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| ACCESSION | PLANT NAME | TAXONOMY | ORIGIN | GENEBANK | IMAGE | AVAILABILITY | RECEIVED | SOURCE TYPE | SOURCE DATE | COLLECTION SITE | COORDINATES | ELEVATION | HABITAT | IMPROVEMENT LEVEL | NARRATIVE | | |
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| 0 | DPRU 543 | Miner | Prunus hortulana L. H. Bailey | California, United States | | | Historic | 1986 | DONATED | 02/04/1986 | | | | | Cultivar | Type = Plum. Flowers white. Fruit one inch or less in diameter, red to yellow. Medium size tree. Per N.E. Hansen (see citation): "The seed which produced Miner plum was planted in 1814, in Knox County, Tennessee, by William Dodd, an officer under General Jackson (Bailey). Probably the first native plum to be introduced into cultivation and widely planted in Illinois, southern Iowa, Missouri and other parts of the west." | 1007025 | DPRU 543 |
| 1 | DPRU 544 | 'Wolf' | Prunus americana Marshall | Iowa, United States | DAV | | Not Available | 1986 | DEVELOPED | NEAR 1852 | | | | | Cultivar | Per Plums and Plum Culture, "The American Plums Described," p. 167: "Wolf.--Fruit oval or round oval; size medium to large; cavity shallow; suture a faint line; color crimson over orange, marked like a bird's egg; dots several, red, pretty; bloom bluish; skin thick, tough; flesh yellow; stone medium large, oval, slightly flattened, perfectly free; quality fair to good, season medium early; tree a good grower and productive...One of the most popular of all native plums." Per The American Fruit Culturist (see citation): " ...skin thick; flesh yellow, firm, fibrous, good, free. Mid-season. Tree strong grower, prolific. Good for home and market." Per The Plums of New York (see citation): "...tree productive...apex taper-pointed, margin coarsely and doubly serrate, eglandular...petiole globose...blooming season of average length, late...fruit mid-season, ripening period short; less than one inch in diameter, roundish-oval or somewhat obovate...apex roundish or flattened; color dull crimson, thickly mottled...stone semi-free to free, five-eighths inch by three-eighths inch in size..." Per Ali Almehdi: "Flowers white, one inch across. Fruit contains flattened stone." For further info read Plums in South Dakota (see citation). | 1007032 | DPRU 544 |