Archivist Page Review

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Document: 22 Plant Introductions

Source page: Open page 9 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 3788)

Right: archivist-1.0 (fragment 11019)

Next Step

Reprocess/promote controls are the next UI layer. The data foundation is now versioned and diffable.

Page Version Diff

Cultivars Added
  • Amur Crab
Claims Added
  • Amur Crab | culinary_use | Bright red fruit is noted as desirable for culinary use.
  • Amur Crab | description_snippet | very pleasing from an ornamental stand point, even though the fruit should be ranked too small to compete with the larger crabs.
  • Amur Crab | entry_hardiness_observation | Tree has been reported free from blight.
  • Amur Crab | fruit_color | Fruit is bright red, called out as a positive orchard and culinary trait.
  • Amur Crab | fruit_size | Fruit is described as one to one and one-half inches in diameter.
  • Amur Crab | growth_habit | Tree is noted as ornamental despite small fruit size, with favorable visual effect.
  • Anoka | anecdote_snippet | Professor A. F. Yeager reported excellent establishment and lateral-bud fruiting in the tested four trees sent from Anoka material.
  • Anoka | caption_context | Fig. 1 is identified as Anoka Apple; caption states fruit is two and one-half inches in diameter, early and heavy bearing.
  • Anoka | entry_pedigree | Seedling of Mercer wild crab top-grafted on Duchess.
  • Anoka | flavor_profile | Flesh is white with good subacid quality.
  • Anoka | fruit_color | Described as round with Duchess-type coloring.
  • Anoka | fruit_size | Fruit is two and one-half inches in diameter, round, and of medium to above-medium size in later field observation; somewhat larger than Duchess.
  • Anoka | growing_habit | Trees were below shoulder height and about four feet high last spring at time of observation.
  • Anoka | harvest_timing | Ripening around the 15th of August in observed trees; season listed as September.
  • Anoka | productivity | At Fargo trial (four trees on Red Siberian crab seedlings), two trees blossomed and bore 23 and 26 apples in spring 1922 observations.
  • Anoka | productivity | Reported to have borne heavily in 1918 and 1919; described as early and heavy bearing under propagation, even on young nursery trees.
  • Anoka | release_year_reference | Introduced in 1918 before fruiting, and named Anoka in 1920.
  • Anoka | selection_origin_reference | Name derives from a Sioux Indian term meaning "on both sides" (as stated in the page text).
  • Anoka | source_reference_abbreviation | Quoted performance note attributed to Prof. A. F. Yeager, Agricultural College, Fargo, North Dakota (Dec. 2, 1922).
Figures Added
  • none
Citations Added
  • "In the spring of 1920, four trees of Anoka apple... were sent to the Experiment Station at Fargo... Under date of December 2, 1922, Professor A. F. Yeager, Agricultural College, Fargo, North Dakota, reports..."
Cultivars Removed
  • Duchess
  • Mercer (Fluke) Crab
  • Red Siberian Crab
Claims Removed
  • Anoka | anecdote_snippet | The trees were scarcely four feet high the previous spring and not yet as high as one's head when reported.
  • Anoka | anecdote_snippet | Under date of December 2, 1922, Professor A. F. Yeager reported that two of the four trees blossomed in spring and produced 23 apples on one tree and 26 on the other.
  • Anoka | caption_context | Figure 1 states the fruit is two and one-half inches in diameter and describes Anoka as an early apple and heavy bearing.
  • Anoka | description_snippet | In 1920 it was named Anoka, said to be a Sioux Indian word meaning "on both sides."
  • Anoka | description_snippet | Season September.
  • Anoka | description_snippet | The apples were described as oblong in character.
  • Anoka | description_snippet | They begin ripening about the 15th of August.
  • Anoka | entry_pedigree | It is a seedling of Mercer (Fluke) wild crab top-grafted on Duchess.
  • Anoka | flavor_profile | Flesh white, good subacid.
  • Anoka | fruit_color | The Fargo specimens showed very little color.
  • Anoka | fruit_color | The fruit is round with Duchess type of coloring.
  • Anoka | fruit_size | The apples were reported as medium to above medium in size, somewhat larger than Duchess.
  • Anoka | fruit_size | The fruit is two and one-half inches in diameter.
  • Anoka | growth_habit | All four trees were reported to have many lateral fruit buds showing.
  • Anoka | growth_habit | Practically all the fruit in the Fargo report was set from lateral buds.
  • Anoka | productivity | It bears even on young nursery trees.
  • Anoka | productivity | It is early and heavy bearing under propagation.
  • Anoka | productivity | This tree bore heavily in 1918 and 1919.
  • Anoka | release_year_reference | It was introduced in 1918 before fruiting as South Dakota No. 2.
  • Anoka | rootstock_compatibility | In spring 1920, four Anoka trees as one-year buds on seedlings of Red Siberian Crab were sent to the Experiment Station at Fargo, North Dakota.
Figures Removed
  • none
Citations Removed
  • Under date of December 2, 1922, Professor A. F. Yeager, Agricultural College, Fargo, North Dakota, reports on these trees as follows

Available Page Versions

IDVariantStatusModelSpecializationCountsSourceCompare
948archivist-1.0activegpt-5.4visual_page_generalist4 cultivars / 24 claims / 0 figuresOpen source page
3416archivist-1.0candidategpt-5.4visual_page_generalist2 cultivars / 19 claims / 0 figuresOpen source pageCompare to active