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Increasing Vegetable Plant Diversity with Seeds

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BURLINGTON – Choosing seeds and starting transplants are among the most empowering ways to garden.

In addition, purchasing unique varieties of seeds encourages growers to keep offering them. As a bonus, diversity in your vegetable garden can give our pollinators and other beneficial insects a wider diet.

Heirloom varieties, such as this Moneymaker pole tomato, often produce more flavorful fruit than hybrid varieties and often have an interesting backstory about how they were developed.
photo by Amy Simone 

If looking for the ideal tomato to slice fresh off the vine into salads and prefer them to be balanced between acidity and sweetness, use growers’ notes on various tomato varieties, focus on the description of their flavors and uses and let that be a guide to a few options. 

Among the choices between those perfect, not-too-sweet, fresh eating tomatoes, there also are options for hybrid, heirloom or open-pollinated seeds. 

Hybrid seeds, also referred to as F1 (first generation off-spring) hybrids, are the result of a controlled cross between two parent plants of the same species carefully chosen for their attributes. This is a lengthy process that may take seven to eight years until a consistent hybrid plant is achieved. 

The seeds from this winning combination are packaged and sold with a higher price tag. In exchange for the extra cost are seeds with hybrid vigor. These seeds germinate into strong seedlings that become larger plants, yield more fruit and are more resistant to the common diseases and pests for that type of plant. 

Selecting seeds and starting transplants is the best way to diversify a garden as not only will it provide a jump start on the season, but gardeners can try varieties that may not be available to purchase at garden centers.
photo by Amy Simone

To clarify, hybrids are not genetically modified organisms, also called GMOs, as some people may believe. GMOs are made by modifying the plant’s genetic material in a lab. 

The downside to hybrids is that to continue to grow the variety, gardeners need to buy seeds for it each year. Seeds saved and planted from F1 hybrids will not result in the same plant. 

Open-pollinated seeds, often noted as OP on packets, are from plants that are pollinated naturally by the wind and insects. Seeds saved from these plants will grow exactly the same variety. It’s especially easy to save the seeds of beans, lettuce, tomatoes and peas for planting in future seasons since these are self-pollinating plants.  

Heirloom seeds are open-pollinated plants that were developed naturally outside of the commercial plant trade. Heirloom plants often have been saved and replanted for more than 50 years, and there is usually an interesting backstory to how that variety developed. 

Growing different tomato varieties allows gardeners to enjoy a wider range of unique flavors and ripening times throughout the growing season. photo by Amy Simone 

Standard and heirloom open-pollinated seeds will yield stable traits from generation to generation. Many people feel that their flavor is superior to that of hybrids. They are less expensive than hybrids, especially when saving their seeds for the following year’s crop. 

If saving seeds is important, there is likely an open-pollinated variety with the desired attributes that is similar enough to a hybrid. 

Hybrid varieties may be better for a smaller garden and to get more yield from fewer plants. Open-pollinated plants will offer more varieties that focus on taste and uniqueness. There is room in a garden for both.

For questions about seeds, seed starting and other gardening topics, feel free to reach out the Extension Master Gardener Helpline at https://go.uvm.edu/gardenquestion.

Amy Simone is an Extension Master Gardener at the University of Vermont 

Amy Simone

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