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Holleran says analysis of the genetic inheritance can
help researchers find molecular markers that would help identify dwarfing
plantsas well as positive and negative traits within themearly
in their development. "This will allow us to eliminate varieties
susceptible to diseases much sooner," he says.
Fazio says the ability to read genetic markers for characteristics
of dwarfing and disease resistance can cut evaluation time in halffrom
30 years to 15. "And there is always a strong demand among U.S.
apple growers and nurseries for new apple rootstocks that are highly
productive and resistant to diseases and pests," he says.
Liking Apple-Derived Dollars
Apples are a $1.5 billion-a-year industry. They are grown commercially
in 35 states and make up about 17 percent of the noncitrus fruit market
in the United States. Each year, nurseries produce 10 to 15 million
apple rootstocks, worth about $6 million. Apple tree nurseries gross
about $30 million annually.
Discovery of the genetic inheritance of dwarfing is one of many achievements
by the Geneva unit. A major accomplishment involves advances against
fire blight. This disease, caused by the bacterium Erwinia amylovora,
causes several million dollars in annual losses. Fazio says there have
been significant outbreaks in New York and Michigan and a smaller outbreak
in Washington. It's also a concern in Europe and New Zealand.
The research has led to fire blight-resistant dwarf and semidwarf lines
that are being commercialized. Four clones have been released since
1994, including Geneva 202, which produces a tree about 40 percent the
size of normal apple trees and is resistant to woolly apple aphids.
This rootstock will be available to U.S. growers in 2005.
"In 2004, we expect to release two more rootstocks," says
Fazio. Both Geneva 3041 and Geneva 5935 are fire blight-resistant and
very productive. Their trees are 30 percent (for 3041) and 50 percent
(for 5935) the size of normal-sized trees.
Also, in research done in collaboration with plant pathologist Mark
Mazzola at the ARS Tree Fruit Research Laboratory in Wenatchee, Washington,
Fazio is investigating the resistance, or tolerance, of Geneva apple
rootstocks to apple replant disease at several grower sites in Washington
State.
The Geneva rootstocks program was started in 1968 by Cornell University
and reorganized in 1997 through a cooperative agreement between ARS
researchers and Cornell's Terence L. Robinson, pomologist, and Herbert
S. Aldwinckle, plant pathologist. The unit is on what is now a Cornell
campus that's the home of the New York State Agricultural Experimentation
Station. "This is the only ARS program working on the genetics
of apples," says Fazio, "and there are no other apple rootstock
breeding programs in the United States."
Besides obvious gains the apple rootstock research program presents
growers and nurseries, Fazio says there are indirect benefits that include
reduced use of chemicals, such as methyl bromide and streptomycin, and
increased profitability.By Luis
Pons, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
This research is part of Plant, Microbial, and Insect Genetic Research,
Genomics, and Genetic Improvement, an ARS National Program (#301) described
on the World Wide Web at www.nps.ars.usda.gov.
Gennaro Fazio is in
the USDA-ARS Plant Genetic Resources
Unit, Cornell University, Collier Dr., Geneva, NY 14456; phone (315)
787-2480, fax (315) 787-2216.
"Short Apple Trees, Faster and Healthier" was published
in the November
2003 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
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