Angelo, Couldn't be simple recessive or yellow could ONLY produce yellow when selfed, but clearly not dominant. Probably several gene loci involved. Tim On Mon, Nov 23, 2020 at 2:53 AM ang.por--- via pbs < pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net> wrote: > > > > > Iris tuberosa is quite common in the countryside around my area and color > variants are occasionally seed but very rare. There is a normal variability > in the amount of black vs the green part of tepals, some individuals > looking almost black. I have spotted from time to time some 'bluish' > individuals but not enough distinctive to be collected, so far. But I have > found a totally golden individual and after many years another one and for > the first time I am sowing seeds from these two cross pollinated each > other. If selfed they will yeald green and black plants again, so it's > clearly a recessive gene. Also I have never seen any color variant around > those yellow in the wild, to confierm it doesn't reproduce true to > type.Angelo PorcelliItaly > _______________________________________________ > pbs mailing list > pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net > http://lists.pacificbulbsociety.net/cgi-bin/… > Unsubscribe: <mailto:pbs-unsubscribe@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net> > _______________________________________________ pbs mailing list pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net http://lists.pacificbulbsociety.net/cgi-bin/… Unsubscribe: <mailto:pbs-unsubscribe@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net>