2007 North Star Lily Society Education Seminar

Saint Bonifacius, MN(Zone 4a)

The North Star Lily Society does it again! This was truly a most excellent education seminar, not just a pretty picture program. Unlike what the original thrust of the program was going to be (tissue culture), it was all about lots more things. I picked up a lot of good tidbits of information, that I am sure will be interesting to some of you (but perhaps not others). But I guarantee there is something for all. And I was able to talk with the speaker for a while myself to get my other questions answered too.

The speaker was Dr. Neil Anderson, who heads flower breeding for several genera at the University of Minnesota: Lilium, Gaura, Oenothera, Oxalis, Gladiolus, among others. He even has some 1ft Epilobium angustifolium from Alaska that he is working with. (Our native E. angustifolium grows 5-6ft.)

The short term goal of his present work with Lilium is to produce a uniform seed strain of continuously blooming lilies that will easily bloom in one season from seed. He is using Lilium formosanum (Formosa Lily) and Lilium longiflorum (Easter Lily) The botanical nomenclature used for the progeny of these interspecific crosses is Lilium x formolongi. L. x formolongi can be a simple F1 cross of the 2 species, F2, F3, etc. crosses, backcrosses or any combination of L. formosanum and L. longiflorum.

Any L. x formolongi is self-infertile, and incompatible with other L. x formolongi. However, using intervention techniques, for instance embryo rescue, progeny may be produced.

Any L. x formolongi is compatible with both L. formosanum and L. longiflorum.

L. formosanum IS SELF-FERTILE. Very unusual in the Lilium genus. However, L. formosanum does have a remnant of self-incompatibility in its gene pool.

As is with most lily crosses, switching which is the pod parent and which is the pollen parent will produce different progeny. Also as with most lily crosses, seed coat characteristics and usually cytoplasmic characteristics are most always gained from the pod parent. No other set of genes have been identified as pollen or pod parent sensitive with L. x formolongi.

L. x formolongi, of course then, is not a uniform group. Nearly every variation in the parents is produced in differing degrees in L. x formolongi. A very important new characteristic is occurring in large numbers in L. x formolongi: the ability to produce new flowering stems without vernalization (a cooling period for the bulb). Thus, many stems may be produced at varying times throughout the season, producing continuous flowering.

There are two alleles responsible for this phenomenon, dubbed VER1 and VER2. A dominant allele of either one or both will do the job. VER1 has more penetrance than VER2. In other words, VER1 is stronger than VER2.

A long term goal, and who knows if it will be possible, is to introduce VER1 and/or VER2 into asiatic genetics.

Many have witnessed that Easter lilies, after being planted out the same season as it has already flowered (at Easter), go on to bloom again on new stems the same season. This is not VER1 or VER2 in action. This is called summer sprouting. L. longiflorum (the Easter lily) can be vernalized at quite high temperatures. Although the industry uses around 50 F, summer sprouting can occur with longiflorum cultivar Nellie White when bulbs are exposed to temps lower than 70 F. Amazing.

Practically all commercial Easter lilies are L. longiflorum ‘Nellie White’. All ARE infected with LSV (Lily Symptomless Virus). “That’s what keeps them so short.” says Neil Anderson. (Although I seem to remember from my schooling that there was a little more to it than that.) L. formosanum, L. longiflorum and L. x formolongi are all susceptible to LSV.

Saint Bonifacius, MN(Zone 4a)

I knew I'd forget something:

Since Lilium x formolongi plants are continuously growing, the bulb stays very small. With several stalks in a plant, the bulb looked to be only about the size of a quarter in a photo he showed.

And we each got a packet of L. x formolongi seed to play with too.

Fox River Valley Are, WI(Zone 5a)

I was wondering what the bulb would look like without an opportunity to recharge. When I grew dinner plate dahlias last year the plants and flowers got enormous. I thought the tubers would be large also, but it was not so. The same concept must apply L. x formolongi, most of the energy going into profuse flower production.
My wish is to see a cobalt blue lily :*)
Rick what did you think of the TC/ER info? Was there any hand outs with good pointers?

Andrew

Saint Bonifacius, MN(Zone 4a)

There was really no info on tissue culture or embryo rescue. Just a little history about it. Seems the first lily tissue culture was done in 1957, somewhere not in the U.S. And that rescued embryos are often sliced very thinly to make many tissue cultures from many cells, rather than just the one embryo. Still have to post some interesting stuff about Gladiolus and Amaryllis in those forums, too.

Saint Bonifacius, MN(Zone 4a)

As Dr. Anderson had asked me to email him about something, I took the oppotunity to ask him a follow up question I had previously forgotten. He got back to me with lightning speed.

Q: Since all Nellie White Easter lilies are infected with Lily Symptomless Virus, should we be concerned about planting it in our gardens with other lilies?

A: Yes. Although he has not tested LSV on most other lilies and doesn't know of any other studies, the possibility is definitely there for infection and loss of vigor or decline of other lilies. The short list of knowns is:
Lilium longiflorum - susceptible
Lilium formosanum - susceptible
Lilium x formolongi - susceptible
Lilium regale - very resistant

This message was edited Mar 13, 2007 4:15 PM

Lincoln, NE(Zone 5b)

Hmm, very interesting. Thanks so much for sharing this info.

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