Brassicoraphanus
Raphanobrassica | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
(unranked): | Angiosperms |
(unranked): | Eudicots |
(unranked): | Rosids |
Order: | Brassicales |
Family: | Brassicaceae |
Genus: | Brassicoraphanus Sageret |
Synonyms | |
Raphanobrassica |
Brassicoraphanus is any intergeneric hybrid between the genera Brassica (cabbages, etc.) and Raphanus (radish). The name comes from the combination of the genus names. Both diploid hybrids and allopolyploid hybrids are known and share this name.
Early experimental crosses between species of these two genera had been sterile or nearly sterile, but large-scale experiments by Soviet agronomist Georgi Dmitrievich Karpechenko using Raphanus sativus and Brassica oleracea were remarkable because some of the plants produced hundreds of seeds. The second generation were allopolyploids, the result of gametes with doubled chromosome numbers.[1][2][3] As Karpechenko realized, this process had created a new species, and it could justifiably be called a new genus, and proposed the name Raphanobrassica for them, but the earlier name Brassicoraphanus has priority. Plants of this parentage are now known as radicole.[4]
Two other fertile forms of Brassicoraphanus are known by the following informal names:
- The Raparadish group are allopolyploid hybrids between Raphanus sativus and Brassica rapa, used as fodder crops
- Raphanofortii is the allopolyploid hybrid between Brassica tournefortii and Raphanus caudatus[5]
Currently, it is thought that a great part of the flowering plants have some hybridization and polyploidization among their ancestors.[6]
References
- ↑ Karpechenko, G.D. 1927, Polyploid hybrids of Raphanus sativus X Brassica oleracea L. Bulletin of Applied Botany 17: 305-408.
- ↑ Karpechenko, G.D. 1928/1989. Polyploid hybrids of Raphanus sativus L. X Brassica oleracea L. In Classic papers in horticultural science. Edited by J. Janick. The Blackburn Press pp. 442–525.
- ↑ Karpechenko, G.D. 1918. Polyploid hybrids of Raphanus sativus L. X Brassica oleracea L. Zeitschrift für induktive Abstammungs- und Vererbungslehre 48 :1–85.
- ↑ L.W. Shemilt, Chemistry and world food supplies: the new frontiers, p 573
- ↑ Choudhary, B.R., Joshi, P., and Singh, K. 2000. Synthesis, morphology and cytogenetics of Raphanofortii (TTRR, 2n = 38): a new amphidiploid of hybrid Brassica tournefortii (TT, 2n = 20) × Raphanus caudatus (RR, 2n=18). TAG Theoretical and Applied Genetics 101(5): 990-999. 10.1007/s001220051572.
- ↑ Otto, S.P., and Whitton, J. 2000. Polyploidy: incidence and evolution. Annual Review of Genetics 34: 401–437.
Bibliography
- Terasawa, Y. 1933. Crossing between Brassico-raphanus and B. chinensis and Raphanus sativus. Japanese Journal of Genetics 8(4): 229–230.
- Lee, S. S., Lee, S. A., Yang, J. & Kim, J. Developing stable progenies of xBrassicoraphanus, an intergeneric allopolyploid between Brassica rapa and Raphanus sativus, through induced mutation using microspore culture. TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik 122, 885-891, doi:10.1007/s00122-010-1494-3 (2011).