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 | PI 616598 | 'Mohawk' | Fragaria ×ananassa Duchesne ex Rozier | Maryland, United States | COR |  | Not Available | 1993 | DEVELOPED | 1994 | | | | | Breeding material | MOHAWK, tested as MDUS 5122, was selected in 1981 at Queenstown, Maryland by G.J. Galletta, A.D. Draper, and H.J. Swartz. It resulted from a 1979 Beltsville cross of MDUS 4587 x Earliglow made by G.J. Galletta, and was screened for resistance to a five race composite of the red stele root rot inciting fungus, Phytophthora fragariae Hickman. MOHAWK has produced good crops of fruit in Maryland, New Jersey, Minnesota, and Ontario. MOHAWK ripens 2-3 days earlier than Veestar in Ontario, and Earliglow in Maryland. MOHAWK did not yield as well as Veestar in Ontario, and had larger fruit than Veestar at one Ontario location, but the same fruit size at a second Ontario location. MOHAWK had better fruit qualities and shelf life than Veestar at both Ontario locations. MOHAWK plants have the same high vigor and runnering ability shown by plants of its Earliglow parent, but MOHAWK plants are more tolerant to powdery mildew. In different growing seasons in Maryland, MOHAWK yielded the same or less, had the same fruit size or larger, and its fruit was firmer-fleshed than that of Earliglow. But MOHAWK fruit was not as tough-skinned, symmetrical, or dark-colored as Earliglow fruit. MOHAWK is suggested for trial in Southeastern Canada and the Northeastern United States as an early, fancy-fruited, fresh shipping or local market berry, with good plant production and disease tolerance.
Gene J. Galletta, J. L. Maas, J. M. Enns, and A. D. Draper and Harry Swartz. Cross made in 1979, selected in 1981 tested as MDUS 5122 introduced in 1994
WHY NAMED= early ripening fresh market strawberry
NAMED FOR= Mohawk Indians | 1012222 | PI 616598 |