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broad beans - weird

Started by Multiveg, April 21, 2005, 15:53:52

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Multiveg

Got some broad beans in modules- nothing weird about that, but how about one that seems to be devoid of greenness - it is yellow, completely yellow - why? Shall take a piccie of it in a mo to post up here (if I haven't by then disappeared down the lottie)...
Allotment Blog - http://multiveg.wordpress.com/
Musings of a letter writer, stamp user and occasional Postcrosser - http://correspondencefan.blogspot.co.uk/

Multiveg

Allotment Blog - http://multiveg.wordpress.com/
Musings of a letter writer, stamp user and occasional Postcrosser - http://correspondencefan.blogspot.co.uk/

Multiveg

herebe, at long last, a piccie of the albino broad bean (The Sutton).
Allotment Blog - http://multiveg.wordpress.com/
Musings of a letter writer, stamp user and occasional Postcrosser - http://correspondencefan.blogspot.co.uk/

legless

ooooh. thats weird....

sorry, not helpful at all am i?  :D

aquilegia

mutant!

Might it really be albino? You have to nurture that one and tell us of it's progress. Will it produce beans?

You could market them as a new type of yellow broad bean. I bet you could sell them to T&M for a fortune (after you've done seed swaps of course!)
gone to pot :D

Sarah-b

You are right MV - that is weird!

Mrs Ava

I am useless at all that hyrbidisation milarky, but could it be a bean that has reverted to an original???

Odd though!  If you make your fortune, remember your allotment chums.  ;D ;D ;D ;D :-* :-* :-* :-*

Multiveg

Transplanted the broad beans into the plot with a little helper on Saturday, including the yellow one, so I will let you know what happens.
Allotment Blog - http://multiveg.wordpress.com/
Musings of a letter writer, stamp user and occasional Postcrosser - http://correspondencefan.blogspot.co.uk/

westsussexlottie

Why don't you phone the seed company and ask them about it?

Suffolklad

Quote from: aquilegia on April 25, 2005, 11:41:59I bet you could sell them to T&M for a fortune

You can't be talking about the same T&M that I worked for  ;D
Mike
They call it the "Good Life" but it's a b****y HARD life!

ruud

I have also one albino broadbean this year but he looked a bit unhealty to me

Apple Dumpling

Wouldn't any plant need chlorophyll to grow properly?
Who planted all these weeds?

redimp

That's the presumption but I suppose we better wait to see how these plants do - there are chlorophylless plants out there.
Lotty @ Lincoln (Lat:53.24, Long:-0.52, HASL:30m)

http://www.abicabeauty

PakChoi

Hello, in the unlikely event that you see this post again, did the yellow bean change and become green?  I have the same thing, again with a Sutton broad bean.

sawfish

keep us all updated on its progress on this thread. I'm quite fascinated, it looks incredible!

manicscousers

once had a pea plant with variegated leaves, I was leaving the pods to mature and ray picked them all  ;D

Robert_Brenchley

It's a mutation without chlorophyll. it can't produce food and won't survive. They're well-known among cacti, as they're grafted onto normal plants and sold. You've probably seen the bright red and yellow things.

sawfish

still worth watching though, you never know.

Suzanne

The bean looks very healthy - so more like a genetic mutation, also to me looks yellow rather than pure white. There are photosynthetic pigments that are different colours to chlorophyll-a and there is one that is yellow. So if it has a dominance of this pigment it could still survive. After all we have lots of golden leaved plants. Not sure what it would do to crop yield though.

If it survives and fruits and you can save pure seed you could see whether this mutation survives to the next generation of it it reverts to parent type.

If it has a defunct gene for pigment and it really is pure white it could of course just be living of the remnants of the seed - broad beans are quite big seeds.

Gosh I hope it's the first possible explanation - so much more exciting.

Robert_Brenchley

It's healthy at the moment because it's feeding on stored carbohydrates in the cotyledons. The test comes when they're used up.

alienwithaview

Am fascinated by the yellow-leafed broad bean - what happened in the end?
I've got a weird occurrence with my broadbeans from Marshalls - this is the first year I've ever sown any and was right pleased that every single one produced a seedling (but all of them with dark-green leaves).
The strange thing is that about half of them produced twins: there are two stalks next to each other, quite close, too, obviously sprouting from the same bean, and both grow equally fast and develop leaves. The ones with only one stalk are admittedly stronger though.
But what is it with these twins? I shouldn't think that this is meant to be, as they are less vigorous than the others, but what puzzles me is that there's so many of them: about 10. They have all germinated under the same conditions. Any suggestions?

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