Taxon ID: 3
Usage Facet: class=edible; edible_score=1.0; ornamental_score=0.0; inferred_from_taxon=no
Relationships: 0 | Linked Entities (visible): 0 | Evidence claims: 11 | History events: 0 | Catalog issue offerings: 0
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Evidence Badge: emerging | claims=11 | sources=2 | contradictions=0
Claim Types: description_snippet:2, recommendation_context:2, taxon_context:2, column_scope_context:1, table_axis_context:1 | Open evidence summary JSON | Open citation drawer JSON
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Assiniboine is a plum selected from Prunus nigra, the Canada plum or wild plum. Sources describe it as a South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station introduction, named in 1908 from a wild plum seedling from Stonewall, Manitoba. [S2] [S3] [S4] It is an early named selection from native plum material, not a later complex hybrid. It remained listed in prairie orchard references and recommendation lists for cross pollination among native plums. [S1] [S3] [S4]
The origin story is specific. University of Minnesota material says the seedling came from Stonewall, Manitoba, and was named at the South Dakota station in 1908. [S2] A prairie cultivar index gives the same year and identifies it as a P. nigra seedling introduced by the South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station. [S3] W. R. Leslie's prairie orchard bulletin gives a more personal account and says the wild plum seed came from Thomas Frankland of Stonewall, Manitoba. [S4]
Sources describe the fruit as medium to fairly large and oval to oblong, with yellow flesh and red skin. Some describe it more specifically as yellow with a bright red blush and light bloom. [S2] [S4] [S3] The flesh is described as soft or tender, very juicy, and moderately sweet, with good overall quality. [S2] Leslie called it good for canning, while the prairie index classified it mainly as a processing plum. [S3] [S4] The season is early, but the exact timing differs by source. One says mid August. Another says the first of September. [S2] [S4]
The tree is described as upright, vigorous, productive, and hardy. [S2] [S4] Minnesota notes add that it holds its fruit well and had only very light winter injury in test winters. That helps explain why it was considered a good parent for breeding winter hardiness. [S2] South Dakota extension later kept Assiniboine in its native plum recommendations for cross pollination, which shows it still had practical value in cold climate home orchards after its introduction. [S1]
Assiniboine is significant because it shows direct use of native prairie plum germplasm in early northern fruit breeding. The sources do not present it as a hybrid line or as a descendant of named cultivars. They describe it as a selected wild plum seedling that proved hardy, productive, and useful for processing under prairie conditions. [S2] [S3] [S4]
Summary source basis
This summary currently draws chiefly from 9c684c14 7509 4b78 a803 0bf01a64aa28, with 4 additional supporting sources linked below.
Featured source descriptions
“Fruit oblong with round apex, small cavity, line-like suture, and a 1/2 inch slender stem; stone flat, oval, cling.”
— [4]
“Fruit diameter 3.0-3.5; maturity early.”
— [5]
“Agood parent in breeding for winter hardiness; showed very light winter injury in test winters.”
— [4]
“Fruit soft, very juicy, and moderately sweet; quality rated good.”
— [4]
Direct parent cultivars
Parentage claim text
Derived or downstream cultivar links
Source-story quotations
Taxonomy context: No family-tree context surfaced yet.
Related cultivars mentioned in source context
Zone assertions are structured rows. Hardiness claim text appears in evidence claims and page-linked citations.
| Zone Min | Zone Max | Zone Text | Assertion Type | Outcome | Location | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| other | recommendation_table | recommended | NATIVE PLUMS | 0.84 |
No linked media assets.
| Document | Title/URL | Rights | Claims | Relationships | History Events | Pages | Snippets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 112 | Pollination Studies with Stone Fruits | unknown | 6 | 0 | 0 | p3 p4 | Species/background listed as P. nigra.; Bloom season: early.; Pollinated 7 varieties tested.; Rated as a good pollinizer in Table 3. |
| 2 | South Dakota Fruit Garden (visual sample pages 9-11) | public_domain | 5 | 0 | 0 | p1 | merged across zone columns; other; NATIVE PLUMS; For Cross Pollination |
| Document | Page | Claim Type | Claim | Quote | Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 112 | p4 | taxon_context | Species/background listed as P. nigra. | Assiniboine 7 Early P. nigra | page_block:0.90 |
| 112 | p4 | description_snippet | Bloom season: early. | Assiniboine 7 Early P. nigra | page_block:0.90 |
| 112 | p4 | description_snippet | Pollinated 7 varieties tested. | Assiniboine 7 Early P. nigra | page_block:0.90 |
| 112 | p4 | recommendation_context | Rated as a good pollinizer in Table 3. | Assiniboine 7 Early P. nigra | page_block:0.90 |
| 112 | p3 | recommendation_context | Native varieties proved to be good pollinizers for hybrid plums that bloomed at the same time. | Assiniboine — P. nigra | page_block:0.90 |
| 112 | p3 | entry_pedigree | Listed in Table 2 as P. nigra. | Assiniboine — P. nigra | page_block:0.90 |
| 2 | p1 | entry_cultural_note | merged across zone columns | Assiniboine merged across zone columns | visual_page_probe:0.90 |
| 2 | p1 | column_scope_context | other | NATIVE PLUMS | For Cross Pollination | other | Assiniboine | visual_page_probe:0.90 |
| 2 | p1 | taxon_context | NATIVE PLUMS | NATIVE PLUMS | For Cross Pollination | other | Assiniboine | visual_page_probe:0.90 |
| 2 | p1 | table_axis_context | For Cross Pollination | NATIVE PLUMS | For Cross Pollination | other | Assiniboine | visual_page_probe:0.90 |
| 2 | p1 | structured_entry_json | {"column_label": "other", "cultivar_name": "Assiniboine", "notes": ["merged across zone columns"], "page_number": 1, "parser_mode": "visual_table_page", "row_context": null, "row_l | NATIVE PLUMS | For Cross Pollination | other | Assiniboine | visual_page_probe:0.90 |
| Year | Nursery | Catalog Issue | Relation |
|---|---|---|---|
| No catalog issue offerings linked. | |||
| Relation | Type | ID | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| No linked entities at this filter level. | |||
| Type | Claim | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| taxon_context | Species/background listed as P. nigra. | 0.99 |
| description_snippet | Bloom season: early. | 0.98 |
| description_snippet | Pollinated 7 varieties tested. | 0.98 |
| recommendation_context | Rated as a good pollinizer in Table 3. | 0.99 |
| recommendation_context | Native varieties proved to be good pollinizers for hybrid plums that bloomed at the same time. | 0.91 |
| entry_pedigree | Listed in Table 2 as P. nigra. | 0.99 |
| entry_cultural_note | merged across zone columns | 0.92 |
| column_scope_context | other | 0.92 |
| taxon_context | NATIVE PLUMS | 0.92 |
| table_axis_context | For Cross Pollination | 0.92 |
| structured_entry_json | {"column_label": "other", "cultivar_name": "Assiniboine", "notes": ["merged across zone columns"], "page_number": 1, "parser_mode": "visual_table_page", "row_context": null, "row_label": "For Cross Pollination", "section | 0.94 |
| ID | Type | Year | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| No history events. | |||