A few notes I keep for myself, relevant to both intra- and interspecific hybridization, though typically based on intraspecific crosses unless otherwise indicated:
Pepper orientation: Pendant- Dominant Upright- Recessive
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size is variable
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Yellow is fully recessive to red
Gold color is recessive to red
orange is recessive to orange-yellow
two independent, fully-recessive genes are necessary to achieve a green when ripe coloration in peppers. One is the cl gene, which retains chlorophyll ("prevents the complete degradation of chlorophyll") and the other is the y gene (y+="red pigment lycopene", y=yellow or orange).
Here's the down and dirty of the 4 combinations of these genes and their phenotypes (what you see):
Red mature fruit: y+/y+, cl+/cl+
Yellow mature fruit: y/y, cl+/cl+
Brown mature fruit: y+/y+, cl/cl
Green mature fruit: y/y, cl/cl
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Marbled variegation is recessive
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'Umbrella' plant form relies on three recessive genes
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Capsaicin content - additive, dominance and dominance x dominance components found to be significant; however the magnitude of additive component was higher
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In simplest terms earlyness is dominant over lateness (trait is a composite of dominant, codominant, and additive variables)
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Anthocyanin in plants, flowers, and fruits incompletely dominant. (A. in the style or filament can operate off separate genes- D/R character of both traits unknown). There is an 'intensifier' gene, D/R character unknown
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C. pubescens corolla anthocyanin produced by a single dominant gene
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Tiny warty bumps on stems, leaves, and cotyledon can be genetic
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Easy pod/calyx separation gene is incompletely dominant.
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pointed fruit apex not fully dominant to blunt
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Pointed apex dominant over indented apex (single gene)
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Non-indented calyx attachment dominant over indented calyx attachment (single gene)
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Yellow corolla spots of C baccatum var. pendulum and C. praetermissum act as single gene dominant in crosses with other species.
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The mode of seed color inheritance in Capsicum was studied via an interspecific hybridization between C. pubescens Ruiz and Pav. (black seed color) and C. eximium Hunz. (yellow seed color). Black seed color was dominant over yellow seed color. The F2 segregation pattern showed continuous variation. The generation means analysis indicated the presence of a significant effect of additive [d], dominance [h], and additive x additive [ i ] interaction for seed color inheritance. The estimate for a minimum number of effective factors (genes) involved in seed color inheritance was approximately 3.
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a single dominant gene, C, is required for pungent genotypes to produce capsaicinoids.
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Crosses between the wild taxa C. eximium and C. cardenasii and the domesticate C. pubescens most often show hybrid pollen viability greater than 55%
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The wild form of Capsicum baccatum exhibits a high crossability index with domesticated C. baccatum var. pendulum with the progeny typically exhibiting pollen viability in excess of 55 percent
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In addition to the attached matrix, I've been told in private communication that pubescens and cardenasii will cross.
C. frutescens and praetermissum will also cross but the F1 plants will
usually have male sterility.
Breeding peppers can be great fun