Select the tab for the type of search. Each tab has everything you need to do to perform that type of search.
(Results of more than 500 will not return images.)
This search will show only accessions that have material that may be requested, including those not seasonally available.
You may list accessions with separators (commas or semicolons, as shown below) or by entering them on separate lines, such as
PI 651794
PI 651649
PI 651650
When searching a range of accessions, use the Advanced Search tab with the Accession Identifier Range criterion.
The more information you provide, the better the search will be.
Scientific name (any part, no hybrid symbols)
Genebank
Country of Origin
Other search criteria:
If your results aren't what you expected, try using the Advanced Search tab and filling in more information.
Your query included:
All accessions
| ACCESSION | PLANT NAME | TAXONOMY | ORIGIN | GENEBANK | IMAGE | AVAILABILITY | RECEIVED | SOURCE TYPE | SOURCE DATE | COLLECTION SITE | COORDINATES | ELEVATION | HABITAT | IMPROVEMENT LEVEL | NARRATIVE | | |
|---|
| 0 | DVIT 839 | Morrastel | Vitis vinifera L. subsp. vinifera | France | DAV | | | 1983 | COLLECTED | 12/24/1938 | | | | | Cultivated material | Per Hedrick (see citation): "A profitable red wine grape. Season: mid-season (third period). Merits: combines quality with quantity; resists diseases well. Vine: strong, upright, fruitful. Wood: thick, pretty hard, of a reddish colour; joints not very long; nodes strong and swollen. Buds, hairy white. Leaves: strong, light green, three to five lobes, not very indented; glabrous on upper surface, and somewhat cottony on underside; leaf-stalk and veins red; dies yellow with red patches. Bunch: learge, winged, and conical; berries close set, black, with blue bloom, oblong, juicy. Cultural notes: Very fruitful in soils well adapted to its growth. Does remarkably well on hillsides, where it produces a wine full of chracter, with a rich grenat colour, suitable for blending. It also does well in heavy or in loamy soil. The buds burst late, and is therefore late affected by light frost; the bunches se very well; resists well cryptogamic fungoid diseases. Does not do so well in sandy land, where its yield is not so great. In damp places the vine is liable to rot at the crown, and shoots come up again from the roots; in rich soil it grows wood and leaves too luxuriantly for fruit production. The lower buds being fruitful and growth erect, short puring suits it best." Information taken from www.wine-lovers-page.com: "Late-budding red-wine grape found in the Rioja region of Spain. Sensitive to diseases such as downy mildew." | 1009258 | DVIT 839 |