[{"source_document_id":102,"title":"Haskap Breeding & Production - Final Report, January 2012","url":"https://research-groups.usask.ca/fruit/documents/haskap/20080042.pdf","rights_status":"unknown","evidence_claim_count":64,"relationship_count":0,"history_event_count":0,"sample_snippets":["Figure 32 states that haskap bushes have branches close to the ground and that the pictured row was the source of selection for Tundra.","The row shown in Figure 32 is identified as the row from which the variety Tundra was selected.","Identified as one of the few haskap selections adapted to machine harvest and sorting-line handling.","Held up to shake harvesting and running through sorting lines, indicating comparatively durable fruit handling performance among haskap selections."]},{"source_document_id":147,"title":"New Haskap Varieties from the University of Saskatchewan","url":"https://research-groups.usask.ca/fruit/documents/haskap/new_varieties.pdf","rights_status":"unknown","evidence_claim_count":12,"relationship_count":0,"history_event_count":0,"sample_snippets":["Scar is listed as dry; stems rating is a; integrity rating is a.","Fruit shape is listed as long flat bullet oval, with a small fruit end.","Yield is listed as average.","Flavour is listed as sweet tangy."]},{"source_document_id":110,"title":"Growing Haskap in Canada","url":"https://research-groups.usask.ca/fruit/documents/haskap/growinghaskapinCanada.pdf","rights_status":"unknown","evidence_claim_count":10,"relationship_count":0,"history_event_count":0,"sample_snippets":["The same observation set contrasts big-fruited selections with thin tubular Russian types, which dehydrated earlier by late July.","Fruit from rows including Tundra was part of an observed holding window that lasted into late August in a hot year and into early September in a cool year.","Tundra is explicitly named with Borealis as a big, fat berry selection that performed best in the unharvested holding trial.","Leaves of Tundra showed less powdery mildew than other tested varieties in this program context."]},{"source_document_id":143,"title":"Recommended fruit Varieties","url":"https://research-groups.usask.ca/fruit/documents/other-crops-/Popular-fruit-Varieties-2019-Handout.pdf","rights_status":"unknown","evidence_claim_count":10,"relationship_count":0,"history_event_count":0,"sample_snippets":["Was the favourite at release because of larger fruit and machine-harvest firmness, but Indigo Gem is often considered more productive.","Fruit can last on the bushes into late July if birds do not find them.","It was higher yielding in an Ontario test, but most growers including the University of Saskatchewan find Indigo Gem more productive.","Plant is more spreading instead of upright and is slower to propagate."]},{"source_document_id":141,"title":"Haskap Pollinator Breeding in 2009","url":"https://research-groups.usask.ca/fruit/documents/haskap/Haskap-Pollinator-Research-in-2009.pdf","rights_status":"unknown","evidence_claim_count":4,"relationship_count":0,"history_event_count":0,"sample_snippets":["In 2010, six advanced selections were planned to be cross pollinated with Borealis and Tundra to check pollen compatibility and similar bloom time.","Borealis and Tundra are stated to be too closely related and not to pollinate each other very well.","The selection goal was to find a higher quality pollinator for Borealis and Tundra.","Tundra is described as one of the program's recently released varieties."]},{"source_document_id":146,"title":"Breeding the Boreal Series of Haskap (Lonicera caerulea)","url":"https://research-groups.usask.ca/fruit/documents/haskap/cshs-Poster-2017.pdf","rights_status":"unknown","evidence_claim_count":4,"relationship_count":0,"history_event_count":0,"sample_snippets":["Referenced as a University of Saskatchewan haskap variety in the Lonicera caerulea breeding program.","Early University of Saskatchewan breeding was limited to only four parents obtained in 1998.","These early varieties showed superior characteristics for fruit quality and size compared to their parents.","Described as one of the first University of Saskatchewan varieties, produced as hybrids between Russian and Kuril accessions."]},{"source_document_id":131,"title":"‘Aurora’ & ‘Borealis’ Haskap","url":"https://research-groups.usask.ca/fruit/documents/haskap/AuroraBorealisArticle.pdf","rights_status":"unknown","evidence_claim_count":3,"relationship_count":0,"history_event_count":0,"sample_snippets":["'Tundra' is referenced as a haskap variety.","'Aurora's' odd shape will not allow it to roll on a sorting line like 'Tundra'.","'Aurora' will likely grow 1/2 meter taller than 'Tundra'."]},{"source_document_id":130,"title":"‘Aurora’ Haskap","url":"https://research-groups.usask.ca/fruit/documents/haskap/Aurora2019.pdf","rights_status":"unknown","evidence_claim_count":1,"relationship_count":0,"history_event_count":0,"sample_snippets":["Young ‘Aurora’ plants were growing 50% taller than ‘Tundra’ varieties."]}]