Logo image
Understanding genetic and phenotypic drivers of parthenocarpy in pear
Graduate Thesis/Dissertation   Open access

Understanding genetic and phenotypic drivers of parthenocarpy in pear

Leeanne Boyd
Master of Science - MSc, University of Otago
21/04/2026
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.82348/our-archive.00111
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/50504

Abstract

Parthenocarpy Pear (Pyrus spp.) Autonomous fruit set Reproductive biology Stenospermocarpy Self-pollination Phenotyping Genetic analysis QTL mapping Breeding

Parthenocarpy, the ability to produce fruit without fertilisation, is a valuable trait for ensuring consistent yields amidst increasing climate variability and pollination challenges. However, understanding of parthenocarpy in pears (Pyrus spp.) remains limited. This study investigated a segregating breeding population (P14.XXX) from The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research (PFR) in Motueka, examining reproductive mechanisms that support fruit set without effective cross-pollination across 86 trees with valid phenotypes. Initial assessments revealed a high incidence of autonomous fruit set, which was assumed to indicate parthenocarpy. Multi-season analyses later demonstrated that these cases also included self-compatibility and stenospermocarpy, confirming that autonomous fruit set can arise through multiple pathways. Subsequent seed analyses identified diverse fruit-set types within the population, revealing that parthenocarpy and self-pollination may coexist within an individual genotype and uncovering autonomous-set variants that did not fit conventional definitions. To address this complexity, a Parthenocarpy Contingency Chart was developed to refine classification and guide downstream genetic investigation. Bulked Segregant Analysis identified genomic regions potentially associated with pollination-independent fruit development, including auxin-related (IAA17) and oxidative-stress/peroxidase pathway genes. PCR assays targeting insertion/deletion polymorphisms confirmed genetic variation but did not consistently predict phenotype, emphasising the need for detailed, multi-year phenotyping prior to marker development. This work represents the first integrated evaluation of parthenocarpy within a segregating pear population, demonstrating the coexistence of multiple reproductive mechanisms within a single genetic framework. The findings provide a foundation for developing climate-resilient cultivars and support sustainable orchard systems that maintain fruit quality under pollination constraints.

pdf
Understanding genetic and phenotypic drivers of Parthenocarpy in Pear. Lee Boyd Masters thesis. 9.12.20252.23 MBDownloadView
Open Access 1: Open Access

Metrics

1 File views/ downloads
5 Record Views

Details

Logo image