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ACCESSIONPLANT NAMETAXONOMYORIGINGENEBANKIMAGEAVAILABILITYRECEIVEDSOURCE TYPESOURCE DATECOLLECTION SITECOORDINATESELEVATIONHABITATIMPROVEMENT LEVELNARRATIVE
0PI 595378NEBRASKA DROUGHT SYNTHETICZea mays L. subsp. mays Nebraska, United StatesNC7KERNELS1996DEVELOPEDBreeding materialGermplasm chosen based on reports of stress tolerance. Population random mated for four generations, improved by 2 cycles of reciprocal full-sib selection with Nebraska Rootworm Synthetic. Average maturity 108 to 110 days. Since large proportion was hybrids, lines not expected to conform to one heterotic pattern. Yield good. Plant and ear heights medium. Stalk strength good. Little stalk rot observed and European corn borer damge less severe in this population relative to others grown in similar trials. Plant health very good with good staygreen late in season. No data on drought tolerance. Several lines selfed from this population show excellent root strength.1525791PI 595378
1PI 707985Northern UteZea mays L. subsp. mays Utah, United StatesNC7EAR1988DONATEDPRE 05/1988LandraceA desert corn, like those of the southwest. Requires little water, yet produces very long thin ears, usually 8-12 rows. Unique since it is the most northern adaptation of desert corn. Donor suspects it is a direct ancestor of the cave corn, carbon dated 600-800 years old, which was grown in the same region on the Ute Reservation in northeast Utah, near the Colorado-Wyoming borders. Not fast maturing compared to Mandan corn. However, when crossed to something faster, the early maturity dominates, yet the Ute size also dominates. Plants average 3 male-type suckers when planted individually. Can grow 5-6 feet tall with water. Donated samples were taken from 5 cobs which had flint + flour starch. Seed obtained from Ladonna Johnson, who received it from her mother Mrs. Cob and grandmother Mrs. Daniels. Originated near Roosevelt or Fort Duchesne, Utah. Ms. Johnson ground the corn for flour and ate it fresh.1043616PI 707985
2PI 508270Arizona Maize Germplasm for Saline Env'sZea mays L. subsp. mays Arizona, United StatesNC7KERNELS1987DONATED04/14/1987Breeding materialDeveloped for saline environments.1403206PI 508270
3PI 699430Blue Indian CornZea mays L. subsp. mays Oklahoma, United StatesNC71963DONATED06/1963LandraceA blue aleurone selection of OSU 106 (Okla.)1093269PI 699430
4PI 222624Montgomery County Blue and WhiteZea mays L. subsp. mays Kansas, United StatesNC7KERNELS1954COLLECTEDPRE 12/20/1954From Paul Adamson, Cherryvale, Kansas.LandraceWhite. A high yielding late maturing variety. Some blue aleurone. Drought resistant.1179926PI 222624