Cultivar 447: Prunus Nigra Yellow

Taxon ID:

Usage Facet: class=edible; edible_score=1.0; ornamental_score=0.0; inferred_from_taxon=no

Relationships: 0 | Linked Entities (visible): 0 | Evidence claims: 7 | History events: 0 | Catalog issue offerings: 0

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Evidence Badge: emerging | claims=7 | sources=1 | contradictions=0

Claim Types: description_snippet:1, flavor_profile:1, fruit_color:1, fruit_size:1, growth_habit:1, productivity:1, selection_origin_reference:1 | Open evidence summary JSON | Open citation drawer JSON

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Wiki Draft

Prunus Nigra Yellow is a yellow-fruited plum listed under Prunus nigra in a South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station evaluation. The station received it from C. W. H. Heideman of Minnesota and planted it in spring 1900. The tree is described as vigorous and open in growth, which suggests a strong, somewhat spreading habit rather than a dense canopy. [S1]

The surviving record is brief and practical. It does not name a breeder, give parentage, or explain why the selection was distributed. It does show that the cultivar had moved from Minnesota into South Dakota trial plantings by 1900. The bulletin records fruit ripening on August 26 in 1902 and August 30 in 1904, placing it in the late August season under those conditions. [S1]

The fruit is described simply as yellow and of fair quality. The main limitation noted by the station was size. The plums were judged too small to have commercial value. In 1904 the crop was also light, so the small fruit and limited production counted against it as a market sort. [S1]

This entry gives no direct hardiness statement. Its documented performance comes from station planting and fruiting records in South Dakota, but the source does not say whether it was considered reliably hardy there over the long term. [S1]

Within the broader plum record, Prunus Nigra Yellow appears as one of the Prunus nigra types being tested alongside Americana plums and related hybrids. Its value in the archive is less as a celebrated commercial cultivar than as evidence of northern plum material being circulated, planted, and judged in prairie and upper Midwest conditions at the turn of the twentieth century. [S1]

Summary source basis

This summary currently draws chiefly from Plums in South Dakota.

Featured source descriptions

“Received from C. W. H. Heideman, Minnesota, planted in the spring of 1900.”
[1]
“The fruit ripe August 26, 1902, and August 30, 1904.”
[1]
“Of fair quality.”
[1]
“In 1904 the crop was light.”
[1]

Parentage

Direct parent cultivars

Parentage claim text

Lineage Links

Derived or downstream cultivar links

Story Highlights

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Family Navigation

Taxonomy context: Genus: Prunus | open genus tree

Related cultivars mentioned in source context

No sibling cultivars surfaced from source quotes yet.

Cold Hardiness

Zone assertions are structured rows. Hardiness claim text appears in evidence claims and page-linked citations.

Zone MinZone MaxZone TextAssertion TypeOutcomeLocationConfidence
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Media Gallery

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Citation Drawer (Top Supporting Sources)

DocumentTitle/URLRightsClaimsRelationshipsHistory EventsPagesSnippets
17Plums in South Dakotaunknown700p33Too small to be of any commercial value.; Of fair quality.; Fruit yellow.; In 1904 the crop was light.

Citation Evidence (Page-Linked Quotes)

DocumentPageClaim TypeClaimQuoteMatch
17p33fruit_sizeToo small to be of any commercial value.Prunus nigra Yellow. Received from C. W. H. Heideman, Minnesota, planted in the spring of 1900. Atree of vigorous open growth. The fruit ripe August 26, 1902, and August 30, 1904.page_block:0.90
17p33flavor_profileOf fair quality.Prunus nigra Yellow. Received from C. W. H. Heideman, Minnesota, planted in the spring of 1900. Atree of vigorous open growth. The fruit ripe August 26, 1902, and August 30, 1904.page_block:0.90
17p33fruit_colorFruit yellow.Prunus nigra Yellow. Received from C. W. H. Heideman, Minnesota, planted in the spring of 1900. Atree of vigorous open growth. The fruit ripe August 26, 1902, and August 30, 1904.page_block:0.90
17p33productivityIn 1904 the crop was light.Prunus nigra Yellow. Received from C. W. H. Heideman, Minnesota, planted in the spring of 1900. Atree of vigorous open growth. The fruit ripe August 26, 1902, and August 30, 1904.page_block:0.90
17p33description_snippetThe fruit ripe August 26, 1902, and August 30, 1904.Prunus nigra Yellow. Received from C. W. H. Heideman, Minnesota, planted in the spring of 1900. Atree of vigorous open growth. The fruit ripe August 26, 1902, and August 30, 1904.page_block:0.90
17p33growth_habitAtree of vigorous open growth.Prunus nigra Yellow. Received from C. W. H. Heideman, Minnesota, planted in the spring of 1900. Atree of vigorous open growth. The fruit ripe August 26, 1902, and August 30, 1904.page_block:0.90
17p33selection_origin_referenceReceived from C. W. H. Heideman, Minnesota, planted in the spring of 1900.Prunus nigra Yellow. Received from C. W. H. Heideman, Minnesota, planted in the spring of 1900. Atree of vigorous open growth. The fruit ripe August 26, 1902, and August 30, 1904.page_block:0.90

Nursery Offering Timeline

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Linked Entities

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Evidence Claims

TypeClaimConfidence
fruit_sizeToo small to be of any commercial value.0.98
flavor_profileOf fair quality.0.96
fruit_colorFruit yellow.0.98
productivityIn 1904 the crop was light.0.96
description_snippetThe fruit ripe August 26, 1902, and August 30, 1904.0.96
growth_habitA tree of vigorous open growth.0.97
selection_origin_referenceReceived from C. W. H. Heideman, Minnesota, planted in the spring of 1900.0.97

History Events

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