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Details for: DVIT 2009,
Vitis vinifera
L. subsp.
sylvestris
Hegi, 'L86'
Summary
Passport
Taxonomy
Other
Pedigree
IPR
Observation
Summary Data
Taxonomy:
Vitis vinifera
L. subsp.
sylvestris
Hegi
Cultivar:
'L86'
Origin:
Collected – France
Maintained:
Natl. Germplasm Repository - Davis
Received by NPGS:
15 Dec 1993
Improvement Status:
Wild material
Form Received:
Cutting
Life Form:
Vine
Life Habit:
Woody Vine
Availability
This accession is not available. Contact site for status.
Natl. Germplasm Repository - Davis
There are no images for this accession.
Core Passport Data
Taxonomy:
Vitis vinifera
L. subsp.
sylvestris
Hegi
Cultivar:
'L86'
Origin:
Collected – France
Maintained:
Natl. Germplasm Repository - Davis
Received by NPGS:
15 Dec 1993
Improvement Status:
Wild material
Form Received:
Cutting
Life Form:
Vine
Life Habit:
Woody Vine
Source History
Collected
France
Comment:
Collected from the Pyrenees in South-Western France
Donated
01 January 1975.
France
Comment:
Donated to George Remaily NYAES, Geneva NY from Bordeaux, France
15 December 1993.
New York, United States
Comment:
Donated to NCGR, Davis by Bruce Reisch NYAES, Geneva, NY
Donor(s):
Reisch, Bruce I., Cornell University
Accession Names and Identifiers
'L86'
Type: Cultivar name
DVIT 2009
Type: Site identifier
Narrative
Type = Hybrid. Flower = Male. Per Remaily (see citation): "These importations are spontaneous vines gathered from the Pyrenees in south-western France, and were interpretated and selected as the autochthonous form of Vitis vinifera of Europe. The grave concern caused by the decreasing number of this wild-growing form of Vitis has awakened the portended action - needed to warn and prevent their probable extinction. IN the last hundred years of imperious pressures from 'imported' diseases and pests, the great expansions of thousands of these autochthonic vines, have dwindled to a condition of declining endangement. With the importation to Europ of North American species of Vitis at an ever increasing establishment of rootstocks during and after the disasterous period of viticultural decline, owing to the scourge of Oidium and the devastation of Phylloxera; these exotic species from the North American Continent have spontaneously hybridized with both the European autochthon, V. vinifera, sylvestris and the cultivated grape, v. vinifera, sativa, de Candolle. The adventitious naturalization of these wild-growing stands with increased resistance to various diseases and pests have become successfully competitive and long-lived, and are now permanent members of the natural flora of Europe. It is imperative for future systematic studies that the two Vitis vinifera forms: sativa, de Candolle and sylvestris, Omelein be clearly characterized, and both, from the wide-spread diversity of interspecific feral vines that have spontaneously evolved along with the development and culture of interspecific root-stocks and interspecific direct-producers. Both the European autochthon and the the native North American species are characterized by dioecism, however this 'mode' has been allowed too much weight in confirming identification, and is tenuously inconclusive."
Vitis vinifera
L. subspp.
sylvestris
Hegi
Genus:
Vitis
Subgenus:
Vitis
Family:
Vitaceae
Subfamily:
Vitoideae
Nomen number:
409301
Place of publication:
Ill. Fl. Mitt.-Eur. 5(1):364. 1925 "
silvestris
"
Comment:
authorship and place of publication verified from original literature
Verified:
01/24/2011
by ARS Systematic Botanists.
Other conspecific taxa
Vitis vinifera
L.
(215 active accession[s])
Vitis vinifera
L. subsp.
vinifera
(1497 active accession[s])
Autonyms (not in current use), synonyms and invalid designations
Basionym
Vitis sylvestris
C. C. Gmel.
Common names
Language
Name
Alternate name
note
seq
Citation
English
wild grape
1
Hanelt, P., ed.
2001.
Mansfeld's encyclopedia of agricultural and horticultural crops. Volumes 1-6
Note:
lists as
Vitis vinifera
subsp.
sylvestris
(C. C. Gmel.) Beger
German
Wild-Rebe
2
Hanelt, P., ed.
2001.
Mansfeld's encyclopedia of agricultural and horticultural crops. Volumes 1-6
Note:
lists as
Vitis vinifera
subsp.
sylvestris
(C. C. Gmel.) Beger
Name
References
Annotations
Nomenclature Name Change:
06 Aug 2002, from
Vitis sylvestris
C. C. Gmel. to
Vitis vinifera
L. subsp.
sylvestris
Hegi
Taxonomic Re-Identification:
08 Oct 1998, from
Vitis
hybr. to
Vitis sylvestris
C. C. Gmel.
Taxonomic Re-Identification:
24 Sep 2007, from
Vitis vinifera
L. subsp.
sylvestris
Hegi to
Vitis vinifera
L.
Taxonomic Re-Identification:
02 Oct 2007, from
Vitis vinifera
L. to
Vitis vinifera
L. subsp.
sylvestris
Hegi
Other Links
Actions
Pathogens
Vouchers
Citations
Remaily, G.
1980. Descriptions of Vitis clones imported from Bordeaux, France and Geilweilerhop, Federal Republic of Germany 25.
Note:
Department of Pomology & Viticulture N.Y. State Ag. Exp. Sta. Geneva, NY
Number of accessions cited:
0
Pedigree
Material Transfer Agreement
Observations
Phenotype Data
Category
Descriptor
Description
Value
Sample Size
Study
Inventory
Availability
MORPHOLOGY
Sex of Flower
Observation during flowering, mean value of 10 inflorescences
1 - Male (Richter 110)
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available
MORPHOLOGY
Leaf Underside Hair
Observations of the density of prostrate hairs on the underside of the leaf
5 - Medium
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available
MORPHOLOGY
Leaf size of mature leaf
Observations of the size of mature leaves within the medium third of the shoot.
3 - Small
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available
MORPHOLOGY
Leaf Shape of Leaf Teeth
Observations of the shape of teeth on the edge of mature leaves
3 - Both sides convex
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available
MORPHOLOGY
Shoot note hair density
Observations of the density of erect hairs on the shoot nodes on the medium third of the shoot.
3 - Sparse
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available
MORPHOLOGY
Cluster Peduncle length
Observation of the length of the peducle
3 - Short (5 cm)
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available
MORPHOLOGY
Shoot Tip Color Intensity
Intensity of the color of the young shoot tip
1 - Very weak
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available
MORPHOLOGY
Shoot tip form 2
Observation of Shoot tip form 2
5 - opened
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available
MORPHOLOGY
Shoot Tip Hair Density
Observation of the density of prostrate hairs on the tip of the young shoot.
7 - Dense (downy)
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available
MORPHOLOGY
Leaf Petiolar Sinus Base Shape
Observations of the shape of the base of the petiolar sinus of a mature leaf
1 - U shaped"
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available
MORPHOLOGY
Leaf Petiolar Sinus Openness
Observation of the openness or overlap of the petiolar sinus opening on mature leaves
1 - Very wide open
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available
MORPHOLOGY
Shoot Tendril Distribution
Observations of the number of consecutive tendrils on the shoot.
1 - Up to two
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available
PHENOLOGY
Bloom Date
Julian days from January 1 when 50% of the grape flowers are in bloom
124
GRAPE.WEO.1994
DVIT 2009 0000A PL
Not Available