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| Authors: | D. Bassi, S. Bartolini, R. Viti |
| Keywords: | bud drop, chilling and heat requirements, cold tolerance, grafting, P. armeniaca L., self-compatibility |
Abstract:
Several biochemical and biological methods are available for assessment of environment adaptability in apricot and, also, molecular-based approaches recently proposed for peach could possibly be applied to apricot.
The tolerance to low temperatures is a complex process depending on a genetic control that interacts with physiological and environmental factors.
While cold-responsive, regulating genes with specific functions have been found in other species, insufficient knowledge is available in apricot.
Assessment of floral compatibility is a lengthy procedure and, although it could be assisted by reliable in vitro techniques, field validation is often hampered by yearly climatic fluctuation.
Recent findings on genes regulating self-(in)compatibility will allow the development of PCR primers for marker-assisted selection.
Several rootstocks with a satisfactory degree of adaptability to specific soils/ environments are available, even if graft compatibility could limit their commercial introduction.
Histological, biochemical and molecular tools are available for early in vitro screening of graft compatibility.
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