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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 | | |
|---|
| 0 | PI 636493 | NDSAB(MER-FS)C13 | Zea mays L. subsp. mays | North Dakota, United States | NC7 |  | | 2004 | DEVELOPED | | | | | | Breeding material | A yellow-dent maize population that was developed at the North Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station, Fargo, ND, as a result of long-term germplasm improvement, for breeding programs developing elite germplasm for short-growing-season. It is an improved germplasm source for development of inbred parents for early maturing, high quality, and high yielding corn hybrids. Population hybrids including NDSAB(MER-FS)C13 were not statistically different from the top commercial check for grain yield performance and root and stalk lodging percentages. Therefore, this population is not only an elite source for inbred line development but also a potential product for alternative production systems to commercial hybrids. This is a vigorous population with above average emergence percentage in cold soils. It typically produces medium-tall plants with medium ears. Each plant develops an average of one ear per plant, and is similar in days to flowering to Pioneer 39D82 and is earlier than previous NDSAB versions (AES 200 maturity). In trials this was top performer of all populations and significantly improved from unreleased experimental NDSAB(MER)C12 for grain yield, stalk lodging resistance, and starch content. It also tended to be drier at harvest with higher grain protein content. Starch content of is as high as any commercial hybrid tested. | 1668991 | PI 636493 |