UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH SERVICE WASHINGTON, D.C. 20250 with THE CALIFORNIA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION DAVIS, CALIFORNIA 95616 and THE OREGON AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION CORVALLIS, OREGON 97331 and THE WISCONSIN AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION MADISON, WISCONSIN 53706 RELEASE OF MOTLEY DWARF RESISTANT CARROT POPULATION The Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, the California Agricultural Experiment Station, the Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station, and the Wisconsin Agricultural Experiment Station, announce the release of a carrot population to be used as germplasm for developing improved genotypes and producing hybrids with motley dwarf resistance. Motley Dwarf Resistant population (MDR) was derived from crosses made in 1981 between B6439 (a dark orange Imperator-shaped inbred from an open-pollinated synthetic consisting of 16 fresh market inbreds) and Oregon 6 (a long Danvers-shaped breeding line from Autumn King and OSU 26-2 with moderate field resistance to motley dwarf). Selection was made in Corvallis, Oregon, for motley dwarf resistance and for dark orange, long, smooth root in five subsequent generations. Now at M6, MDR is the result of six generations of selection for motley dwarf resistance and acceptable root shape and color. MDR tends to produce limited amounts of seed. Roots of MDR are short to medium long (14-18 cm), tapered, and medium orange with large cores. Root surface is fairly smooth and greening of the root shoulder surface is common. Tops of MDR are fairly tall and dark green. Carotene content of mature roots is 140 to 160 ppm (compared to 70 to 100 ppm for older and 120 to 160 ppm for modern fresh market varieties). Flavor is average. Motley dwarf resistance is excellent in the MDR population. In two years of field testing and one year of greenhouse testing, this population exhibited a minimal amount of leaf mottling and root stunting typical of motley dwarf (Table 1). Interestingly, performance of F1 hybrids with MDR as one parent had few disease symptoms to suggest resistance to be a dominant trait. Roots of the MDR population suffered no reduction in seed yield after exposure to the disease whereas plants of other genetic background produced no seed, even if symptoms in earlier stages of growth were not severe. |