01 February 2010

Where double flowers come from

Every wondered how plant breeders get from single flowers like this:


To big doubles full of petals like this?

(photo from jungle seeds)
Well, it starts with flowers like this:

Look closely (click on the image to expand it) in the center of each flower, and you can see little tiny specks of extra petals -- they're actually called "petaloids"
Here is what they look like carefully pulled out of each flower: (I highly recommend clicking on the photo to see them much larger)

At far right is a normal stamen -- the male part of the flower that produces pollen. The others are in various stages of conversion into petals. Keep going with this, and you get the full, frilly, double flowers you see in the second pictures. It only takes a very small change in the expression of a single gene to switch an anther to a petal -- so double versions of flowers pop up randomly all the time in nature due to random mutations, or in the genetic confusion of hybrids between species (which is what lead to the petaloids in these pictures). In the wild, of course, double flowers die out because they are usually virtually sterile -- and even when they aren't how is a bee supposed to get in there and pollinate them? But in the garden, we treasure them and keep them alive -- so much so that many people don't even realize that the classic rose:


Is a double version of a very simple flower with only five petals like this:
 

3 comments:

Matt DiLeo said...

Do you know if different alleles produce different levels of petal duplication? Don't most roses have a somewhat intermediate phenotype and still have stamens?

Joseph said...

Mat, yes, there are a huge range of different doubling phenotypes, including most modern roses which do have some fertile stamens. Almost certainly all doubling is caused by some changes to the ABC genes, though the actual genetics haven't been worked out for almost anything except arabidopsis. Most likely, roses and these petunias are caused be a change in expression pattern, not a loss of function.

Dirty Girl Gardening said...

Great post... I have some double petaled daffodils growing wild on my farm. They put the single petaled daff's to shame.