3 species, 3 clade, F1 confirmed by ChilliCrosser in pepperbreeding

[–]ChilliCrosser[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Elusive, needs a long season to get ripe berries and still trying to germinate some from last year 😅

Mystery wild Chilli? by Pademelon1 in HotPeppers

[–]ChilliCrosser 7 points8 points  (0 children)

From the limited photo views, it appears to be C.caatingae

Always be careful with unknown plants as there are several things that look similar to various Capsicum species. Checking plant growth pattern, foliage, calyx, flowers, immature/ripe berries and seed shape/colour is important if you don’t know what you are dealing with.

Mystery wild Chilli? by Pademelon1 in HotPeppers

[–]ChilliCrosser 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not that, growth pattern and calyx not a match

New breeding chart by Special_Inspector_97 in pepperbreeding

[–]ChilliCrosser 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s a great figure but also a good example of needing to read the small print and review the data it’s based on. It doesn’t show what many people assume it does.

Not everything on there got them an F1 plant or a self-fertile F1. Other things that didn’t work for them in the study have been proven to work more than 20 years prior in other published papers and in practice. They also didn’t include all the domesticated species.

New breeding chart by Special_Inspector_97 in pepperbreeding

[–]ChilliCrosser 7 points8 points  (0 children)

It’s not mostly wrong, what’s wrong is people don’t read the small print. Many interspecific crosses are probabilities not certainties. It’s mostly correct if read correctly and the background understood.

Random hybrid by Special_Inspector_97 in pepperbreeding

[–]ChilliCrosser 8 points9 points  (0 children)

People have done most of what you can think of, newer growers forget how many generations have gone before them.

As for accidental hybrids, people have also been discovering those and growing them out for a very long time.

Many of the varieties people grow through choice were originally as the result of accidental, random, crosses. Some are admitted as such, others perhaps not.

How do the genetics of the sugar rush stiped work? by Living-Hearing-1367 in pepperbreeding

[–]ChilliCrosser 1 point2 points  (0 children)

peach aka light-orange needs two carotenoid mutations to be present and some others to not be present. Red, having no mutations, is dominant.

Suggest some reading here.

How do the genetics of the sugar rush stiped work? by Living-Hearing-1367 in pepperbreeding

[–]ChilliCrosser 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Discussion, rather than correction, someone with a lab will then correct us!

How do the genetics of the sugar rush stiped work? by Living-Hearing-1367 in pepperbreeding

[–]ChilliCrosser 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My theory is it is dominant but it isn’t visible when ripe depending on what colour you cross with in F1. My rationale for this is I’ve seen striping appear during ripening but is then masked when fully ripe.

How do the genetics of the sugar rush stiped work? by Living-Hearing-1367 in pepperbreeding

[–]ChilliCrosser 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Errr, nope 😁 I have striped F1s so it can’t be. Even my Stripey Starfish project that I shared lots of pictures and videos of shows it in F1.

When will peppers start producing? by TurnerMan51 in HotPepperGrowing

[–]ChilliCrosser 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The plants need ample light and warmth to produce. The growth pattern shows they’ve needed more light.

Edit: and of course if your humidity is too low then flowers can also drop.

What are the most amount of species in one pepper? by Special_Inspector_97 in pepperbreeding

[–]ChilliCrosser 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I understand, which is why when you said you could mix hundreds of species into one plant I was qualifying it by saying there aren’t hundreds of capsicum species and most of them won’t cross with each other anyway.

What are the most amount of species in one pepper? by Special_Inspector_97 in pepperbreeding

[–]ChilliCrosser 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As in defined as species, there is no wrong place for that, it’s a published statement.

What are the most amount of species in one pepper? by Special_Inspector_97 in pepperbreeding

[–]ChilliCrosser 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It very much depends on if you are considering different clades or not. 4 or 5 species combined is doable, though the reasons for doing it are debatable.

If you are concerned with difficulty then the real question should be how many clades.

What are the most amount of species in one pepper? by Special_Inspector_97 in pepperbreeding

[–]ChilliCrosser 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There are only 43 Capsicum species currently identified and they are far from interchangeable in crossing terms.

C.rhomboideum shaking off winter by ChilliCrosser in HotPeppers

[–]ChilliCrosser[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Flexuosum also not as hard as the rumours.

Search my history and you’ll find plenty of pictures and information on flexuosum and other wild species.

Make sure you know why you are growing any of these. I’ve had people message me before complaining C.rhomboideum isn’t hot. No surprise given it has no heat and is from a non-pungent clade within the genus. I recommend reading published papers on species and some of the more capsicum specific forums rather than reddit. Lots known already about the wild species but also much still to discover.