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 B6366 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 B6366 to provide germplasm for developing improved genotypes and producing hybrids. B6366 was derived from a cross made in 1983 at the University of Wisconsin between B748 (a blunt Imperator-shaped inbred developed from Nantes and fresh market varieties) and 951-1 (an Alternaria leaf blightresistant breeding population). Beginning at the F1 generation, selection was made for dark orange color and long, smooth root shape, orange cambium and small core size. Two generations beyond the F2, selection for mild, sweet flavor was also initiated. The better of two plants self-pollinated in the 1985 breeding plots produced seed for field row 6366 in Florida and California. Now at F2MSM6, B6366 is the result of nine generations of selection for root shape and color and six generations for culinary quality. B6366 is a maintainer of sterility ("B" line) and a petaloid cytosterile counterpart ("A" line) in the Wisconsin Wild cytoplasm and now at BC6. B6366 is a fair producer of seed. Roots of B6366 are long (17-21 cm), fairly blunt, dark orange throughout, especially the core. Root surface is very smooth with a tendency for growth cracks under stressful conditions. Tops of B6366 are of medium height and dark green. Carotene content of mature roots is 180 to 200 ppm (compared to 70 to 100 ppm for older and 120 to 160 |