Cultivar 448: Prunus Simoni

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: 3 | History events: 0 | Catalog issue offerings: 0

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Evidence Badge: emerging | claims=3 | sources=1 | contradictions=0

Claim Types: selection_origin_reference:1, taxon_context:1 | Open evidence summary JSON | Open citation drawer JSON

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Wiki Draft

Prunus Simoni is described in the South Dakota bulletins as an apricot plum from China. It was already widely grown in California by the early 1900s.[S1] In this archive, it appears less as a named prairie fruit than as an important species reference point: a distinct Chinese plum noted for fine fruit, but poorly adapted to South Dakota conditions.[S1][S2]

The South Dakota evaluation is blunt about hardiness. H. C. Warner of Forestburg, South Dakota, reported it as "Not hardy" in 1903, and that judgment was preserved in the station bulletin.[S1] No zone rating is given here, but the surviving evidence places Prunus Simoni outside the reliable hardy plum group for prairie conditions in that setting.[S1]

The fruit is only briefly described in these sources. The bulletins call it an apricot plum and identify China as its place of origin.[S1][S2] The packet does not give a fuller direct description of size, color, flavor, season, or keeping quality for Prunus Simoni itself.

Its broader significance in the record is as breeding material. One South Dakota bulletin identifies Prunus Simoni as the male parent of Tokeya. This shows that even though it lacked hardiness in South Dakota, it was still valued in hybrid breeding work at Brookings.[S2] That distinction matters: the sources here support Prunus Simoni as a parent used in later breeding, not as a hardy released cultivar for prairie planting.[S2]

What remains uncertain is how much its California reputation reflected fruit quality, commercial promise, or ornamental interest, because these pages do not go beyond the short species note and the breeding reference.[S1][S2] For Pomologica, Prunus Simoni stands as an important tender plum species at the edge of the cold climate story: not hardy in South Dakota, but influential enough to appear again in the parentage of later hybrid work.[S1][S2]

Summary source basis

This summary currently draws chiefly from Plums in South Dakota.

Featured source descriptions

“The hardiness note is attributed to H. C. Warner, Forestburg, S. D., 1903.”
[1]
“Not hardy.”
[1]

Parentage

Direct parent cultivars

Parentage claim text

Lineage Links

Derived or downstream cultivar links

Story Highlights

Source-story quotations

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
No explicit zone assertion rows yet.

Media Gallery

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Citation Drawer (Top Supporting Sources)

DocumentTitle/URLRightsClaimsRelationshipsHistory EventsPagesSnippets
17Plums in South Dakotaunknown300p33The hardiness note is attributed to H. C. Warner, Forestburg, S. D., 1903.; Not hardy.; An apricot plum from China, now much raised in California.

Citation Evidence (Page-Linked Quotes)

DocumentPageClaim TypeClaimQuoteMatch
17p33selection_origin_referenceThe hardiness note is attributed to H. C. Warner, Forestburg, S. D., 1903.Prunus Simoni. An apricot plum from China, now much raised in California. "Not hardy." (H. C. Warner, Forestburg, S. D., 1903.)page_block:0.90
17p33entry_hardiness_observationNot hardy.Prunus Simoni. An apricot plum from China, now much raised in California. "Not hardy." (H. C. Warner, Forestburg, S. D., 1903.)page_block:0.90
17p33taxon_contextAn apricot plum from China, now much raised in California.Prunus Simoni. An apricot plum from China, now much raised in California. "Not hardy." (H. C. Warner, Forestburg, S. D., 1903.)page_block:0.90

Nursery Offering Timeline

YearNurseryCatalog IssueRelation
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Linked Entities

RelationTypeIDLabel
No linked entities at this filter level.

Evidence Claims

TypeClaimConfidence
selection_origin_referenceThe hardiness note is attributed to H. C. Warner, Forestburg, S. D., 1903.0.95
entry_hardiness_observationNot hardy.0.99
taxon_contextAn apricot plum from China, now much raised in California.0.98

History Events

IDTypeYearLabel
No history events.