppressed genes are said to be "hypostatic"; the opposite
of dominance which refers to the intraallelic action of
members of an allelomorphic pair An example is "piping",
the leaf form typical of the "Maipure" group of pineapple
(Ananas comosus); in which the upper and lower sides of
the margin are folded over and fused and are completely
spineless; the genotype is PPSS, although plants heterozygous
for P are epistatic to the S or s alleles.
- ERROR VARIANCE
- Variance arising from unrecognized or uncontrolled factors
in an experiment with which the variance of recognized
factors is compared in tests of significance.
- EUPLOID
- An organism or cell having a chromosome number that
is an exact multiple of the monoploid or haploid (1n)
number; terms used for a euploid series are haploid (1x),
diploid (2x), triploid (3x), tetraploid (4x), etc.
- EUPLOIDION
- A species sexually reproduced (i.e., apomixis is not
present) and composed of segments with a common origin
arranged in a euploid series; the segments are morpholoically
separable but are similar and tend to intergrade.
- EXOTIC
- Introduced from another country.
- EXPRESSIVITY
- The degree of manifestation of a genetic character.
- EXSERTION
- Elongation beyond enclosing structure to expose (eg
- exserted style).
- F1
- The first filial generation, the first generation of
a given mating
- The first generation of a cross.
- F2 VARIETIES
- The next generation seed derived from the hybrid (F1)
generations; the variety cannot be perpetuated by growing
additional generations. Examples: `Foremost F2' tomato,
`Market Pride' cantaloupe,'Violet Blue' petunia, `Seven-Eleven'
pansy.
- F2
- The second filial generation obtained by self-fertilization
or crossing inter se of F1 individuals.
- F3
- Progeny obtained by self-fertilizing or crossing inter
se of F2 individuals.
- FACTOR
- Same as gene.
- FAMILY
- A group of individuals directly related by descent from
a common ancestor.
- FEDERAL SEED ACT of 1938 as Amended and Regulations
(1976)
- The U.S statute governing aspects of seed production,
handling, and sales.
- FERTILITY
- Ability to produce viable offspring.
- FERTILIZATION
- Fusion of the nuclei of male and female gametes.
- FIRST-GENERATION SYNTHETIC VARIETIES (Syn-1)
- First-generation progenies derived by intercrossing
a specific set of clones or seed-propagated lines; these
may include varieties of normally cross-fertilizing or
self-fertilizing crops into which mechanisms have been
introduced to maximize cross-fertilization such as male
sterility or self-incompatibility. These varieties usually
contain mixtures of seed that result from cross-,self-and
sib-fertilization; the variety consists of only the first-generation
progenies after intercrossing and cannot be reproduced
from seed of the first generation. Examples: `Gahi' pearl
millet, `Vitagraze' rye, `Tempo' alfalfa.
- FLORA
- An essentially monographic treatment or assemblage of
plants of a given area, usually arranged in systematic
fashion; e.g., G Bentham and J.D Hooker, 1862-1863 Genera
plantarum. London 3 vol.; or A Engler and L Diels, 1964
Syllabus der Pflanzenfamilien, 12th ed Berlin, as world
floras; or J Hutchinson, 1948 British flowering plants
London and M.L Fernald, 1950. Gray's manual of botany,
8th ed., etc., as regional floras.
- FORM
- A category ranking below a subspecies, used chiefly
for certain minor variations (e.g., the yellow passion
fruit, Passiflora edulis fflavicarpa, whose
fruit is yellow rather than purple as in P edulis
proper); a sporadic variant, equivalent to "variety" of
some botanists but generally trivial such as corolla or
fruit color or habit response.
- FOUNDATION SEED
- A class of certified seed that is the progeny of Breeder
or Foundation seed and is produced and handled under procedures
established by the certifying agency...for the purpose
of maintaining genetic purity and identity. Seed stock
produced from breeder seed by or under the direct control
of an agricultural experiment station. Foundation seed
is the source of certified seed, either directly or through
registered seed.
- FOUNDATION SINGLE CROSS
- A single cross in the production of a double, three-way,
or top cross.
- FRUIT CYCLE
- The period, or length of time, between fruit set and
maturity.
- FRUITING CYCLE (FRUITING ROTATION)
- The shortest period between successive generations of
a plant; i.e., from propagule to fruit maturity (differs
from breeding cycle in that the former may be reproduced
vegetatively rather than from seed).
- GAMETE
- Cell of meiotic origin specialized for fertilization.
- GENE FLOW
- Spread of genes by crossing.
- GENE FREQUENCY
- The proportion in which alternative alleles of a gene
occur in a population.
- GENE INTERACTION
- Modification of gene action by a nonallelic gene or
genes.
- GENE POOL SYSTEM
- Three informal categories by Harlan and de Wet (cited
in Harlan, 1975) to provide a genetic perspective and
focus for cultivated plants.
- GENE
- The unit of inheritance. Genes are located at fixed
loci in chromosomes and can exist in a series of alternative
forms called alleles.
- GENERAL COMBINING ABILITY
- SEE Combining ability.
- GENETIC EQUILIBRIUM
- The condition in which successive generations of a population
contain the same genotypes in the same proportions with
respect to particular genes or combinations of genes.
- GENETIC
- The normal or usual pattern of change in a morphological
character that occurs after development of an organism
is initiated.
- GENIC STERILITY
- A type of male sterility conditioned by nuclear genes;
may be transmitted by either parent.
- GENOME
- A set of chromosomes corresponding to the haploid set
of a species.
- GENOTYPE
- The genetic constitution (gene, makeup), expressed and
latent, of an organism; individuals of the same genotype
breed alike; contrast (this behavior) with phenotype.
- GENUS
- A category of classification between a family and a
species; a group of structurally or phylogenetically related
species or consisting of an isolated species that exhibits
unusually differential features (monotypic genus); distinctions
between genera are sometimes empirical or arbitrary and
liable to modification as knowledge advances; a category
antedating binomial nomenclature, composed of plants with
two or three characters of reproductive structures in
common, although characters used for separation vary widely
among different families.
- GERMPLASM
- The sum total of the hereditary materials in a species.
- GRAFT-CHIMAERA
- Plants composed of tissues in intimate association from
two different individuals; they originate by grafting
name with a plus (+) sign used instead of a X, as for
a graft hybrid.
- GRAFT-HYBRID
- A sexual hybrid between two or more species or genera,
which can be denoted by the botanical names of the parents
connected by a multiplication sign (X) = formula, or a
botanical name for an interspecific hybrid consisting
of the generic name followed by a Latin collective epithet,
the latter immediately preceded by X; or for an intergeneric
hybrid, a "generic name" preceded by X and normally followed
by a Latin collective epithet; a "generic" name of a multigeneric
hybrid usually consists of a personal name with the suffix
-ara.
- GUIDELINES FOR CLASSIFYING CULTIVATED PLANT POPULATIONS
(1978)
- An appendix to the Federal Seed Program Review (1980)
which gives more precise definitions of the various categories
of cultivated varieties.
- GYNOECIOUS
- A plant having all pistillate flowers (sometimes called
all-female). SEE androecious, andromonoecious, dioecious,
gynomonoecious, hermaphroditic, monoecious, trimonoecious.
- GYNOMONECIOUS
- A plant having perfect (hermaphroditic) and pistillate
flowers. See androecious, andromonoecious, dioecious,
gynoecious, hermaphroditic, monoecious, trimonoecious.
- HAPLOID
- An organism or cell with only one complete set of chromosomes
(i.e., 1n); having half of one parent's chromosomes.
- HEREDITY
- Resemblance among individuals related by descent.
- HERITABILITY
- The proportion of variability that results from genetic
causes; equivalent to total genetic variation, which is
total variation less environmental variation; also that
proportion of the variation of a population that is transmitted
to progeny.
- HERMAPHRODITIC
- A plant having all perfect (hermaphroditic) flowers.
SEE androecious, andromonoecious, dioecious, gynoecious,
gynomonoecious, monoecious, trimonoecious.
- HERMAPHRODITISM
- Reproductive organs of both sexes present in the same
individual or in the same flower in higher plants.
- HETEROCARYOSIS
- The presence of two or more genetically different nuclei
within single cells of a mycelium.
- HETEROGAMEON
- A species made up of races that if selfed, produce morphologically
stable populations; apomixis is not present.
- HETEROGENESIS
- Alternation of generations, especially a unisexual dioecious
alternating with one or more parthenogenetic generations.
- HETEROSIS
- Hybrid vigor such that an F1 hybrid falls outside the
range of the parents with respect to some character or
characteres. Usually aplied to size, rate of growth, or
general thriftiness.
- HETEROTHALLY
- Haploid incompatibility in fungi (opposite of homothally).
- HETEROTYPIC DIVISION
- SEE Reductive division.
- HETEROZYGOTE
- An organism with unlike members of any given pair or
series of allelomorphs, consequently producing unlike
gametes.
- HETEROZYGOUS
- The condition in which homologous chromosomes of an
individual possess different genes of the same allelomorphic
series.
- HOMOLOGOUS
- Chromosomes of an allopolyploid that are similar in
size, shape, and function, but are not homologous. For
example, chromosome 5A and 5D in bread wheat are homoeologous
since they have the same code number, but belong to different
genomes (A and D, respectively). Different genome letters
indicates that the wheat chromosomes came from different
ancestral diploid species when the allopolyploid wheat
was formed. SEE homologous.
- HOMOGENEON
- A genetically and morphologically homogeneous species
in which apomixis is not present and all members are interfertile.
- HOMOLOGOUS
- Members of paired chromosomes in somatic cells; the
former are similar in size, shape, and supposedly in function,
one being derived from the male parent, the other from
the female.
- HOMOLOGY OF CHROMOSOMES
- Applied to whole chormosomes or parts of chromosome
which synapse or pair in meiotic prophase.
- HOMOTYPIC DIVISION
- SEE Reductive division, Fruit setting, Apomixis).
- HOMOZYGOTE
- An individual whose chromosomes carry identical members
of any given part of allelomorphs; the germ cells therefore
are alike with respect to this locus and the individual
will breed true.
- HOMOZYGOUS
- Having like alleles at corresponding loci on homologous
chromosomes. An organism can be homozygous at one, several,
or all loci.
- HYBRID VARIETIES (F1)
- First-generation (F1) progenies from a cross, produced
by controlling the pollination, between (1) two inbred
lines, (2) single crosses, (3) a single cross and an open-pollinated
or a synthetic variety, or (5)two selected clones, seed
lines, varieties, or species. A line cross between two
closely related inbreds (theoretical coefficient of parentage
at least 0.87) is considered equivalent to a line (inbred)
variety; the hybrid variety cannot be reproduced from
seed of the hybrid generation. Examples of conventional
hybrids: `Hybrid-7' spinach, `US13' hybrid corn, `RS-610'
hybrid grain sorghum,, `Moreton' hybrid tomato, `Comanche'
hybrid petunia; examples of varieties that contain substantial
numbers of hybrid seeds: `Market Prize' hybrid cabbage,
`Valley' hybrid sunflower, `Picadilly' hybrid cucumber.
- HYBRID VIGOR
- The situation in which the cross of two parents produces
hybrids that show increased vigor in comparison to that
of either parent.
- HYBRID
- The product of a cross between genetically unlike parents.
- HYBRIDS
- Involve inbred lines with favorable combining ability
of annual or biennial, or sometimes perennial, seed-propagation
material; homogeneous, highly heterozygous, with inbred
lines for use in hybrid production derived from continuous
selfing of selected plants in cross-pollinated populations
(verges on monogenotypic)l examples are maize, onion,
Brussels sprouts, kale, tomato, beets, cucurbits, black
pepper (Piper), cloves, fig, radish, Chinese cabbage,
and sunflower.
- HYPERPLOID
- SEE Aneuploid.
- HYPOPLOID
- SEE Aneuploid.
- HYPOSTATIC
- SEE Epistasis.
- HYPOTRIPLOID
- A triploid (3x) lacking one or more chromosomes, as
in instances in which 2n = 20 instead of the expected
21 derived from a basic (x) number of 7.
- IDEOTYPE
- The ideal architectural plant type.
- INBRED LINE
- A line produced by continued inbreeding. In plant breeding
a nearly homozygous line usually originating by continued
self-fertilization, accompanied by selection. A relatively
true-breeding strain that results from at least five successive
generations of controlled fertilization or of backcrossing
to a recurrent parent with selection, or its equivalent,
for specific characteristics.
- INBRED PURE LINES
- Involves inbreeding annual seed-propagated material;
homogeneous, homozygous isolated by selection of desired
recombinants or segregates in F2-F7 generations of crosses
between parental pure lines (generally monogenotypic,
can be blended to form multilines); examples are tomato,
lettuce, soybean, pea, cowpea, snapbean, field bean, Arabian
coffee, pepper (Capsicum), eggplant, okra, lentil, and
papaya (`Solo').
- INBRED-VARIETY CROSS
- The F1 cross of an inbred line with a variety.
- INBREEDING C`FFICIENT
- A quantitative measure of the intensity of inbreeding.
- INBREEDING
- The mating of individuals more closely related than
individuals mating at random.
- INDEPENDENCE
- The relationship between variables when the variation
of each is uninfluenced by that of others, that is, correlation
is zero.
- INTERFERENCE
- The effect of one crossover influencing the probability
than another will occur in the immediate vicinity.
- INTROGRESSIVE HYBRIDIZATION
- Hybridization followed by recrossing with the parental
species in such a way that certain features of one species
become transferred to the other species without impairment
of taxonomic integrity.
- INVERSION
- A rearrangement of a chromosome segment so that its
genes are in reversed linear order.
- INVERSION
- A rearrangement of a group of genes in a chromosome
in such a way that their linear order is reversed.
- IRRADIATION
- Exposure of plants or plant parts to X-rays or other
radiations to increase mutation rates.
- ISOALLELES
- Alleles indistinguishable except by special tests.
- ISOGENIC LINES
- Two or more lines differing from each other genetically
at one locus only. Distinguished from clones, homozygous
lines, identical tiwns, etc., which are identical at all
loci.
- ISOLATION
- The separation of one group from another so that mating
between or among groups is prevented.
- KARYOTYPE
- The sum of the specific characters of a nucleus, such
as chromosome number, size, and form.
- KIND
- Means one or more related species or subspecies that,
singly or collectively, is known by one common name; e.g.,
soybean, flax, carrot, and radish.
- KINETOCHORE
- Spindle attachment. A localized region in each chromosome
to which the "spindle fiber" apears to be attached and
which seems to determine movement of the chromosomes during
mitosis and meiosis.
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