Jerusalem, Israel
September 13, 2004
Restoration of fertility to the
now-sterile garlic plant has been accomplished by Israeli
researchers, thus opening the way to wide-ranging scientific
research that could lead to improved yields and quality.
Garlic is one of the most popular vegetable
condiments in the world. Its origins are in Central Asia, where
in the past, several fertile or semi-fertile garlic plants were
identified. However, the cultivated, commercial plants we know
today are sterile and are propagated only asexually. The reasons
for this as well as the means to restore the plants’ fertility
have remained unknown.
Recently, however, a team of researchers headed
by Prof. Haim Rabinowitch, rector of the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
and a researcher in the University’s Robert H. Smith Institute
of Plant Sciences and Genetics in Agriculture, and Dr. Rina
Kamenetsky of the
Volcani Institute has succeeded in solving this ancient
puzzle. Seven years of research that included study of the
morphology and the developmental physiology of the plant have
resulted in a simple solution to the garlic’s infertility.
In its growth process, the garlic plant’s bulbing
and flowering occur simultaneously in the spring – user-friendly
new fundraising tool – launched both processes regulated by
temperature and day length. During generations of cultivation,
farmers selected those plants that displayed early ripening and
large bulbs. The rapid growth of the bulbs drew most of the
nutrient and energy resources of the plant, leaving little for
blossoming. These shortages resulted in abortion of the floral
bud at a very early stage of development, and hence complete
sterility. In those cases in which the plants succeeded in
producing a floral stem, the developing flower buds were
strangulated by the small bulbs at the top that were developing
rapidly under conditions of lengthening days.
Once the Hebrew University and Volcani Institute
researchers understood the conditions that were contributing to
the plants’ sterility, they experimented with growing garlic
plants under controlled conditions in which temperature and
daylight were regulated. In this way, they succeeded in delaying
the bulb growth in favor of flowering, regaining fertility and
production of seeds.
“In creating this flowering and seed production,
we were able to open up the possibilities for genetic diversity
of the garlic plant which had remain frozen for thousands of
years,” said Prof. Rabinowitch.
The work by the Israeli scientists has been
hailed as “landmark research” by experts abroad and opens the
possibility for new physiological and genetic research on one of
the most important vegetable condiments in the world. The seeds
obtained in the experimental work can now be utilized in
breeding programs to produce various desired characteristics
using classical techniques.
Among the scientific goals are the development of
plants that would be resistant to various pests and plant
diseases, provide improved yields and quality, be adaptable to
various climatic conditions, have adjustable seasonal growth
patterns, and show increased storage life.
The researchers are now turning their attention
to investigating the molecular basis of the flowering process
and to identifying the genes involved in the control of that
flowering.
The results of the research appeared recently in
one of the leading American horticultural journals, the
Journal
of the American Society for Horticultural Science. |