A comprehensive scientific guide to cherry genetics, breeding, physiology, and the latest pomological research for professionals and researchers.
Dr. Michael Chen
Ph.D. in Plant Sciences from UC Davis. Former extension specialist with 20+ years of agricultural research experience. Specializes in commercial vegetable production and integrated pest management.
Scientific Overview
This expert-level guide synthesizes current agricultural and genomic research on cultivated cherries (Prunus avium L. and Prunus cerasus L.). It is intended for pomologists, breeders, researchers, and advanced enthusiasts seeking science-based knowledge of these economically important stone fruits.
Taxonomic Classification
| Level | Sweet Cherry | Sour Cherry |
|---|---|---|
| Kingdom | Plantae | Plantae |
| Clade | Angiosperms | Angiosperms |
| Order | Rosales | Rosales |
| Family | Rosaceae | Rosaceae |
| Genus | Prunus | Prunus |
| Subgenus | Cerasus | Cerasus |
| Species | P. avium L. | P. cerasus L. |
Genomic Resources
Sweet cherry (Prunus avium):
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Chromosome number | 2n = 2× = 16 |
| Genome size | ~272 Mb |
| Predicted genes | ~27,000 |
| Reference genome | 'Satonishiki' v1.0 |
| Ploidy | Diploid (AA) |
Sour cherry (Prunus cerasus):
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Chromosome number | 2n = 4× = 32 |
| Genome size | ~629 Mb |
| Subgenome composition | AA'BB (trigenomic) |
| Reference genome | 'Montmorency' (2023) |
| Ploidy | Allotetraploid |
Sour Cherry Origin
Recent genomic analysis reveals:
- Hybrid origin: P. fruticosa (tetraploid) × P. avium (diploid unreduced gamete)
- AA'BB genome composition
- A and A' from P. fruticosa-like ancestor
- BB from P. avium-like ancestor
- Little-to-no recombination between progenitor subgenomes
Origin and Domestication
Geographic origin:
- Asia Minor (Caucasus, Turkey)
- Wild P. avium range: British Isles to Caucasus
Domestication timeline:
| Period | Event |
|---|---|
| ~800 BCE | Cultivation in Asia Minor, Greece |
| 72 BCE | Lucullus brings cherries to Rome |
| 1st-5th century CE | Spread across Roman Empire |
| 16th century | Introduction to Americas |
Molecular Biology
Self-Incompatibility
Gametophytic self-incompatibility (GSI):
- Controlled by S-locus
- S-RNase (pistil) + F-box (pollen) genes
- ~30 S-alleles identified in sweet cherry
S-allele notation:
| Variety | S-genotype | Group |
|---|---|---|
| Bing | S3S4 | II |
| Rainier | S1S4 | I |
| Lambert | S3S4 | II |
| Stella | S3S4' | Self-fertile |
Self-fertile mutants:
- S4' = non-functional S4 allele
- Pollen side mutation
- Key breeding target
Flowering Time Genes
| Gene | Function | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| PavDAM | Dormancy maintenance | Chilling requirement |
| PavFT | Floral promoter | Early/late bloom |
| PavSOC1 | Flowering integrator | Bloom timing |
Fruit Quality Genes
Firmness:
- PavPG (polygalacturonase): Cell wall degradation
- PavPME (pectin methylesterase): Texture
Color:
- PavMYB10: Anthocyanin regulation
- PavUFGT: Anthocyanin synthesis
Size:
- QTLs on LG 2, 6, 7
- Complex inheritance
Global Production
Production Statistics (2024)
World cherry production:
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Total production | ~5.0 million MT |
| Harvested area | ~450,000 hectares |
| Growth trend | Increasing (Chile, China) |
Top producing countries:
| Rank | Country | Production (MT) | Share |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Turkey | 900,000 | 18% |
| 2 | USA | 321,000 | 6% |
| 3 | Chile | 502,000 | 10% |
| 4 | Uzbekistan | 219,000 | 4% |
Export Markets
| Rank | Exporter | Value (2024) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Chile | $2.8 billion |
| 2 | USA | $550 million |
| 3 | Turkey | $300 million |
Key importers:
- China: ~415,000 MT (2024/25)
- Growing 10+ consecutive years
Breeding and Genetics
Breeding Objectives
| Trait | Priority | Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Self-fertility | High | S4' introgression |
| Firmness | High | MAS for PG genes |
| Crack resistance | High | QTL mapping |
| Rain tolerance | High | Physiological studies |
| Large fruit | Medium | QTL introgression |
| Low chill | Medium | DAM gene modification |
Marker-Assisted Selection
Established markers:
| Trait | Gene/QTL | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Self-fertility | S-locus | Perfect markers |
| Fruit size | LG 2 QTL | Linked markers |
| Bloom time | LG 4 QTL | Research |
| Firmness | PavPG | Development |
Active Breeding Programs
| Program | Location | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Washington State Univ. | USA | Firmness, size, rain tolerance |
| UC Davis | USA | Low chill, quality |
| Agriculture Canada | Canada | Cold hardiness |
| Bologna/CRA-FRF | Italy | Quality, self-fertility |
Physiology Research
Fruit Development
Double sigmoid growth:
| Stage | Duration | Process |
|---|---|---|
| I | 0-25 DAFB | Cell division |
| II | 25-45 DAFB | Pit hardening |
| III | 45-harvest | Cell expansion, ripening |
Rain Cracking Physiology
Mechanisms:
- Osmotic water uptake through skin
- Cuticular permeability
- Cell wall properties
- Turgor pressure dynamics
Key factors:
- Cuticular wax composition
- Cuticle thickness
- Fruit surface area:volume ratio
- Osmotic potential gradients
Cold Hardiness
Hardiness by tissue (mid-winter):
| Tissue | Sweet Cherry | Sour Cherry |
|---|---|---|
| Flower buds | -10 to -15°F | -20 to -30°F |
| Vegetative buds | -20 to -25°F | -30 to -40°F |
| Wood | -25 to -30°F | -35 to -45°F |
Chilling Requirement
Models:
| Model | Sweet Cherry | Sour Cherry |
|---|---|---|
| Chill hours (<45°F) | 800-1200 | 600-1000 |
| Utah model | 800-1200 | 600-900 |
| Dynamic model | 45-60 portions | 35-50 portions |
Research Frontiers
Gene Editing
CRISPR targets:
- Self-incompatibility (S-RNase knockout)
- Firmness enhancement (PG modification)
- Dormancy genes (DAM)
- Anthocyanin pathway
Climate Adaptation
Research priorities:
- Low-chill varieties
- Heat tolerance during bloom
- Rain cracking resistance
- Extended harvest season
SWD Resistance
Research approaches:
- Oviposition deterrents
- Thick-skinned varieties
- RNAi approaches
- Sterile insect technique
Research Resources
Key Databases
- Genome Database for Rosaceae (GDR)
- NCBI GenBank
- Cherry BAC end sequences
- Prunus SNP consortium data
Important Journals
- HortScience
- Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science
- Tree Genetics & Genomes
- Horticulture Research
Professional Organizations
- American Pomological Society
- International Society for Horticultural Science
- Northwest Cherry Growers
Conclusion
Sweet and sour cherries represent important temperate stone fruit crops with distinct genomic backgrounds—diploid vs. allotetraploid. Recent genomic advances, including the 'Montmorency' reference genome revealing the trigenomic nature of sour cherry, enable accelerated breeding for key traits.
Critical research frontiers include developing rain crack-resistant and self-fertile sweet cherry varieties, managing spotted wing drosophila, and adapting production systems to climate change through low-chill variety development.
References available upon request. This guide synthesizes research from Nature, Horticulture Research, GDR, and university research programs.
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