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Document: 22 Plant Introductions

Source page: Open page 31 in document reader

Institution: Open PRAIRIE | Publisher: | Year: | Pages: 68

Source URL: https://openprairie.sdstate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1223&context=agexperimentsta_bulletins

Selected Versions

Left: archivist-1.0 (fragment 3810)

Right: archivist-1.0 (fragment 11047)

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Page Version Diff

Cultivars Added
  • none
Claims Added
  • Moscow | anecdote_snippet | Author mentions multiple visits in 1894 and 1897 to orchards near the Sparrow Hills near Moscow where the fruits were historically abundant.
  • Moscow | breeder_reference | Selection and naming attributed directly to the bulletin author (N. E. Hansen).
  • Moscow | entry_hardiness_observation | Presented as a new hardy cherry for the North, but cautioned by the author as probably not hardy as far north as Sand Cherry hybrids.
  • Moscow | entry_location | Source population traced to cherry types from the Vladimir region east of Moscow, Russia.
  • Moscow | entry_pedigree | Selected from imported Russian seedlings and named Moscow.
  • Moscow | productivity | Described as a new hardy substitute target for the prairie Northwest; broader yield performance appears to continue onto the following page.
  • Moscow | recommendation_context | North-side management guidance: mulch carefully in winter to prevent root-killing.
  • Moscow | release_year_reference | Listed as from the 1917 list and now offered for the first time as budded trees.
  • Moscow | rootstock_compatibility | Offered as one-year buds on Mahaleb roots; nursery notes imply care for northern root-zone exposure.
  • Moscow | taxon_context | Part of Prunus cherry discussion contrasting sweet/sour cherries and alternatives from Sand Cherry relatives.
  • Wokanka | description_snippet | Referenced only in comparative context at start of page; no full heading or complete entry appears on this page.
  • Wokanka | growth_habit | Characterized as strong, vigorous, stocky, and spreading.
  • Yuksa Sandcherry Hybrid | entry_pedigree | Hybridized from western Sand Cherry with pollen of the New Large Apricot of Europe; described as a South Dakota Sand Cherry × European Apricot cross.
  • Yuksa Sandcherry Hybrid | productivity | Produces an abundance of flowers but is sterile.
  • Yuksa Sandcherry Hybrid | recommendation_context | Concludes this hybrid approach is not the path to originate a hardy apricot.
  • Yuksa Sandcherry Hybrid | release_year_reference | Introduced in 1908.
  • Yuteca | entry_hardiness_observation | Referred to as a choice native plum in a northern introduction context.
  • Yuteca | flavor_profile | Fruit quality described as good.
  • Yuteca | fruit_size | Fruit size described as very large.
  • Yuteca | productivity | Called a choice early and productive native plum.
Figures Added
  • none
Citations Added
  • "the 1917 list"
  • Hansen, N.E., "Plant Introductions" (1927). Bulletins. Paper 224.
Cultivars Removed
  • none
Claims Removed
  • Moscow | anecdote_snippet | Interesting orchards of these cherries on the Sparrow Hills near Moscow were visited in 1894 and 1897.
  • Moscow | anecdote_snippet | The breeder became interested in the cherry grown in the Vladimir region of Russia just east of Moscow during five tours to Russia.
  • Moscow | description_snippet | The prairie Northwest greatly needs a hardy cherry.
  • Moscow | description_snippet | The type is not as constant as was thought at first, but varies considerably.
  • Moscow | description_snippet | These cherries are grown mostly from root sprouts and seeds.
  • Moscow | entry_hardiness_observation | A new hardy cherry for the North.
  • Moscow | entry_location | The fruit comes to the markets of Moscow in immense quantities.
  • Moscow | recommendation_context | At the North they must be mulched carefully to prevent root-killing.
  • Moscow | release_year_reference | From the 1917 list.
  • Moscow | rootstock_compatibility | It is now offered for the first time as budded trees because building stock on its own roots would take too many years.
  • Moscow | rootstock_compatibility | The trees are one-year buds on Mahaleb roots.
  • Moscow | selection_origin_reference | It was grown at the station from Russian seed.
  • Moscow | selection_origin_reference | Out of imported seedlings, one was selected and named Moscow.
  • Moscow | taxon_context | Referenced within the section on cherry improvement.
  • Wokanka | growth_habit | Very strong, vigorous, stocky, spreading.
  • Wokanka | recommendation_context | Its size will not make Wokanka as promising as Opata or Sapa.
  • Yuksa Sandcherry Hybrid | entry_pedigree | A hybrid of western Sand Cherry with pollen of the New Large Apricot of Europe.
  • Yuksa Sandcherry Hybrid | recommendation_context | It was regarded as evidence that this was not the way to originate a hardy apricot.
  • Yuksa Sandcherry Hybrid | release_year_reference | Introduced 1908.
  • Yuksa Sandcherry Hybrid | selection_origin_reference | This hybrid of the South Dakota Sand Cherry with a European Apricot produces an abundance of flowers, but is sterile.
Figures Removed
  • none
Citations Removed
  • From the 1917 list

Available Page Versions

IDVariantStatusModelSpecializationCountsSourceCompare
970archivist-1.0activegpt-5.4visual_page_generalist5 cultivars / 32 claims / 0 figuresOpen source page
3434archivist-1.0candidategpt-5.4visual_page_generalist5 cultivars / 26 claims / 0 figuresOpen source pageCompare to active