Aussie Growers Thread

giglewigle

Well-Known Member
The trouble with mods getting involved is that they have a different culture. Good brutal put downs and turn of phrase is 3/4 of the fun of the battle. Its not like they stole ya beer and you have to punch them ( like ya going to walk away from that?).
So are swear words. I had a grog filled Friday arvo and off to an aussie day concert 2morrow ( Barnsy will be killer but im more lookin to my fav Aussie Rocker Richard Clapton.
Fk yea Kunts!!!
Is he Aussie I dident kno
 

Hazed and confused

Well-Known Member
A Bob C99?
No mate but I have seen Bob's work in previous posts and its frosty af. To be honest I'm relatively new to the scene, took a beating on my first round in 2014 and gave up till midway thru 2018. The one thing that confuses me is it's one of 2 clones from the same with dramatically different results. I have been seeing alot of talk about s1's and f2's and honestly have no idea so if anyone can point me in the direction of some genuine info regarding genetics etc it is much appreciated.
 

Lucky Luke

Well-Known Member
No mate but I have seen Bob's work in previous posts and its frosty af. To be honest I'm relatively new to the scene, took a beating on my first round in 2014 and gave up till midway thru 2018. The one thing that confuses me is it's one of 2 clones from the same with dramatically different results. I have been seeing alot of talk about s1's and f2's and honestly have no idea so if anyone can point me in the direction of some genuine info regarding genetics etc it is much appreciated.
Might be were you cut the clone from. For more on that and the breeding thing Ill let others answer
 

Mofo83

Well-Known Member
That Hermie ive been ripping the balls off of ,has a few hairs that are twice as thick as others on the plant and they are coming out of what looks to be a few balls I've missed .. so im super confused now . I'll get photos in the morning and show ya.. man they are starting to fill up with pistils at every bract .. I think I'm getting buds.. 'sniff" its an emotional time
 

OzCocoLoco

Well-Known Member
No mate but I have seen Bob's work in previous posts and its frosty af. To be honest I'm relatively new to the scene, took a beating on my first round in 2014 and gave up till midway thru 2018. The one thing that confuses me is it's one of 2 clones from the same with dramatically different results. I have been seeing alot of talk about s1's and f2's and honestly have no idea so if anyone can point me in the direction of some genuine info regarding genetics etc it is much appreciated.
A good place to start is a google search of Luther Burbank. I've got some good cannabis related stuff I'll dig up and post over the next day or so.
 

OzCocoLoco

Well-Known Member
No mate but I have seen Bob's work in previous posts and its frosty af. To be honest I'm relatively new to the scene, took a beating on my first round in 2014 and gave up till midway thru 2018. The one thing that confuses me is it's one of 2 clones from the same with dramatically different results. I have been seeing alot of talk about s1's and f2's and honestly have no idea so if anyone can point me in the direction of some genuine info regarding genetics etc it is much appreciated.
This was written by Vic High who was a pretty influential breeder back in the 90s


What really is an F1 cross?

Well defining the terms P1, F1, F2, homozygous, and heterozygous can be a simple task, however,
applying them to applied genetics can often create confusion. Depending on your point of reference, a
plant could be described as any of these terms. For our specific field of interest it's important to further
define these terms to reduce confusion and protect the consumers. First I'll provide the classic scientific
definition of these and other related terms and then I'll dive into each term into detail.

Heterzygous - a condition when two genes for a trait are not the same on each member of a pair of
homologous chromosomes; individuals heterozygous for a trait are indicated by an "Aa" or "aA" notation
and are not true breeding for that trait.(Clarke)

Homozygous - the condition existing when the genes for a trait are the same on both chromosomes of a
homologous pair; individuals homozygous for a trait are indicated by "AA" or "aa" and are true breeding
for that trait. (Clarke)

- Now the heterozygous and homozygous terms can be applied to one trait or a group of traits within an
individual or a group of individuals. Depending on your point of reference, an individual or group can be
considered both homozygous or heterozygous. For instance, say you have two individuals that are both
short (S) and have webbed leaves (W) and have the following genotypes.

#1 = SSWW
#2 = SSWw

They are both homozygous for the short trait but only individual #1 is homozygous for the webbed leaf
trait. Individual #2 is heterozygous for the webbed leaf trait and would be considered a heterozygous
individual. As a goup, they would be considered heterozygous in general by some and homozygous by
others. It would depend on your point of reference and the overall importance you place on the webbed
leaf trait. Most would consider it to be heterozygous.

For example, the blueberry cannabis strain is considered a true breeding homozygous seed line because
as a whole the many offspring have a similar look and produce a similar product. However there are
often subtle differences between the plants of characters such as stem colour and potency. When taking
a close look at blueberry, you will find heterozygous traits, but because of the whole overall look, we
still generally consider them homozygous for the purpose of breeding programs. Using dogs is another
way to explain this, take a dobie for example, you can tell the difference between dobies, but you can
tell a dobie from another breed. Ya follow?

Hybrid - An individual produced by crossing two parents of different genotypes. Clarke says
that a hybrid is a heterozygous individual resulting from crossing two seperate strains.

- For the purpose of seedbanks, a hybrid is in general, a cross between any two unrelated seedlines.
ANY HYBRID IS heterozygous and NOT TRUE BREEDING.

F1 hybrid - is the first generation of a cross between any two unrelated seedlines in the creation of a
hybrid. F1 hybrids can be uniform or variable depending on the P1 parent stock used.

F2 hybrid - is the offspring of a cross between two F1 plants (Clarke). What Clarke and other sources
don't make clear is do the two F1's need to be from the same parents? By convention they don't. As
well, german geneticists often describe a backcross of an F1 back to a P1 parent as a F2 cross.

- OK lets say we take blueberry and cross it with romulan (both relatively true breeding of their unique
traits) to create the F1 hybrid romberry. Now lets cross the F1 romberry with a NL/Haze F1 hybrid.
Some could say this is a F1 cross of romberry and NL/Haze. Others could argue that it is a F2 cross
of two F1 hybrids. Gets confusing doesn't it? Now lets cross this Romberry/NL/Haze(RNH) with a
Skunk#1/NL#5 F1 hybrid to create RNHSN. Now some would argue that RNHSN is an F1 hybrid
between RNH and SK/NL seedlines. Others would call it an F2.

- So what does this mean to the consumer? It means that a seed bank can call a cross whatever it wants
until the industry adopts some standards. This is what this article will attempt to initiate. Clarke eludes to
standardising these definitions but never really gets around to it. Fortunately other plant breeding
communities have (Colangelli, Grossnickle&Russell, Watts, &Wright) and adopting their standards
makes the most sense and offers the best protection to the seedbank consumer.

Watts defines an F1 as the heterozygous offspring between two homozygous but unrelated seedlines.
This makes sense and gives the F1 generation a unique combination of traits; uniform phenotype but not
true breeding. This is important in the plant breeding world. This means that when a customer buys F1
seeds that they should expect uniform results. It also means that the breeder's work is protected from
being duplicated by any other means than using the original P1 (true breeding parents). [There are
exceptions to this by using techniques such as repeated backcrosses (cubing the clone)]

F2 crosses are the offspring of crossing two F1 hybrids. This means that they will not be uniform nor
will they breed true. However, F3, F4, F5, etc will also share these characteristics, so to simplify
terminology for the seedbanks and seedbank merchants, they can all be classified as F2 seeds in general.

What does this mean for the preceeding example? Well, the blueberry, romulan, skunk#1, NL#5, and
haze were all P1 true breeding seedlines or strains (another term that needs clarification). Romberry,
NL/Haze, and SK/NL were all F1 hybrids. Both the Romberry/NL/Haze and the RNHSN would be F2s.
Within each group the consumer can know what to expect for the price they are paying.

Few cannabis seedbanks (if any) and their breeders are following these definitions and are subsequently
creating confusion within the cannabis seedbuying community. This is a change that needs to happen.
 

OzCocoLoco

Well-Known Member
Think Vic wrote this too


Creating True Breeding Strains



I've been hearing a fair bit of confusion from many on how to create a true breeding strain and so I'm writing this page to try and help shed some light on the subject. There are a few situations where a plant breeder would want to create a true breeding strain (IBL) and a few ways of accomplishing the task. But understanding the subtle differences of the various techniques is not so easy. This paper will attempt to give a basic understanding of what is actually happening with each technique and then apply what is learned to actual projetcs. As a friend worked overtime making sure I didn't forget, breeding is not a black and white subject and as a whole, it would be too complex to put on paper in an easily understood form. Therefore, I will create small fictional examples to reinforce various concepts and then we will take those examples and concepts and apply some reality to them. Try not to get hung up on the erroneous assuptions used here such as flavour being monogenic, the assumption is simply used to make it easier to learn a certain concept.


Just What Is It That We Are Doing?

Before we dive in, maybe we should take the time to understand what we are trying to accomplish when we set out to create a true breeding strain. There are hundreds of possible phenotypic traits that we could observe within a cannabis population. Are we trying to make all of them the same and remove ALL variation? Not likely, the genetic code is just too complex to try. Plus, since phenotype (what we see) is 1/2 genotype + 1/2 environment, everytime the population was grown under new conditions, new heterozygous traits would be observed. Basically, all we are trying to create is an overall uniformity while not worrying about the minor individual varioations. No different than a dog breed. You can look at a german shepard and recognise it as belonging to a discrete breed. But if you look closer at several german shepards all at the same time, you will find variations with each and every one of them. Some will be a little taller, some a little wider, some more agressive, some a little fatter, some darker, etc. But they would all fall within an acceptable range for the various traits. Generally speaking, this is what a plant breeder is trying to accomplish when creating a true breeding strain, or IBL.

However this isn't always the case. Sometimes a breeder will just concentrate on a specific trait, like say outdoor harvest date, or mite resistance. You could still have a population where some are 2' bushes and some 10' trees. In this case, you would say that the strain was true breeding for the particular trait, but you wouldn't consider it a true breeding strain per se. In genetics, wording plays a big part in meaning and understanding. As does reference point as my F1 vs F2 comparison page illustrates.

Ok, so we want to make a cannabis population fairly uniform over a few phenotypically important traits, like say flavour for instance. For simplicity sake, we'll just deal with the single trait flavour, it's complex enough. And although flavour is controlled by several gene pairs (polygenic), we'll make the simplistic assumption that it's controlled by a single gene pair (monogenic) for many of the models and examples in this paper. There are many flavours such as chocolate, vanilla, musky, skunky, blueberry, etc, but in this paper we'll just deal with two flavours, pine and pineapple. Either gene in the gene pair can code for either of the flavours. If both genes code for pineapple or both genes code for pine flavour, we say that the gene pair (and individual plant) is homozygous for flavour. If the one gene codes for pine and the other codes for pineapple, we say that the gene pair (and individual plant) is heterozyous with respect to flavour. The heterozygous individual can create gametes (pollen or ovules) that can code for either pine flavour or pineapple flavour, the homozygous individuals can only create gametes that code for one OR the other. A homozygous individual is considered true breeding and a heterozygous individual is not.

However, as the words imply, when we are creating a true breeding strain, we are looking at a population, not individuals. We are trying to make all the individuals in the population homozygous for a particular trait or group of traits. Lets say we have a population of 50 individual plants, and each plant has has a gene pair coding for flavour. That means that 100 flavour genes make up the flavour genepool (reality is much more complex). When trying to create a true breeding strain, we are in fact trying to make all 100 of those genes code for the same trait ( pineapple flavour in our case). The closer our population comes getting all 100 genes the same, the more homozygous or true breeding it becomes. We use the terminology gene frequency to measure and describe this concept, where gene frequency is simply the ratio or percentage of the population that actually contains a specific gene. The higher the gene frequency, the more true breeding the population is. A fixed trait is where the gene frequency of the trait reaches 100%.

And folks, this is the basic backbone of what breeding is all about, manipulating gene frequencies. It doesn't matter if your making IBL, F1s, F2s, selecting for this or selecting for that, all you are really doing is manipulating gene frequencies. Therefore, to ever really understand what is happening in any breeding project, the breeder must pay attention to gene frequencies and assess how his selective pressures and models are influencing them. They are his measure of success.




An overview of Inbreeding Strategies
What are we trying to create a true breeding strain from?

This a good question. Sometimes a gardener will notice a sport or unique individual in an IBL or F2 population, like say it has pineapple flavour when the rest have pine flavour. For one reason or another he decides he wants to preserve this new trait or combination of traits from that single individual. For the sake of ease of comprehension, we tend to call this special unique individual the P1 mom. He could start by selfing the individual OR breeding that individual with another and create what can be described as F1 offspring. If the F1 route was chosen, then breeders can diverge down two new paths. Some breeders will take the progeny of the F1 crossing and breed it back to the P1 mom, and then repeat for a couple more generations. This is referred to as backcrossing or cubing by cannabis breeders. Another common strategy is to make F2 progeny from the F1 population and then look for individuals that match the P1 mom. They would repeat the process for a few generations. We can call this filial or generational inbreedingsince the parents from each cross belong to the same generation.

In another situation, sometimes a farmer will notice a few individuals in his fields that stand out from the crowd in a possitive manner. Like say the are resistant to a problem pest. In this case, he will collect the best of the individuals and his starting population will contain several similar individuals and not a unique single individual as in the previous example. He would skip the hybridizing step (making the F1s) and go straight to the generational inbreeding step. Links to pages going into detail of each of these scenarios and techniques are at:

A) Selfing the individual

B) Backcrossing and Cubing

C) Filial or Generational Inbreeding



Future topics to flesh out:

As we pointed out in the previous sections, selection plays an important role in successfully maximizing a gene's frequency. There are many factors effecting our ability to select the right parents.

One of the tricks for identifying the right parents is progeny testing

Applying the theory to practical situations. And finally, variations on various strategies, like RRS, acclimization, pest tolerance, etc.
 

OzCocoLoco

Well-Known Member
F-ing Around



We can often get get hung up on terminology and lose sight of what is really trying to be said. For this paper, when I discuss inbreeding, I'm talking about crossing individuals from the same generation and not backcrossing. I've haphazardly referred to this as generational inbreeding, although I'm not certain such terminology is considered accurate, haha. Also, in my F1 vs F2 discussion paper, I try to finely define terms such IBL, F1, and F2 from the perspective of a seed vendour and seed buyer. Those definitions won't apply here and I'll rely upon the most generic definitions of those terms for this discussion.

Your starting point of an inbreeding project can involve two parents that are related or two parents that are not. You could even start with a single parent and self it. In each case, we will arbitrarily assign the parents making up the starting point the P1 parents. In a typical inbreeding project, the progeny of the P1 parents will be called the F1 cross. When you cross individuals from an F1 generation together, you get an F2 generation. Cross the F2 generation and you get an F3 generation. The F3 generation gives rise to the F4 generation, and likewise, the F4 gives rise to the F5 generation. A similar inbreeding strategy can also be applied as a followup to a selfing or backcrossing project. We will first take a close look at how we can manipulate gene frequencies by solely working with generational inbreeding.

Lets say we want to stabilize the pineapple flavour of a special individual within a pine flavoured population. The genes controlling the pine flavour could be dominant or recessive. This fact can greatly influence the success of the project.

If the pineapple flavour is controlled by a dominant gene, there is a good chance the indivual will be heterozygous (Pp) where P symbolizes pineapple flavour and p symbolizes pine flavour. It can also safely be assumed that other individuals in the population are homozygous (pp) for the pine gene. Therefore our F1 cross will be:

F1 cross = Pp x pp = Pp + Pp + pp + pp

50% of the F1 generation will be pineapple flavoured and the frequency of the pineapple (P) gene will be 2/8 or 25%. Natually when selecting parents for the F2 generation, we would choose ones that were pineapple flavoured and therefore they would all be heterozygous (Pp). By being able to select both sets of parents, we call this a full sib cross. Again due to it's common simplicity I'll spare you the punnet square, we can determine the genetic combinations of our F2 population in our heads.

F2 (a) cross = Pp x Pp = PP + Pp + Pp + pp - typical mendelian phenotypic 3:1 and genotypic1:2:1 ratios.

75% of the F2 population will have pineapple flavour and our frequency of the P gene is now 4/8 or 50%. Now moving onto the F3 (a) generation gets a little harder to do in our heads. Again spotting the pine flavoured (pp) individuals should be easy and therefore removed from the breeding population. This leaves us with the PP + Pp + Pp individuals to make up the breeding population. We shorten it to PPPPpp to indicate the breeding population's genotype and frequency of the P gene. Since it can evenly be divided by 2, PPp just as accurately symbolizes the same genotype. Therefore the two parents become PPp x PPp. Each individual letter can represent the frequency of a single gamete (pollen or ovule) in the breeding population.

Fig 1: F3 (a) Cross





If we continued into the F5 generation using the same selective pressure, we would end up with 144PP + 72Pp + 9pp which translates into 96% of the population tasting like pineapple. The frequency of the pineapple gene would have risen to 80%.

b) But lets say that in all reality, that we can't determine flavour in the males, so we can only remove the pine (pp) flavoured individuals from the female parents. We call this a half-sib cross when we can't select our pollen source. So we would be doing two crosses Pp x Pp and Pp x pp. A shortcut is to combine the various genotypes into one and just write Pp x Pppp. I'll skip the punnet square on this one, but please feel free to do one yourself to be sure you understand what's happening. If you don't, it should become obvious when I go through the F3 cross in detail.

F2 (b) cross = Pp x Pppp = PP + Pp + Pp + Pp + Pp + pp + pp + pp

62.5% (5/8) of the halfsib F2 population would be pineapple flavoured and the frequency of the P gene would be 6/16 or 37.5%. This is quite a decrease by simply not being able to remove the pp males from the breeding population. I'll carry this one more generation (F3 cross) in detail to show you the developing patterns. After removing the pine flavoured (pp) females, our female genepool would be PP+Pp+Pp+Pp+Pp = PPPPPPpppp = PPPpp. Without any selective pressure, our male genepool would remain PP+Pp+Pp+Pp+Pp+pp+pp+pp = PPPPPPpppppppppp = PPPppppp. Here's how the cross plays out.



As you can see, the F3 cross yields pineapple flavour in 75% (30/40) of the offspring. The frequency of the P gene has risen to 48.8% (39/80).

Lets look at the mathematical patterns developing. To recap, this F3 cross was PPPpp x PPPppppp. Lets rewrite it in a simpler fashion that expresses the ratio of each gene (or gamete). We would get 3P2p x 3P5p. If you note, when we add up the numerical value of each side of the cross and then multipy them (3+2)*(3+5) we get the number 40, which turns out is the same as the number of offspring created by the punnett square. Notice that when we multiply the two 3Ps, we get 9P, the same number of PP individuals from the punnett square? The same pattern holds for each combination, so what we have here is a simple way of calculating a punnet square outcome without actually drawing the punnet square. This can save alot of time when we get into complex combinations. So lets use the mathematical method of determining the results from the above F3 cross.

3P2p x 3P5p = (3*3)P + (3*5)Pp + (2*3)Pp + (2*5)pp = 9PP + 15Pp + 6Pp + 10pp = 9PP + 21Pp + 10pp

As you can see we came up with the same number as the punnet square without drawing all the lines. Now lets use the same formula to calculate the F4 and F5 generations. We will remove the 10pp from the female genepool and be left with 9PP + 21Pp. If we add up all the P's and p's, this works out to [2(9) + 21]P and 21p which translates to 39P21p. The male gene pool will work out to be [2(9)+21]P and [21+2(10)]p = 39P41p. Remember, each number infront of each gene simply represents the frequency of that particular gene.

F4 Cross:

39P21p x 39P41p = 39*39PP + 39*41Pp + 21*39Pp + 21*41pp = 1521PP + 1599Pp + 819Pp + 861pp

= 1521PP + 2418Pp + 861pp and these add up to 4800

Therefore (1521+2418)/4800 or 82% will have pineapple flavouring and the frequency of the P gene will be 2(1521)+2418/2(4800) = 5460/9600 or 56.8%.

Can you imagine doing that with a punnet square? Even so, as you can see, the literal numbers are getting a little crazy and are becoming hard to follow. It may be easier to start working with gene frequencies in terms of decimals or simply percentages. Percentages are the easiest to follow but there is a trick or two to remember, so I'll stick with simple decimals. So lets move onto the F5 generation using decimals to indicate frequencies. First we have to calculate the gene frequencies of each parental genepool. If you recall, the F4 cross created the following genepool. 1521PP + 2418Pp + 861pp with a total of 4800. When we translate each ratio into a decimal we get 1521/4800PP + 2418/4800Pp + 861/4800pp = .32PP + .50Pp + .18pp after rounding to two decimal places. [Hint: Note that if we add up all our decimals, we get a total of 1. If they don't, a mistake was made.]

So now lets use the ratios we got from the F4 generation to calculate the gene frequencies of the parental genepools of the F5 cross. All we do is add together the frequency of each gene (gamete) and divide by the total of the ratio used in that genepool. Since the Pp is only half P, we divide this one in half. Therefore, the male parental genepool will be (.32+.25)/1 which equals .57P. Once we know P, we automatically know p since it is simply 1-P or .43. Therefore, the male parental genepool is .57P.43p. Now to determine the female gene frequencies, we need to subract the .18pp from the total numbers since they will be removed from the genepool. This is one way to do it. (.32+.25)/1-.18 = .57/.82 = .695P. Again 1-P=p so we end up with the female gene frequencies of .695P.305p. The F5 cross is as follows:

.695P.305p x .57P.43p = (.695*.57)PP + (.695*.43)Pp + (.303*.57)Pp + (.305*.43)pp = .40PP + .47Pp + .13pp

Finally in conclusion, after 4 generations of inbreeding where we only make our selections from the female population, we end up with an F5 population where 87% taste like pineapple. Plus the frequency of the pineapple gene in the F5 population is 63.5%. This is significantly less than if we were able to apply the selective pressure to both parental genepools. If you recall, in that situation we achieved 96% of the population tasting like pineapple. The frequency of the pineapple gene would have risen to 80%. This is just the case where the flavour gene is dominant, the situation when selecting for recessive traits is much nicer.
 

OzCocoLoco

Well-Known Member
When the trait we want is recessive.

In this case, we will assign the symbol p to indicate pineapple flavour and P will indicate Pine flavour. If we find a single pineapple flavoured individual in a population of pine flavoured individuals, and the trait is recessive, then the individual must be homozygous (pp) for the trait. When choosing a mate to cross it with, there is a chance you could select a heterozygous individual, but it's more likely to use a homozygous dominant pine flavoured one so that is what we'll base this next model on. Therefore, our F1 cross will be:

F1 cross = pp x PP = Pp + Pp + Pp + Pp or just simply Pp since all the F1s are the same.

Just to maintain consistency, I will point out that none (0%) of the F1 cross will have pineapple flavour but the frequency of the p gene will be 50%. Now when we move onto the F2 population, our parents will both be Pp. Here is the F2 cross:

F2 cross = Pp x Pp = PP + Pp + Pp + pp

Since there was no selection in choosing the parents, the p gene frequency remained at 50%. However, 25% of the offspring will be pineapple flavoured. As has been shown previously, it is this reassortment within the F2 population that is key. Now we can spot the females that are homozygous (pp) for the pineapple flavour. If we can identify the pineapple flavoured males, then we will be finished with an F3 cross as follows:

F3(a) cross = pp x pp = pp + pp + pp + pp - all true breeding for the pineapple flavour, mission accomplished :)

But not so fast, many are unable to determine the flavour of a male plant and so therefore wouldn't be able to perform any selections on the male portion of the genepool. Again we are back in a half-sib breeding model. The male population's population be PP + Pp + Pp + pp which equals 4P4p which in turn can be simplified to Pp. The frequency of the p gene in the female genepool will remain 100% from now on in this model. In this case the F3 cross would be:

F3 (b) cross = pp x Pp = Pp + pp + Pp + pp

50% of the F3(b) generation would be pineapple flavoured and the frequency of the pineapple (p) gene has increased to 6/8 or 75%. We would select out the PP female but use both Pp and pp males in the F4 cross. From what we learned in the previous section we could designate our gene frequencies as the female breeding pool = .5p.5p and the male breeding pool as .25P.75p. You see where those came from? Remember that 6/8 or 75% were p from the F3(b) cross? Well the 75% simply becomes .75 when we convert to decimal form. And 1-p=P to arrive at the .25p. Hence our F4 cross is:

F4 (b) cross = .5p.5p x .25P.75p = (.5*.25)Pp + (.5*.75)pp + (.5*.25)Pp + (.5*.75)pp = .25Pp + .75pp or more simply Pp + pp + pp + pp :)

We'll skip to the F5 generation, see if you can figure where I get my gene frequencies.

F5 (b) cross = .5p.5p x .125P.875p = .125Pp + .875pp

So after doing half sib inbreeding for 4 generations, we achieve an F5 generation where 87.5% of the offspring will be pineapple flavoured and the frequency of the p gene will be 93.75%. Not bad at all, just as good as cubing, but the 100% we achieved with the previous full sib example was better and with two fewer generations (HINT!!).

Please keep in mind that these models assume that flavour is a trait controlled by a single gene or linked group of genes. Reality isn't as simple, but the principles mentioned here apply to more complex models as well. The main point to take from this is that the degree of selection we use can very much influence our success rate. And that selecting for dominant and recessive traits have some subtle differences.
 
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