Abstract
The ultimate size of diploid or tetraploid kok-saghyz plants, when grown in pots or at wide spacings in the field, was not determined primarily by the weight of the achenes from which they originated. Conversely large or small tetraploids when crossed among themselves did not produce achenes reflecting the differences in plant size. Tetraploids differed from diploids in possessing larger organs, but increase in size was more or less counteracted by reduction in numbers. This was especially true as regards flowering. Tetraploids were notably deficient in the production of inflorescences during the first year, and since they were correspondingly freed from the inhibiting effects of flower and seed development on root enlargement, the root size of the vegetating tetraploids tended to surpass that of the more floriferous diploids, unless the latter were disbudded. On the whole first-year plants with the broadest and leafiest rosettes and few or no capitula developed the biggest roots. An association of such characteristics is probably the best criterion for the selection of large-rooted plants. When large root size is desired it would seem advisable to avoid pregermination treatments that hasten maturation and stimulate flowering.

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