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ACCESSIONPLANT NAMETAXONOMYORIGINGENEBANKIMAGEAVAILABILITYRECEIVEDSOURCE TYPESOURCE DATECOLLECTION SITECOORDINATESELEVATIONHABITATIMPROVEMENT LEVELNARRATIVE
0PI 414723LJ 90234Cucumis melo L. subsp. melo Uttar Pradesh, IndiaNC7FRUIT1977COLLECTEDPRE 02/1977From Mussoorie, Uttar Pradesh, India.30.45000000, 78.08333333Cultivated materialOrigin traces to PI 175111 (C. sativus) from Mussooric, Uttar Pradesh, India and contaminant, PI 371795 (C. melo selection out of 175111). Bulk-sibbed, second generation inbred selection from PI 371795. Aphid resistant. Reported to be resistant to zucchini yellow mosaic virus, watermelon mosaic virus, powdery mildew, melon aphid (aphid gossypii Glover).1312874PI 414723
1PI 313970VIR 5682Cucumis melo L. subsp. melo IndiaNC7FRUIT1966COLLECTEDPRE 04/28/1966Wild materialAgrestis. Same as PI 3154101234456PI 313970
2PI 236355Cucumis melo L. subsp. melo England, United KingdomNC7FRUIT1957COLLECTEDPRE 01/04/1957From Local Market, Kew, England.Uncertain improvement status1185706PI 236355
3PI 234607Sweet MelonCucumis melo L. subsp. melo KwaZulu-Natal, South AfricaNC7FRUIT1956COLLECTEDPRE 09/24/1956Pietermaritzburg, Natal, South AfricaLandrace1185048PI 234607
4PI 179901TetiCucumis melo L. subsp. melo Gujarat, IndiaNC71949COLLECTED01/22/1949Bhavnagar, Kathiawar21.76666667, 72.15000000LandraceFruit flattened, 4 1/4 by 2 1/2 inches, smooth, yellow blotched with gloden brown; flesh pale-salmon.1155899PI 179901
5PI 134198Tar DesiCucumis melo L. subsp. melo var. flexuosus (L.) Naudin Punjab, Pakistan Historic1939COLLECTED08/02/1939Collected at Lahore, Punjab, India.LandraceSaid to be a long, green, much-ridged fruit which is used in the same way as No. 4454 (PI 134197). Received as Cucumis melo and re-identified to C. melo var. flexuosus. NOTE: Ames 31282, donated in 2012 by Dr. L. Liu, was said to be PI 134198, but fruit is not flexuosus type as originally described by Koelz in 1939.1812862PI 134198
6PI 1241112563Cucumis melo L. subsp. melo Bihar, IndiaNC7FRUIT1937COLLECTED04/02/1937LandraceFruit flattened, 5 by 3 inches, ribbed, rib lines orange, smooth to obscurely netted.1132398PI 124111
7PI 1241122564Cucumis melo L. subsp. melo Bihar, IndiaNC7FRUIT1937COLLECTED04/02/1937LandraceFruit unevenly elongate, 8 by 6 inches, flattened at ends, ribbed, smooth to obscurely netted, yellow with orange rib lines, fragrant; flesh 1 1/2 inches thick, rather flavorless.1132399PI 124112
8Ames 35627AR Hale's Best JumboCucumis melo L. subsp. melo var. cantalupo Ser. California, United StatesNC7FRUIT2020DEVELOPEDNEAR 1984Breeding materialMelon aphid (Aphis gossypii) resistant. Reported resistances of AR Hale’s Best Jumbo to Podosphaera xanthi races 2F and 5. Only moderately resembles ‘Hale's Best Jumbo’. Fruit are round-oblate, deeply ribbed, and heavily netted, but with net-free vein tracts. Flesh is thin and salmon-orange in color; seed cavity is large. AR Hale's Best Jumbo has a drier seed cavity and firmer flesh than ‘Hale’s Best Jumbo’. Soluble solids between 12 and 16%.2110779Ames 35627
9Ames 35630WMR 29Cucumis melo L. subsp. melo var. cantalupo Ser. California, United StatesNC7FRUIT2020DEVELOPEDNEAR 1980Breeding materialResistant to papaya ringspot virus (PRSV, syn. watermelon mosaic virus 1), tolerant to watermelon mosaic virus (syn. watermelon mosaic virus 2) and sulfur tolerant. It appears to have complex resistance to powdery mildew incited by Podosphaera xanthi: uniformly resistant to strains of race 1, segregated for resistance to two strains of race 2 (2US and 2S) but was uniformly resistant to other strains of race 2 (2F and 2Z), and exhibited resistance to races N1, N2, N3, N4 and H. The complex powdery mildew resistance may be from a combination of powdery mildew resistance genes from both parents. Fruit heavily netted, nearly globular, have prominent net-fre vein tracts, very firm flesh at full-slip (abscission). Flesh color deep orange. Soluble solids 10 to 17%.2110782Ames 35630
10Ames 3128236896Cucumis melo L. subsp. agrestis (Naudin) Pangalo ChinaNC7FRUIT2012DONATEDPRE 2011Uncertain improvement statusResistant to Podosphaere xanthii race pxCh1. Susceptible to Podosphaere xanthii races S and SD. Andromonoecious sex expression. Pale yellow flower petals. Seeds provided by Dr. L. Liu, Shanghai Academy of Agricultural Sciences, China to Dr. J. McCreight (USDA, ARS, Salinas, CA) as PI 134198. It has been determined that Dr. Liu's seed is not PI 134198, Cucumis melo var. flexuosus and therefore the accession has been assigned a new number, Ames 31282.1898811Ames 31282
11Ames 26809'PMR-5'Cucumis melo L. California, United StatesNC72002DEVELOPEDCultivarBreeder: University of California, Davis, and Hort. Field Sta., USDA, La Jolla, California. Parentage: 45 and PMR introduction from India. Characteristics: vigorous vine, heavy green foliage, high sugar, fruit excellent flavor, but poor net. Resistance: all known races of powdery mildew. Similar to PMR 45. Adaptation: Imperial Valley of California. Proc. Amer. Soc. Hort. Sci. 47:347-356. 1946.1635227Ames 26809
12Ames 26810'PMR-6'Cucumis melo L. California, United StatesNC7FRUIT2002DEVELOPEDCultivarBreeder: University of California, Davis, and Hort. Field Sta., USDA, La Jolla, California. Parentage:45 and P.M.R. introduction from India. Characteristics: large oval "button" at blossom end. Resistance: all known races of powdery mildew. Similar: PMR 45. Adaptation: regionally to Imperial Valley, California and lower Rio Grande Valley. Proc. Amer. Soc. Hort. Sci. 47:347-356. 1946.1635228Ames 26810
13Ames 26811'PMR-45'Cucumis melo L. Colorado, United StatesNC7FRUIT2002DONATED1994Cultivar1635229Ames 26811
14Ames 8578MR-1Cucumis melo L. subsp. melo South Carolina, United StatesNC7FRUIT1988DEVELOPEDBreeding materialThis already had NSL 197061 as an accession record and should be PI'd by NSSL. Do not PI unless NSSL fails to get NSL 197061 PI'ed.1044320Ames 8578