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Details for: PI 618712,
Hypericum androsaemum
L., Index Seminum 196
Summary
Passport
Taxonomy
Other
Pedigree
IPR
Observation
Summary Data
Taxonomy:
Hypericum androsaemum
L.
Top Name:
Index Seminum 196
Origin:
Donated – North Moravia, Czech Republic
Maintained:
North Central Regional Plant Introduction Station
Received by NPGS:
20 Apr 1984
Improvement Status:
Cultivated material
Form Received:
Seed
Life Cycle:
Perennial
Life Habit:
Shrub
Backup Location:
National Laboratory for Genetic Resources Preservation
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Seed
100 count
PI 618712 00ncai01 SD
Images
(2
total. Click on image for more.)
Core Passport Data
Taxonomy:
Hypericum androsaemum
L.
Top Name:
Index Seminum 196
Origin:
Donated – North Moravia, Czech Republic
Maintained:
North Central Regional Plant Introduction Station
Received by NPGS:
20 Apr 1984
Improvement Status:
Cultivated material
Form Received:
Seed
Life Cycle:
Perennial
Life Habit:
Shrub
Source History
Donated
20 April 1984.
North Moravia, Czech Republic
Donor(s):
Arboretum Novy Dvur
Accession Names and Identifiers
Index Seminum 196
Type: Donor identifier
1983 Index Seminum number.
Arboretum Novy Dvur
Ames 2929
Type: Site identifier
Group: AMES
NC-7
USDA ARS NCRPIS
Narrative
Semi-evergreen shrub.
Hypericum androsaemum
L.
Genus:
Hypericum
Section:
Androsaemum
Family:
Hypericaceae
Nomen number:
19558
Place of publication:
Sp. pl. 2:784. 1753
Typification:
View in Linnean Typification Project
Verified:
08/30/2002
by ARS Systematic Botanists.
Other conspecific taxa
Autonyms (not in current use), synonyms and invalid designations
Common names
Language
Name
Alternate name
note
seq
Citation
English
sweet-amber
1
Parsons, W. T. & E. G. Cuthbertson.
1992. Noxious weeds of Australia Inkata Press, Melbourne, Australia.
English
tutsan
1
Liberty Hyde Bailey Hortorium.
1976. Hortus third. A concise dictionary of plants cultivated in the United States and Canada
French
androsème
2
Erhardt, W. et al.
2008. Der große Zander: Enzyklopädie der Pflanzennamen 1474.
French
toute-saine
2
Erhardt, W. et al.
2008. Der große Zander: Enzyklopädie der Pflanzennamen 1474.
German
Mannsblut
2
Erhardt, W. et al.
2008. Der große Zander: Enzyklopädie der Pflanzennamen 1474.
Portuguese (Brazil)
hipérico
2
Groth, D.
2005. pers. comm.
Note:
re. Brazilian common names
Portuguese (Brazil)
hipéricum
2
Groth, D.
2005. pers. comm.
Note:
re. Brazilian common names
Name
References
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Description Of NC7 Ornamental Trials:
The NC-7 Regional Ornamental Plant Trials, began in 1954 through the efforts of a small group of dedicated horticulturists under the leadership of Professor S.A. McCrory of South Dakota State College (now University). The north central United States is a region of climatic extremes, and many parts of the region have alkaline soils that developed under grasslands. Because of these conditions, the diversity found in commercially available woody plants adapted to the area is less than that found in most other parts of our nation. The NC-7 Regional Ornamental Plant Trials were started with the ultimate goal of expanding the range of useful plants in the nursery trade. The emphasis in this program has been placed on detailed, long-term evaluations at a broad range of sites rather than on promotion of new plants. The NC-7 Trials rely on a network of horticultural cooperators located at sites scattered across the Central United States. Cooperators establish plantings, observe and evaluate the plants through the seasons, and prepare performance reports one, five, and ten years after planting. These reports are sent to the North Central Regional Plant Introduction Station (NCRPIS) in Ames, Iowa where they are recorded. Because of the broad range of environments found among the trial sites, it is unusual for any particular trial plant to perform well at a majority of the sites, making system-wide releases difficult. However, when plants perform especially well at sites, the NCRPIS Horticulturist assists trial site cooperators in introducing the new plants, with any official releases initiated through the cooperators' institutions rather than through the Plant Introduction Station.
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