1987
DOI: 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1987.tb08750.x
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Relationship of Woody Parthenium Argentatum and Herbaceous P. Hispidum Var. Auriculatum (Asteraceae)

Abstract: Interspecific hybrids between woody Parthenium argentatum Gray (guayule), native to Mexico and Southwest Texas, and herbaceous perennial P. hispidum var. auriculatum (Britton) Rollins, native to the United States, were obtained successfully. The F1 hybrids were intermediate for most morphological characters with the exception of the short woody stem, yellow pollen color, and the trichome morphology. Chromosome counts revealed the presence of 2n = 36 A‐chromosomes in P. argentatum. The same number of A‐chromoso… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Dierig, 2005; Lloyd, 1911; Ray et al, 2005), leading to extensive plantings in California and Arizona. Subsequent breeding experiments (Hashemi et al, 1987, 1989), with the aim to produce more easily grown, and less environmentally sensitive agricultural crop capable of rubber production, between induced tetraploid P. argentatum and natural tetraploid P. integrifolium produced viable F 1 hybrids (but only when P. argentatum was the female parent). Hashemi et al (1987, 1989) also produced viable backcrosses, thus transferring the desirable characteristics of P. integrifolium to P. argentatum , also highlighting that vegetative propagation was a possibility (Hashemi et al, 1989: 82), although this was somewhat at odds with other reports of this being somewhat difficult, or impossible (Diboll & Cox, 2023: 138 vs. 405).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dierig, 2005; Lloyd, 1911; Ray et al, 2005), leading to extensive plantings in California and Arizona. Subsequent breeding experiments (Hashemi et al, 1987, 1989), with the aim to produce more easily grown, and less environmentally sensitive agricultural crop capable of rubber production, between induced tetraploid P. argentatum and natural tetraploid P. integrifolium produced viable F 1 hybrids (but only when P. argentatum was the female parent). Hashemi et al (1987, 1989) also produced viable backcrosses, thus transferring the desirable characteristics of P. integrifolium to P. argentatum , also highlighting that vegetative propagation was a possibility (Hashemi et al, 1989: 82), although this was somewhat at odds with other reports of this being somewhat difficult, or impossible (Diboll & Cox, 2023: 138 vs. 405).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%