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Post by xdrix on Feb 2, 2020 5:11:07 GMT -5
Hello I have found 5 seed of peas different and i would like to identified them variety and make maybe a few croce later.
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Post by keen101 (Biolumo / Andrew B.) on Feb 2, 2020 17:59:26 GMT -5
Hi xdrix, Can you give us some more photos and context as to where you found these seeds? They really could be any variety. The pink one in the middle, and the redish-brown in the bottom left are not that common for pea seed coat colors. But even then it would be hard to identify based on seed. p.s., what part of the world are you hailing from?
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Post by xdrix on Feb 3, 2020 7:08:48 GMT -5
I found this seed under a tree who i put seed for bird.I come from france.I sow a few seed for observate her developpement and they are many gimlet.I will posted photo later.
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Post by flowerbug on Feb 3, 2020 9:28:34 GMT -5
it is fun to have some new pea babies! i hope they do well for you there in France.
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Post by blueadzuki on Feb 3, 2020 11:19:46 GMT -5
The red brown pea on the bottom left appears to have the marmorated seed coat trait (as well as the black hilum one) This is usually found among older types of soup peas (Carlin, Maple and Latvian come to mind) but is largely excluded from modern ones both because the seed coats are thicker and tougher and because colored seed coats like that are often associated with higher amounts of various substances that can make the peas taste bad.
The pea in the center looks like it has the orc (orange cotelyedon) gene (the pink is actually orange filtered through the white of the seed coat) If you are interested in growing soup peas (which all except the top right probably are) this can actually be a good gene to propagate, as the orange peas are high in beta carotene (much the same as red lentils).
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Post by xdrix on Feb 9, 2020 6:04:06 GMT -5
I have note that the orange peas are sensitive at dry growing in greenhouse. I would like to create a spring peas orange.I you show the croce kelvedon x peas with the gene orc A red peas x a yellow peas give a orange peas without the gene orc? I know that green x yellow= yellow If i found the time i maybe create the croce kelvedon (green wrinkle x yellow peas) = yellow kelvedon wrinkle? The gene wrinkle are dominant?
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Post by xdrix on Feb 24, 2020 15:56:41 GMT -5
Keen101 do you would like the photo for your database?
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Post by blueadzuki on Feb 24, 2020 20:44:25 GMT -5
wrinkle is recessive
orc is incompletely dominant so orangexyellow=light orange. And while I have not seen it personally I imagine orangexgreen=brown
I've never heard of a red pea (unless you mean with a red seed coat, which is it's own genetic mix)
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Post by flowerbug on Feb 25, 2020 5:47:16 GMT -5
... I would like to create a spring peas orange.I you show the croce ... i am assuming you are speaking of "cross" ? as in "crossbreed" or "cross breeding"...
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Post by xdrix on Feb 25, 2020 6:58:00 GMT -5
Yes this is a cross breeding! I would like adapted my peas at the climate of the region tall-east. A climate globally sweet but with extreme cold and hot possible.
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Post by xdrix on Mar 13, 2020 14:08:19 GMT -5
This is a flower of the red peas.
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Post by xdrix on Mar 29, 2020 8:52:33 GMT -5
My both peas kelvedon and yellow was germinate. When theirent flowering i will make my croce.
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Post by flowerbug on Mar 29, 2020 15:30:45 GMT -5
i hope they take!
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Post by keen101 (Biolumo / Andrew B.) on Mar 29, 2020 17:33:56 GMT -5
good luck on your peas this year!
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Post by xdrix on Mar 30, 2020 13:38:36 GMT -5
My red peas
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