2022 Little Easy Bean Network - We Are Beans Without Borders

Ridgerunner

Garden Master
Joined
Mar 20, 2009
Messages
8,229
Reaction score
10,062
Points
397
Location
Southeast Louisiana Zone 9A
Oh! I thought they produce normal beans without reverses. Someone back in one of the old threads did an experiment. Can't remember who at the moment.
I don't know if you are talking about me. One of the few Will Bonsall crosses I got from Russ that actually stabilized was a bean I called "Jas". I'd typically grow five or so plants each year and would get a total of maybe 3 seeds that were reverses. That was one reverse seed in a pod, the others in the pod looked regular. I don't recall planting a reverse and getting it to maturity. I tried one year and had to replant practically all the beans due to a late cold snap so almost nothing germinated.

One interesting thing about that bean. The pods were typically green with purple stripes. But some pods would be reverses, purple with green stripes. The beans in those reverse pods were not reverses, just regular beans.

It is post #254 in the 2020 network thread. I'll try to copy it below

Jas – Parent bean also Norridgewock from packet WB #39. Jas is a climbing bean, a half-runner around 7 feet tall. The flowers are a beautiful lavender. The 4” to 6” pods are striped. 60 beans weight 46 grams. A decent size. On five plants I grew 365 grams of dried beans. Also a dried bean, not a snap. Something interesting about Jas is that every time I’ve grown it I’ve had a very few reverses. Not many, this year it was only three individual beans. The pods also can grow reverse. The pods are typically green with purple stripes but a few pods are purple with green stripes.


Jas Seeds.jpg

Jas Beans with two reverses


Jas Flower.jpg

Jas Flower

Solid.jpg

Jas pods, regular and reverse
 

Blue-Jay

Garden Master
Joined
Jan 12, 2013
Messages
3,313
Reaction score
10,319
Points
333
Location
Woodstock, Illinois Zone 5
For those who have grown Cappuccino Nano - do any of these look characteristic?
I checked the original photo I took when I acquired the bean and the sample I have in the freezer and it looks like the third one from the left is the correct match. Still a very unsettled bean.
 

meadow

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Jan 2, 2022
Messages
1,072
Reaction score
3,373
Points
175
Location
Western Washington, USA
I don't know if you are talking about me. One of the few Will Bonsall crosses I got from Russ that actually stabilized was a bean I called "Jas". I'd typically grow five or so plants each year and would get a total of maybe 3 seeds that were reverses. That was one reverse seed in a pod, the others in the pod looked regular. I don't recall planting a reverse and getting it to maturity. I tried one year and had to replant practically all the beans due to a late cold snap so almost nothing germinated.
It probably was you! I just did a search and see when you had a Jas with 3 reverse seeds (maybe in 2017?) and you said that you planned to grow them out to see what they would produce. You also spoke about it in Post #733 of the 2018 thread which is followed by a post from aftermidnight talking about a peculiar 'reversal' and the results she had in growing it out.

It was interesting to see the various discussions about reversals over the years. So much good info in these Little Easy Bean Network threads!
 

meadow

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Jan 2, 2022
Messages
1,072
Reaction score
3,373
Points
175
Location
Western Washington, USA
Okay, so it sounds like reversals can be any number within a pod, anywhere from a singleton to a full pod.

What about crosses? I experienced some crosses this year on two varieties and those plants did not produce any 'true-to-type' seed, only the cross pattern.*

Is that typical for crosses, that the entire plant will produce the new seed coat pattern?

*eta: I harvested pods by the plant so that I'd know what each plant was producing
 

Eleanor

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Dec 16, 2016
Messages
105
Reaction score
304
Points
157
Location
Southeast Michigan
Okay, so it sounds like reversals can be any number within a pod, anywhere from a singleton to a full pod.

What about crosses? I experienced some crosses this year on two varieties and those plants did not produce any 'true-to-type' seed, only the cross pattern.*

Is that typical for crosses, that the entire plant will produce the new seed coat pattern?

*eta: I harvested pods by the plant so that I'd know what each plant was producing

Bean coat appearance is governed by the "mother plant" which means if you harvested non-true-to-type seeds from an entire plant you planted a seed that was the result of a cross in its parental generation.
 

meadow

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Jan 2, 2022
Messages
1,072
Reaction score
3,373
Points
175
Location
Western Washington, USA
Bean coat appearance is governed by the "mother plant" which means if you harvested non-true-to-type seeds from an entire plant you planted a seed that was the result of a cross in its parental generation.
Do I understand correctly...

This property also applies to the crop produced by the F1 plant by virtue of it now being the "mother plant"? So there is never a generation that will produce a plant with varied seed color?
 

Triffid

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Jun 22, 2021
Messages
140
Reaction score
636
Points
135
Location
Southern England 50.8°N
@meadow Never, as I understand it. Unless we're talking about that seed-coat colour reversal.
All of the seed-coats/testas of a particular plant are genetically identical. They are maternal tissue, as Eleanor mentioned.
You may see variations within a generation, but not in the seeds of an individual plant, no matter how diverse that generation may be.
 

reedy

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Oct 3, 2015
Messages
113
Reaction score
322
Points
172
Location
SE Indiana on a narrow ridge above the Ohio River
That is how I understand it as well. Two different F1 seeds from the same plant might be different but all of the resulting seeds from any single seed will be the same. Although over the course of many years I have seen two or three examples that make me wonder. They might have been the result of transposons, genes that although they are the same can, for reasons I don't understand, express in different way.

In corn the outer seed coat called the pericarp is maternal and theoretically is the same on all kernels from a single mother plant but occasionally are not. There is a pattern called chin mark where little streaks show up on the pericarp, some people call it starburst. If one seed on the ear has the genes for it, they all do but sometimes you can see it some kernels and others not. I had an ear this year where 2/3 of the seeds had the chin mark and 1/3 did not but they were not random. All of the 1/3 without were together in one spot on the ear.
 
Top