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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 554057 | R. trivialis NC 87-14-02 | Rubus trivialis Michx. | North Carolina, United States | COR |  | Not Available | 1987 | DEVELOPED | | | | | | Breeding material | North Carolina selection number
| 1449029 | PI 554057 |
| 1 | PI 553951 | 'Hillquist' | Rubus argutus Link | Virginia, United States | COR | | Not Available | 1985 | DEVELOPED | 1949 | | | | | Cultivar | Original letter accompanying donated germplasm Department of BioEnvironmental ScienceN.Y. S. Agric. Expt. Sta.Geneva, N.Y. 14456November 5, 1985Dear Dr. Jahn,Last spring Dr. Sanford left a note on my desk to send you some Whitford Thornless blackberry plants. I did not then have any to send but do now and hope they do not freeze enroute!I am also enclosing plant of a diploid wild blackberry we call Hillquist, after a Mrs. L. G. Hillquist of Ashland, Virginia, who sent plants here way back in 1949. This clone is unique in that, here in Geneva at least, it exhibits a rudimentary degree of primocane-fruiting- the only blackberry, of any ploidy, we know of which possesses the fallbearing character. This characteristic makes Hillquist potentially important germplasm for blackberry breeding. If the fallbearing character could be transferred into our upright tetraploid lines then lack of hardiness would become much less of a problem for cold areas. The virus status of both clones is unknown. Our virus-indexing man here tells me it is very difficult to get symptoms on quinoa out of blackberries for some reason. Perhaps ELISA might do the trick.Good luck with these plants. If there are any other clones you seek that we might have, let me know.Sincerely,Jack ReichResearch Support Specialist Named for L. G. Hillquist, discoverer.NAMED FOR= Mrs. L. G. Hillquist, discoverer | 1448923 | PI 553951 |