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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 | PI 666045 | 'WCL-L04-Gail' | Physaria fendleri (A. Gray) OʼKane & Al-Shehbaz | Colorado, United States | PARL | | Not Available | 2012 | DEVELOPED | | | | | | Breeding material | Lesquerella is grown as a winter annual, planted in October and harvested in June. Shorter growing seasons, such as spring plantings have been investigated but seed yields are sacrificed (Oierig et aI., 2011 b). Seeds are produced in siliques occurring along inflorescences. The plant is indeterminant and develops new branches in response to warmer temperature (Oierig and Crafts-Brandner, 2011). More branches allow more areas for silique and seed production. As in other members of the Brassicaceae family, lesquerella is a self-incompatible, outcrossing species (Rollins and Shaw, 1973). Yellow flowers form a crop-cover at peak flowering, which occurs from March until late May. Bees and other insects pollinate the crop. Seed is typically harvested with a combine fitted with screens for small seeded crops (Oierig et aI., 2011 a). Crop improvement has focused on traits such as oil content, lesquerolic acid, and seed yield. We developed this germplasm from the most productive population available and selected for harvest index to produce plants with more seeds per unit of plant biomass. | 1905196 | PI 666045 |