Citizen scientists help UF researchers find best-tasting tomatoes

People with a green thumb for growing tomatoes are giving University of Florida scientists good data to help them find tastier tomatoes.

Through a citizen science program, Denise Tieman, a UF/IFAS research associate professor of horticultural sciences and her lab are getting viable data from residential gardeners about which tomato varieties grow and taste best.

Tieman and Jessica Chitwood-Brown, an assistant professor of horticultural sciences, spoke at the Florida Tomato Conference Sept. 5 in Clewiston about breeding efforts at UF/IFAS.

From 2021-23, people in 41 states have told Tieman and her collaborators which tomatoes they want to grow and why.

“This data is very important for our research since we get feedback from different parts of the country,” Tieman said. “Also, people use many different growing conditions: pots, soil, hydroponic, organic etc.”

Right now, Tieman and her lab are offering ‘Improved Garden Gem,’ ‘Improved Garden Treasure,’ ‘Improved Garden Ruby’ and ‘Improved BW hybrid,’ all UF/IFAS cultivars.

“We change the varieties from year to year as we develop new cultivars, but we keep the favorites like Garden Gem,” she said. “We also take special requests, if someone wants an old variety that we aren’t offering this year.”

Click here to find out how you can obtain tomato seeds from the UF/IFAS tomato-breeding lab.

The citizen science program is just one method UF/IFAS researchers use to improve tomato flavor. For 20 years, they have been conducting research to understand the biochemical and genetic bases for good tomato flavor. They are now using the results from this research to breed tastier tomatoes.

“Our latest breeding efforts — separate from the home-garden varieties — are to breed better-tasting commercial varieties,” Tieman said. “We have shown that we can breed for better flavor without expensive, time-consuming biochemical analysis or taste panels. We instead utilize simple and inexpensive DNA analysis to determine if the DNA segments we know are important for good flavor are present. We anticipate that the same tools can be used for other tomato breeders to improve the flavor of their tomato varieties.”

Jessica Chitwood-Brown in a greenhouse. Courtesy, UF/IFAS.

Chitwood-Brown works in the heart of Florida’s tomato-growing area. As a faculty member at the Gulf Coast Research and Education Center, she gave growers historical perspective about the UF/IFAS tomato breeding program, which goes back more than 100 years.

Early efforts were aimed at combating diseases that threatened the industry. In January, UF/IFAS hired Chitwood-Brown to help lead tomato-breeding efforts.

Chitwood-Brown earned her Ph.D. from the UF/IFAS in 2020. At the tomato conference, she discussed how she will align the goals of the tomato-breeding program with challenges described by growers.

“By integrating grower feedback throughout the breeding process, the UF/IFAS tomato-breeding program aims to help develop improved tomato cultivars that meet the needs of the Florida tomato industry, while keeping the consumer in mind,” Chitwood-Brown said.

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ABOUT UF/IFAS
The mission of the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) is to develop knowledge relevant to agricultural, human and natural resources and to make that knowledge available to sustain and enhance the quality of human life. With more than a dozen research facilities, 67 county Extension offices, and award-winning students and faculty in the UF College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, UF/IFAS brings science-based solutions to the state’s agricultural and natural resources industries, and all Florida residents. 

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WHY FOOD IS OUR MIDDLE NAME
Feeding a hungry world takes effort. Nearly everything we do comes back to food: from growing it and getting it to consumers, to conserving natural resources and supporting agricultural efforts. Explore all the reasons why at ifas.ufl.edu/food or follow #FoodIsOurMiddleName.

 

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Posted: September 11, 2024


Category: Agriculture
Tags: Citizen Science, Cultivars, Denise Tieman, DNA, Flavor, Florida Tomato Conference, Gardeners, Growers, Gulf Coast Research And Education Center, Horticultural Sciences Department, Jessica Chitwood-Brown, Tomato Breeding, Tomatoes


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