UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH SERVICE WASHINGTON, D.C. 20250 with THE CALIFORNIA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION DAVIS, CALIFORNIA 95616 and THE FLORIDA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA 32611 and THE WISCONSIN AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION MADISON, WISCONSIN 53706 RELEASE OF CARROT INBRED B5238 GERMPLASM The Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, the California Agricultural Experiment Station, the Florida Agricultural Experiment Station and the Wisconsin Agricultural Experiment Station announce the release of a carrot inbred B5238 to provide germplasm for developing improved genotypes and producing hybrids. B5238 was derived from a cross made in 1980 at the University of Wisconsin between B4367 (a dark orange Imperator-shaped inbred from an open-pollinated synthetic consisting of fresh market varieties) and PI419042 (a Nantes-Danvers- shaped Chinese variety, Hong Ting Hsain, which varies widely for root color). Beginning at the F2 generation, selection was made for dark orange color, long, blunt, smooth root shape, small core size, and non-green shoulders. Two generations beyond the F2, selection was also initiated for mild, sweet flavor. The best of four plants self-pollinated in the 1984 breeding plots produced seed for field row 5238 in Florida and California. Now at F2MSM7, B5238 is the result of ten generations of selection for root shape and color and eight generations for culinary quality. Yellow cambium ("zone") segregants have occurred in low incidence (less than 0.3 percent) throughout the development of B5238 with an apparent elimination of this defect at F2MSM5. A 1992 evaluation of 89 F1 hybrid plants derived from pollinating petaloid steriles with B5238 were completely male sterile, demonstrating that B5238 is a maintainer of sterility ("B" line). B5238 tends to flower early and produce abundant pollen and seed. |