Hi everyone,
I made a MicroTom x Black Cherry cross, and a single F2 plant flowered noticeably earlier than the others and produced its first ripe fruit only 13 weeks after seeding (two weeks before the next soonest plant). The other thirty-eight plants averaged 20 weeks. For reference, I'm growing these plants indoors under fluorescent lights in 2" seedling cells all the way to maturity, so naturally they're a bit stressed and it's not unexpected for them to take longer to develop, thus the average of 20 weeks. In the next generation (F3), half the plants produced ripe fruit in 12 weeks and the other half in 13 (the average for the other lines was 19 weeks; second fastest was 14). This tells me it's obviously genetic and is already fixed in the population. I just planted some F4 seeds and all of the early flowering (EF) line germinated several days before any of the others, and I'm pretty sure that's what happened in the previous generation too.
I'm not sure if anyone has come across lines/varieties that ripen that fast, but MicroTom is supposed to be one of the earliest and this was even sooner, grown side-by-side (again, these were grown under stressful conditions, so it's possible it could be faster in optimal conditions.)The fruit quality isn't great, but if anyone is interested in messing around with some of these seeds to make use of the EF trait, let me know and I might be able to send seeds. I should still have some F4 seeds but I can also send F5 seeds in a few months when I have them. I'm going to try crossing into one of my micro lines. Here's some info from the F2 and selected F3 plant data:
I made a MicroTom x Black Cherry cross, and a single F2 plant flowered noticeably earlier than the others and produced its first ripe fruit only 13 weeks after seeding (two weeks before the next soonest plant). The other thirty-eight plants averaged 20 weeks. For reference, I'm growing these plants indoors under fluorescent lights in 2" seedling cells all the way to maturity, so naturally they're a bit stressed and it's not unexpected for them to take longer to develop, thus the average of 20 weeks. In the next generation (F3), half the plants produced ripe fruit in 12 weeks and the other half in 13 (the average for the other lines was 19 weeks; second fastest was 14). This tells me it's obviously genetic and is already fixed in the population. I just planted some F4 seeds and all of the early flowering (EF) line germinated several days before any of the others, and I'm pretty sure that's what happened in the previous generation too.
I'm not sure if anyone has come across lines/varieties that ripen that fast, but MicroTom is supposed to be one of the earliest and this was even sooner, grown side-by-side (again, these were grown under stressful conditions, so it's possible it could be faster in optimal conditions.)The fruit quality isn't great, but if anyone is interested in messing around with some of these seeds to make use of the EF trait, let me know and I might be able to send seeds. I should still have some F4 seeds but I can also send F5 seeds in a few months when I have them. I'm going to try crossing into one of my micro lines. Here's some info from the F2 and selected F3 plant data:
F2
- Growth habit: determinate
- Average fruit/cluster: 5
- Ripening time: 13 wks
- Color: red
- Height at collection: 6"
F3
- Growth habit: determinate
- Average fruit/cluster: 7
- Ripening time: 12 wks
- Color: red
- Height at collection: 11"
- Fruit quality: not very sweet, mealy, soft (similar to MicroTom)
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