Amount of natural outcrossing in a species is one of the primary deter
mining factors in selection of breeding methods. Existing literature o
n natural outcrossing of sorghum is dated and limited in geographical
reference. Experiments were designed to investigate natural outcrossin
g in contemporary sorghum, Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench, B- and R-lines
, and in sudangrass, Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench. Four R-lines and fou
r B-lines were seeded in rows in isolation at Mead, NE, and allowed to
intercross in each of 2 yr. Bulked seed from each row was planted and
proportion of offtypes recorded. Outcrossing ranged from 0.1 to 13% i
n R-lines, and from 0.5 to 9% in B-lines. Outcrossing among sudangrass
plants with white or green midribs transplanted in isolation in each
of 2 yr was estimated by utilizing the dominant gene for white midrib
as a marker. Panicles from green midrib plants were tagged to indicate
approximate date of pollination. At maturity, the panicles were divid
ed into top, middle, and bottom thirds and threshed. Seed from each pa
nicle section was planted and proportion of white midrib plants record
ed. Outcrossing ranged from 0 to near 100% on individual sudangrass pl
ants and was highly variable. Harvest of panicles pollinated during th
e middle of the pollination period should maximize outcrossing in suda
ngrass, but the use of nuclear male-sterility genes is still recommend
ed for improvement of sudangrass through recurrent selection. For sorg
hum breeding procedures requiring a high degree of self-pollination, s
elfing under pollination bags is recommended.