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#1
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Blight resitant tomatoes
Question for 'you guys':
Back in the old days I used to graft a Moneymaker to a desease resistant root stock....with the current selection of desease resistant varieties there of course is little need for that today....but.... Any thoughts re doing the same thing today but grafting to a blight resistant tomato?...H |
#2
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Blight resitant tomatoes
"middleton.walker" wrote in message ... Question for 'you guys': Back in the old days I used to graft a Moneymaker to a desease resistant root stock....with the current selection of desease resistant varieties there of course is little need for that today....but.... Any thoughts re doing the same thing today but grafting to a blight resistant tomato?...H Which part of the blight resistant tomato? Resistance to blight is genetic and affects the entire plant. Blight attacks the leave of plants. However when grafting plants, no genes are transferred. Basically all thats being done when grafting is joining up two bundles of pipes or veins inside the stem. Veins from the roots (or from the main stem in addition) with one set of genes, to veins leading to the leaves with possibly an entirely different set of genes. So if you grafted ordinary tomatos onto the rootstock of blight resistant tomatoes you could still get blight. michael adams .... |
#3
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Blight resitant tomatoes
"carried through" substituted for "affects"
"middleton.walker" wrote in message ... Question for 'you guys': Back in the old days I used to graft a Moneymaker to a desease resistant root stock....with the current selection of desease resistant varieties there of course is little need for that today....but.... Any thoughts re doing the same thing today but grafting to a blight resistant tomato?...H Which part of the blight resistant tomato? Resistance to blight is genetic and is carried through the entire plant. Blight attacks the leave of plants. However when grafting plants, no genes are transferred. Basically all thats being done when grafting is joining up two bundles of pipes or veins inside the stem. Veins from the roots (or from the main stem in addition) with one set of genes, to veins leading to the leaves with possibly an entirely different set of genes. So if you grafted ordinary tomatos onto the rootstock of blight resistant tomatoes you could still get blight. michael adams .... |
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