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  #1  
Old 07-03-2008, 09:20 PM
Lisa Lisa is offline
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I, personally, would love to be able to find out the "for sure" parentage on a couple of my babies. Would be worth it just to know. Guess I will just have to be patient and wait.
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  #2  
Old 07-03-2008, 08:22 PM
(..._...) (..._...) is offline
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awww so I won't be able to find out who my baby's daddy is?

--dna testing would be handy... but I certainly would not want to pay much to find out the parentage of one of my plants. as mentioned earlier, it would be super expensive
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  #3  
Old 07-05-2008, 04:12 PM
maitaman maitaman is offline
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The DNA testing is to determine species relationships and would be as much as useless in determining hybrid lines. even with only two species crosses, there is not going to be more than a half-marker determination. We have a long way to go before we can even determine which plant of a given species is involved, much less which in a series.
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  #4  
Old 08-26-2008, 08:32 PM
Andrew Andrew is offline
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Vulpes Velox,
A couple of things that need to be clarified. Sequence analysis is used to assess the evolutionary relationship between taxa (species, genera, etc.). It involves comparing how much a homologous DNA sequence has changed between two taxa so you can assess how different the two taxa are. This can certainly be extended to the point where you can group different plants into the same species based on the similarity in DNA sequences. The problem with applying this to hybrids is that hybrids are an amalgam of chromosomes from different species, so comparing one sequence on one chromosome set will only tell you about the presence of two species in the hybrids (or one species if mitochondrial or plastid DNA is examined). To determine the species make up of a hybrids you'd need to sample identifiable sequences from all chromosomes and work out the percentage of species in the hybrid. However, this would really only tell you that a hybrid is 50% species A: 25% species B: 25% species C. You still would not know if the hybrid was Ax(BxC) or (AxB)x(AxC) which would be considered two different hybrids. Even if this percentage information was useful, you would still need to define the appropriate chromosomal gene sequences to examine. Most of the orchid sequence analysis being carried out by taxonomists uses very highly conserved DNA such as NOR's. As these regions are so highly conserved, you can often piggy back off the work that others have done in designing primers against these regions. Trying to look at other regions on all of the chromosomes that are specific to the species requires a better knowledge of the sequences of the taxa being examined. Realistically, orchids are of limited scientific importance and of very little genetic importance so there is little incentive in sequencing the genomes of large numbers of orchid species. The bulk of the plant genomes in the various databases belong to agriculturally important plants or established genetic models.
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  #5  
Old 08-27-2008, 06:17 AM
Vulpes Velox Vulpes Velox is offline
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your probably right, since i havent really looked that much into plant DNA ... the databases consist ofcourse of "important" plants such as agriculture as you mention. but you can also find many others. i jsut did a quick search on Phalaenopsis gigantea in NCBI for example (posting the sequence would take alot of room )

as i said your probably right about hybrids and such, but im not really sure i understand why it in theory should be a problem?

"hybrid is 50% species A: 25% species B: 25% species C"
if your two hybrids have the exact same DNA, wouldnt that make them the exact same kind of plant? and if they dont have the same DNA, why isnt it possible to tell them apart?
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Old 08-27-2008, 10:40 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vulpes Velox View Post
"hybrid is 50% species A: 25% species B: 25% species C"
if your two hybrids have the exact same DNA, wouldnt that make them the exact same kind of plant? and if they dont have the same DNA, why isnt it possible to tell them apart?
They can have the same DNA but the registered names are different.
eg Dendrobium (speciosum x tetragonum) x (kingianum x tetragonum)= Jannine Banks
Dendrobium (speciosum x kingianum ) x tetragonum= Ku-Ring-Gai

Most people with a NOID are more interested in a name rather than a species background. If you simply want to know what species are in the background, most experienced breeders can take a good guess.
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  #7  
Old 08-27-2008, 08:34 AM
Vulpes Velox Vulpes Velox is offline
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now genetics is certainly not my strong area, so if someone who is very much into that says something else, then im willing to believe it... however im pretty sure identifying a species isnt that difficult.. i worked with sequences on mykorrhiza a year back, to compare different forest areas in sweden. the main point wasnt as much to identify them as to just tell them apart.. but, the mykorrhiza species that is known (alot arent) could be identified... again plants and genetics arent my strong side, so i could be totally wrong.. and as some have said hybrids make it more difficult maybe? i dont know, i would jsut be suprised if you couldnt easily identify a plant species, especially since they are most likely much more well documented than mykorrhiza ...
but seems like im a bit outnumbered so again it might just be me that is wrong
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  #8  
Old 08-27-2008, 09:25 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vulpes Velox View Post
now genetics is certainly not my strong area, so if someone who is very much into that says something else, then im willing to believe it... however im pretty sure identifying a species isnt that difficult.. i worked with sequences on mykorrhiza a year back, to compare different forest areas in sweden. the main point wasnt as much to identify them as to just tell them apart.. but, the mykorrhiza species that is known (alot arent) could be identified... again plants and genetics arent my strong side, so i could be totally wrong.. and as some have said hybrids make it more difficult maybe? i dont know, i would jsut be suprised if you couldnt easily identify a plant species, especially since they are most likely much more well documented than mykorrhiza ...
but seems like im a bit outnumbered so again it might just be me that is wrong
Well, you are for the most part correct then
The main use for the 'DNA analysis' in orchids is to determine relationships. But, in your case, the sequences were used to demonstrate differences between taxa, not to identify a specific taxon with accessions in a database.

-Pat
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  #9  
Old 08-27-2008, 05:41 PM
Vulpes Velox Vulpes Velox is offline
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well that was just because it wasnt really relevant to us to know what species it was (dont worry wont bore you with to much details about the research ). we did identify some of the species this way however.
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