Seed Saving: Sports and Crosses

There are two ways the genetics of the plants in your garden can change, with sports or crosses.

Sports

A sport is a chance genetic variation. Søren recently came across a sport in some seeds I sent him. Sports can be good or bad. Many very interesting plant varieties are the result of sports. Plants that result from a sport are still genetically stable, and preserving the new trait is as simple as saving seeds from it. It may take a few generations of selective seed saving before the sport itself becomes a stable trait.

Plants that are inbreeding or don’t develop true seeds which have resulted from pollination (like garlic), depend entirely on sports for genetic evolution. For this reason, many of these plants are more genetically prone to sports.

Crosses

Crosses can be accidental or intentional.

Crosses are when two genetically compatible plants of different varieties exchange pollen with one another, resulting in an F1 hybrid. F1 hybrids are distinct in the first generation, but genetically unstable in future generations. In this case the resulting plant has 50% of it’s genes from each parent plant. Accidental crosses are often obvious in the garden, especially when it involves 2 very distinct parent plants. When growing 2 similar varieties next to each other, a cross may not be immediately obvious and this is something to consider when selecting varieties to be grown in close proximity.

Gregor Mendel is credited for being the first to document what happens when plants cross, and the consequences of dominant and recessive traits. A while ago, I wrote a post about this.

In order to create a new, genetically stable, variety from an F1 hybrid you must go through a process called dehybridization. This is an obvious candidate topic for a future post.

3 Replies to “Seed Saving: Sports and Crosses”

  1. Hi Patrick,
    This is just to tell you that the link you sent for the Garden Blogger’s Carnival is in today’s post on the Balcony Garden.
    Sue

  2. Christina — I’m glad you like the seed saving posts, and thanks for your comment.

    Sue — Thanks for doing the Blogger’s Carnival, it was a good idea.

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