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ACCESSIONPLANT NAMETAXONOMYORIGINGENEBANKIMAGEAVAILABILITYRECEIVEDSOURCE TYPESOURCE DATECOLLECTION SITECOORDINATESELEVATIONHABITATIMPROVEMENT LEVELNARRATIVE
0RCRC 4247'Adamopoulou'Citrus ×limon (L.) Osbeck Pelopónnisos, GreeceRIV2016DONATED11/04/2009CultivarThis accession was received at the CCPP in November 2009 as part ofa collaborative project with Greece funded by the European Union. Underthis project a number of cultivars from the Greek national citrusfoundation collection at Poros Arboricultural Station (PAS) were testedat the CCPP for graft-transmissible pathogens of citrus (Wang et al.2013). Subsequently, the CCPP inquired of PAS if among the tested varietiesthere were any unique or interesting cultivars suitable for California.PAS highlighted 'Adamopoulou' lemon and 'Mihrio' mandarin.

'Adamopoulou' lemon is thought to be derived from 'Lisbon' lemon. In the 1950's, the director of Poros Arboriculture Station (Greece) observed a tree resistant to mal secco in an established 'Lisbon' orchard and named this tree 'Adamopoulou' (Passisis and Keramidas, 1983). Tripolitsiotis et al. (2013), using 9 RAPD and 5 ISSR markers, found that 'Adamopoulou' and other Greek lemon cultivars were distinct from 'Lisbon' and some other common lemons. In addition to being more tolerant to mal secco than 'Lisbon', 'Adamopoulou' is also more cold tolerant (Protopapadakis, 1994). Koutsioumari and Voloudakis (2011) cloned differentially expressed genes from 'Adamopoulou' and 'Lisbon', deriving 81 clones that revelaed homology with various proteins. Subsequently, Koutsioumari and Voloudakis (2016) reported that 'Adamopoulou' and 'Lisbon' had signficantly different gene expression for proteins known to be upregulated under biotic and abiotic stress. (RR Krueger, 2017-02-04)

1946753RCRC 4247