<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//Atypon//DTD Atypon Systems Archival NLM DTD Suite v2.2.0 20090301//EN" "nlm-dtd2.2/archivearticle.dtd">
<article xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" article-type="research-article" dtd-version="2.2" xml:lang="EN">
	<front>
		<journal-meta>
			<journal-id journal-id-type="publisher-id">pnut</journal-id>
			<journal-id journal-id-type="allenpress-id">pnut</journal-id>
			<journal-title>Peanut Science</journal-title>
			<issn pub-type="ppub">0095-3679</issn>
			<issn pub-type="active">0095-3679</issn>
			<publisher>
				<publisher-name>American Peanut Research and Education Society</publisher-name>
			</publisher>
		</journal-meta>
		<article-meta>
			<article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.3146/i0095-3679-6-2-12</article-id>
			<article-categories>
				<subj-group subj-group-type="heading">
					<subject>Articles</subject>
				</subj-group>
			</article-categories>
			<title-group>
				<article-title>Cytology of Interspecific Hybrids in Section <italic>Arachis</italic> of Peanuts<xref ref-type="fn" rid="fn1"><sup>1</sup></xref></article-title>
			</title-group>
			<contrib-group>
				<contrib contrib-type="author" xlink:type="simple">
					<name name-style="western">
						<given-names>H. T.</given-names><x xml:space="preserve"> </x>
						<surname>Stalker</surname>
					</name><x xml:space="preserve"> and </x>
				</contrib>
				<contrib contrib-type="author" xlink:type="simple">
					<name name-style="western">
						<given-names>J. C.</given-names><x xml:space="preserve"> </x>
						<surname>Wynne</surname>
					</name>
					<xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff2"><sup>2</sup></xref>
				</contrib>
				
					<aff id="aff2">
					<label><sup>2</sup></label>Assistant Professor and Associate Professor, respectively, Department of Crop Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, N. C. 27650
				</aff>
			</contrib-group>
			<author-notes>
				<fn fn-type="fn" id="fn1">
					<p><sup>1</sup>Paper number 5908 of the Journal Series Number of the North Carolina Agricultural Research Service, Raleigh. The investigation was supported in part by ICRISAT and SEA-CR Grant no. 701-15-51.</p>
				</fn>
			</author-notes>
			<pub-date pub-type="ppub">
				<month>7</month>
				<year>1979</year>
			</pub-date>
			<volume>6</volume>
			<issue>2</issue>
			<fpage>110</fpage>
			<lpage>114</lpage>
			<history>
				<date date-type="accepted">
					<day>30</day>
					<month>7</month>
					<year>1979</year>
				</date>
			</history>
			<permissions>
				<copyright-statement>American Peanut Research and Education Society</copyright-statement>
				<copyright-year>1979</copyright-year>
				<copyright-holder>American Peanut Research and Education Society</copyright-holder>
			</permissions>
			<related-article related-article-type="pdf" xlink:href="i0095-3679-6-2-12.pdf" xlink:type="simple"></related-article>
			<abstract>
				<title>Abstract</title>
				<p>Interspecific hybrids between <italic>Avachis correntina</italic> (Burk.) Krap. <italic>et</italic> Greg. <italic>nom. nud.</italic> (coll. GKP 9530&ndash;31) and seven other diploid peanut species of section <italic>Arachis nom. nud.</italic> &lsqb;syn. Axonomorphae (7)&rsqb; were cytologically analyzed. Although hybrid plants were partially sterile, cytological barriers to gene exchange were nonexistent except for A. <italic>batizocoi</italic> Krap. <italic>et</italic> Greg, hybrids. <italic>Arachis batizocoi</italic> hybrids had between 0 and 4.67&percnt; pollen fertility, probably due to an average of 2.88 univalents per cell. Laggards and anaphase I bridges were observed in 85&percnt; of the hybrid cells. Because the cultigen, <italic>A. hypogaea</italic> L. (2n = 40), and the diploid wild species (2n = 20) are at different ploidy levels, hybridization results in sterile triploid plants. This is a major barrier to introgression from wild to cultivated varieties. In order to derive wild species of section <italic>Arachis</italic> at the same ploidy level as A. <italic>hypogaea</italic>, 572 three to six-day-old seedlings were colchicine-treated representing 34 interspecific <italic>Arachis</italic> section hybrid combinations. Eighty-one cytologically confirmed amphidiploids plus 49 probable ones based on plant morphology were isolated. After colchicine treatments, 26 autotetraploids were likewise produced from six species. The observations indicated that selection can occur at the diploid level in wild species for desired agronomic traits or for disease and insect resistances. Colchicine-treated selected hybrid seedlings would then serve as a pathway for overcoming the major sterility obstacle to introgressing germplasm into A. <italic>hypogaea.</italic></p>
			</abstract>
			<kwd-group>
				<title>Key Words</title>
				<kwd>Amphidiploids</kwd>
			</kwd-group>
			<counts>
				<page-count count="5"></page-count>
			</counts>
		</article-meta>
	</front>
</article>
