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ACCESSIONPLANT NAMETAXONOMYORIGINGENEBANKIMAGEAVAILABILITYRECEIVEDSOURCE TYPESOURCE DATECOLLECTION SITECOORDINATESELEVATIONHABITATIMPROVEMENT LEVELNARRATIVE
0PI 528511SA 105Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423447PI 528511
1PI 528614SA 250Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423550PI 528614
2PI 528636SA 282Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423572PI 528636
3PI 528655SA 309Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423591PI 528655
4PI 528692SA 357Gossypium hirsutum L. MexicoCOT1989COLLECTEDCultivar1423628PI 528692
5PI 528717SA 395Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423653PI 528717
6PI 528779SA 473Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423715PI 528779
7PI 528955SA 850Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423891PI 528955
8PI 528956SA 852Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423892PI 528956
9PI 528963SA 863Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423899PI 528963
10PI 528965SA 865Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423901PI 528965
11PI 528966SA 866Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423902PI 528966
12PI 528967SA 868Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423903PI 528967
13PI 528971SA 875Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423907PI 528971
14PI 528973SA 877Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423909PI 528973
15PI 528976SA 881Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423912PI 528976
16PI 528977SA 882Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423913PI 528977
17PI 528978SA 883Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423914PI 528978
18PI 528983SA 890Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423919PI 528983
19PI 528984SA 891Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423920PI 528984
20PI 528985SA 892Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423921PI 528985
21PI 528997SA 924Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1423933PI 528997
22PI 529169SA 1103Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United StatesCOT1989DONATED02/1989Cultivar1424105PI 529169
23PI 651093'BISHOP'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Oklahoma, United StatesS91982DONATED1009084PI 651093
24PI 651094'DOUBLE DWARF YELLOW MILO'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor California, United StatesS91982DONATEDInformation from 1936 USDA Tech Bul 506. - Plants midseason, mature with Dwarf Yellow milo or 2 to 6 days earlier; extra dwarf (24 to 30 inches); leaf sheaths overlapping very much, heads often not well exserted, panicles usually ellipsoid; fewer heads recurved than in Dwarf Yellow. Otherwise like Standard Yellow and Dwarf Yellow milo. Also called Extra Dwarf milo, rabbit maize.1009514PI 651094
25PI 655970'Standard Blackhull Kafir'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Kansas, United StatesS9SEED1982DEVELOPEDBreeding material1002121PI 655970
26PI 655971'STANDARD WHITE MILO'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor S9SEED19821005510PI 655971
27PI 655972'PINK KAFIR'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Kansas, United StatesS9SEED1982DEVELOPEDInformation from Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) and USDA Technical Bullletin 506 (1936). Specimens have been introduced from South Africa by USDA from time to time. The selection made in 1909 was later distributed under the name "Pink kafir." The direct introduction of Pink kafir from South Africa, PI 19742, was larger and much later in maturing with seeds a darker pink than the Pink kafir developed at Hays, Kansas. Plants mid-season (113 days average), mid-tall (56 inches average), stems mid-stout (three-fourths to seven-eighths inch), usually dry, not sweet, tillers sparse, branches sparse, leafy (10 to 15), midribs white to cloudy, leaf sheaths overlap, panicles erect, glumes pubescent to partly pubescent, lemmas not awned, stigmas creamy white, kernels much exposed and pink or nearly white with pink flecks,endosperm starchy.1006280PI 655972
28PI 655973'SPUR FETERITA'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS9SEED1982DEVELOPEDBreeding materialInformation from Texas AES Bulletin 275 (1921) - In 1914 a selection was made from a feterita grown under Texas Station No. 40, original seed of which was obtained from PI 19517. Selection No. 40-3-6-15 was made in 1916 and assigned Texas Station No. (TS) 3232 and increased as rapidly as possible for farmers. Similar to Standard Feterita (PI 19517, CV-4) but slightly later and more leafy with somewhat stouter stems, panicles more often truncate, and rachis more often discontinuous; plants early to midseason (103 days, average of 16 crop years); mid-tall, slightly shorter than Standard Feterita. Stocky plant is of value in that plant does not lodge or fall as readily as unimproved feterita. Stands well in the field even after ripening. Rather compact seed head, well filled with seed at the base. 1007612PI 655973
29PI 655974'TEXAS BLACKHULL KAFIR'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS9SEED1982COLLECTED1009488PI 655974
30PI 655975'WHEATLAND'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor United StatesS9SEED1982DEVELOPEDNEAR 1931"A selection from a kafir-milo hybrid made by J.B. Sieglinger, Woodward, Okla. It was named and first distributed to farmers in Kansas and Oklahoma in 1931." Sieglinger, J.B. 1932. Developing Grain Sorghums for Combine Harvesting. New Agr. Rev. 1 (9):6-8.1010013PI 655975
31PI 655976'RED KAFIR'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Kansas, United StatesS9SEED1982DEVELOPEDInformation from USDA Technical Bulletin No. 506 (July 1936). Plants midseason (113 days average), mid-tall (55 inches average), stems mid-stout (three fourths to seven eighths inch), mid-juicy and dry strains, slightly sweet, tillers and branches sparse, leafy (11 to 15), midribs cloudy except in dry strains, much overlapping in leaf sheaths, panicles erect and mid-compact and slender, rachis averages 80 percent of head length, glumes pubescent but pubescence partly deciduous at maturity, lemmas not awned, stigmas yellow, kernels small to mid-size and reddish brown to yellowish brown and often with dark spots, endosperm starchy. Distinguished from other kafirs by red color of head due to red seed and straw or reddish brown glumes, and from sorgos by sparse tillering, erect habit of growth, long, cylindroid, semicompact (kafir type) heads, and absence of nucellar layer in seed.1010366PI 655976
32PI 669258'DARSO'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Oklahoma, United StatesS91982DEVELOPEDNEAR 1912"Darso is a new sorghum developed and named at the Oklahoma Experiment Station. The exact origin and history is not known. In 1912 the station received the first supply of seed from a farmer in southwest Logan County who sent a head for identification. Later it was learned that it had been grown in a small way in Kingfisher and adjoining counties. Selection work has been carried on at the Oklahoma Experiment Station for high grain-yielding quality and improvement of other characteristics." Beeson, M.A. and Daane, A., 1919. DARSO. Okla. Agr. Expt. Sta. Bull. 127, 19 pp., illus.

The name is a contraction of letters from the descriptive name "dwarf red sorghum."

1007555PI 669258
33PI 669291'DESERT BISHOP'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Oklahoma, United StatesS91982COLLECTED1009533PI 669291
34PI 685243'SHALLU'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Louisiana, United StatesS91982COLLECTED1002413PI 685243
35PI 685244'CALIFORNIA GOLDEN'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor S919821007307PI 685244
36PI 685245'SCHROCK'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Oklahoma, United StatesS91982COLLECTED1007557PI 685245
37PI 685247'FARGO'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor United StatesS91982COLLECTED1009047PI 685247
38PI 685248'BEAVER'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Maryland, United StatesS91982COLLECTED1009544PI 685248
39PI 685249'DAWN KAFIR'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91982COLLECTED1009866PI 685249
40PI 685324'EVERGREEN DWARF'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor S919821004698PI 685324
41PI 700350'WHITE DURRA'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor California, United StatesS91982COLLECTED1010201PI 700350
42PI 641876'EARLY WHITE MILO'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91960DONATED1960Information from 1936 J Amer Soc Agron 28(12):1027-1028, 'Minutes of the Twenty-Ninth Annual Meeting of the Society' which references the 1936 USDA Tech Bul 506. - Early White milo is similar to Standard White milo but is much earlier and has fewer leaves, smaller panicles, and more slender stalks. In height it is intermediate between the Standard White and the Dwarf White varieites. It is the earliest commercial variety of White milo. Stalks are regarded as sweet by some farmers. Also called Sugar milo, Little Sweet milo, 40-day milo, and 70-day milo.1026328PI 641876
43PI 669611'DWARF WHITE MILO'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor United StatesS91960DEVELOPEDInformation from 1936 J Amer Soc Agron 28(12):1027-1028, 'Minutes of the Twenty-Ninth Annual Meeting of the Society' which references the 1936 USDA Tech Bul 506. Like Dwarf Yellow milo except that the seed coat is white.1026327PI 669611
44PI 655984'CHILTEX'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS9SEED1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936).1026248PI 655984
45PI 682845'BROWN DURRA'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS9Not Available1960DONATED1960Literature references -- 1) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506 2) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936).1026233PI 682845
46PI 682846'DWARF FETERITA'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS9Not Available1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936).1026243PI 682846
47PI 682847'GROHOMA'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS9Not Available1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506.1026359PI 682847
48PI 683940'GOOSENECK'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91960DONATED1960Literature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506 3) U.S.D.A. Texas Bul. 496.1026432PI 683940
49PI 667578'RICE KAFIR'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor United StatesS91960DEVELOPEDInformation from Agron. Jour. 28(12):1027 (1936) and USDA Technical Bulletin No. 506 (1936). Rice kafir is similar to Blackhull except in having long, slender panicles similar in shape to those of Red and Pink kafirs. The seeds do not extend so far beyond the apices of the glumes as in Blackhull and have a somewhat corneous or pearly appearance. The history is not known. Probably a selection from the Blackhull variety or from a Blackhull hybrid.1026291PI 667578
50PI 667033'PEARL KAFIR'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor UnknownS91960COLLECTEDLiterature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506.1026290PI 667033
51PI 685253'MANKO'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91960DONATED1960Literature references -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) Texas Bul. 459 3) Kansas Bul. 304 4) Oklahoma Bul. 210.1026342PI 685253
52PI 685254'DWARF FREED'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91960DONATED1960Literature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Texas Bul. 459 3) U.S.D.A. Bul. 304 4) U.S.D.A. Tech Bul. 506.1026355PI 685254
53PI 685255'DAKOTA AMBER'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91960DONATED1960Literature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A Tech. Bul. 506.1026395PI 685255
54PI 685256'DENTON'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91960DONATED1960Literature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936). 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506.1026467PI 685256
55PI 685330'PREMO'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91960DONATED1960Literature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506.1026250PI 685330
56PI 685331'AJAX'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91960DONATED1960Literature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506.1026255PI 685331
57PI 685332'WONDER'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91960DONATED1960Literature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506.1026256PI 685332
58PI 685338'HONEY'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91960DONATED1960Literature reference -- Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936).1026626PI 685338
59PI 61455'HEGARI'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Khartoum, SudanS9PANICLE1924COLLECTED1112066PI 61455
60PI 48770'WHITE KAFIR'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Cape Province, South AfricaS9SEED1919COLLECTED09/27/1919From the market in KimberleyOrdinary kafir corn, probably grown in Orange Free State.1106212PI 48770
61PI 35038'SUMAC'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS9SEED1913COLLECTED1104357PI 35038
62PI 32707'SUNRISE KAFIR'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91912DEVELOPEDInformation from 1936 USDA Tech Bul 506. - Plants midseason (112 days, average of 22 crop years), mid-tall to tall (70 inches, average of 20 crop years); stems mid-stout (three-fourths to seven-eighths inch) but more slender than Blackhull, mid-juicy to juicy, slightly sweet to sweet; tillers mid-freely; branches mid-freely; mid-leafy (10 to 14); midribs cloudy; leaf sheaths overlapping slightly; panicles erect, mid-compact, ellipsoid to cylindroid; rachis 80 to 100 percent of head length; rachis branches mid-long to short, appressed; glumes pubescent but pubescence partly deciduous at maturity, black or reddish black, indurate, elliptic, apices acute or rarely obtuse; lemmas not awned; stigmas white; kernels much exposed laterally in angle of glumes and beyond apices of glumes, mid-size, white with reddish-brown to black spots, ellipsoid, endosperm starchy, corneous layer mid-thick to thick, nucellar layer absent; pedicellate spikelets straw-colored to dark reddish brown, usually persistent at maturity; coleoptiles green. This strain tillers and branches more freely than ordinary Blackhull kafir; the stems are not so stout and are somewhat sweeter; the heads are usually shorter and tend more to the ellipsoid; the glumes are more often straw-colored or with straw edges, and the pedicellate spikelets are a little more persistent; the kernels are not quite so broad in relation to length and are usually a little smaller. The tall strain when purified was first called Early Blackhull Kafir but was later named Sunrise.1103525PI 32707
63PI 30204'JAPANESE DWARF BROOMCORN'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Kansas, United StatesS91911COLLECTED1099275PI 30204
64PI 29166'FREED'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91910COLLECTEDGrown from PI 27764 which was secured from Mr. J.K. Freed, Scott City, Kansas. This variety came from Mr. Freed as White Amber sorgo, but it is evidently a kowliang. Early.1097597PI 29166
65PI 24960'STANDARD YELLOW MILO'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United StatesS91909DONATED03/19091090770PI 24960
66PI 24969'DWARF YELLOW MILO'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor ChinaS9SEED1909COLLECTED1090777PI 24969
67PI 22913'CHINESE AMBER'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor ChinaS91908COLLECTEDTsungming Island"The white variety (SPI No. 22912) is considered inferior to the red (SPI No. 22911, Brown), though planted in the same way. It is planted in richly manured land, in rows 6 inches wide covered lightly with half an inch of earth. If plants come up too thick or crowded, the plants which should be removed are not pulled, but cut off with a sharp knife, so as not to disturb the roots of neighboring plants." (Barchet.)1088418PI 22913
68PI 19517'STANDARD FETERITA'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor SudanS91906COLLECTEDInformation from Vinall, H.N., J.C. Stephens, and J.H. Martin. 1936. Identification, History, and Distribution of Common Sorghum Varieties. USDA, Bul. 506. Early maturing, drought escaping. Plants early (100 days average), mid-tall (59 inches average), stems mid-slender to mid-stout, dry or only slightly juicy, slightly sweet; tillers freely; branches freely; leaves few (7 to 12); midribs white; leaf sheaths overlapping slightly to moderately; branches short to mid-long, appressed; glumes pubescent but pubescence partly deciduous at maturity, usually black but at times straw-colored or redissh brown, indurate, elliptic, apices acute to obtuse; lemmas usually appear awnless but have very short tip awns which usually do not extend beyond the glumes; stigmas creamy white; kernels much exposed in angles and extending well beyond apices of glumes, very large, chalky white, usually with red and black spots, nearly globose but flattened on side opposite the embryo, endosperm starchy, corneous layer thin, nucellar layer present, seed coat checked; coleoptiles green.1083021PI 19517
69PI 18518'MANCHU BROWN KAOLIANG'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Manchuria, ChinaS91906COLLECTEDKaulien sorghum of Manchuria. Grows 8 to 10 feet high.1081534PI 18518
70PI 17548'RED AMBER'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor New South Wales, AustraliaS9SEED1906COLLECTEDGrown from Agrost 1079494PI 17548
71CIso 204'DWARF BLACKHULL KAFIR'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Historic19821004292CIso 204
72CIso 556'EVERGREEN'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Historic1982Cultivar1007122CIso 556
73CIso 628'REED KAFIR'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Oklahoma, United States Historic1982COLLECTED1007647CIso 628
74CIso 827'BLACK SPANISH'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Historic19821009171CIso 827
75CIso 946'DWARF WHITE DURRA'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor California, United States Historic1982COLLECTED1010273CIso 946
76CItr 8054'Superhard'Triticum aestivum L. subsp. aestivum Kansas, United States Historic1982DEVELOPEDCultivar1042129CItr 8054
77NSL 3978'COLMAN'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Historic1960DEVELOPEDInformation from 1936 J Amer Soc Agron 28(12):1027-1028 and 1936 USDA Tech Bul 506. - Plants midseason, tall, stems mid-stout, juicy, sweet; tillers freely; branches sparsely; leafy; midribs cloudy; leaf sheaths overlapping slightly to moderately; panicles mid-size, erect, mid-compact, cylindroid, or sometimes ellipsoid; rachis 60 to 100 percent of head length, usually discontinuous; rachis branches mid-long to short and heavily fruited; glumes appressed, thinly pubescent to glabrous, intense dark red, indurate, veins hardly perceptible, elliptic, apices acute; lemmas not awned; stigmas pale yellow; kernels much exposed, mid-size, plump, mostly light buff but reddish brown when exposed, ellipsoid, to obovoid, endosperm starchy, conreous layer mid-thick, nucellar layer present; pedicellate spikelets mid-size, mostly straw-colored, coleoptiles green or in some strains slightly red. Synonyms Honey Drip, Sugar Drip, and Red Orange.1026414NSL 3978
78NSL 3995'SCARBOROUGH'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936).1026480NSL 3995
79NSL 3940'WESTERN BLACKHULL KAFIR'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Historic1960DONATED19601026269NSL 3940
80NSL 3970'EARLY SUMAC'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936).1026375NSL 3970
81NSL 3972'MINNESOTA AMBER'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936).1026385NSL 3972
82NSL 3973'WACONIA AMBER'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936).1026388NSL 3973
83NSL 3976'ORANGE'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature references -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506 3) Texas Bul. 496 4) Kansas Bul. 304 5) Oklahoma Bul. 210.1026404NSL 3976
84NSL 3977'KANSAS ORANGE'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506 3) Texas Bul. 496 4) Kansas Bul. 304 4) Oklahoma Bul. 210.1026406NSL 3977
85NSL 3979'SOURLESS'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- Agron. Jour. 28:1027-28 (1936).1026415NSL 3979
86NSL 3980'SAPLING'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936).1026423NSL 3980
87NSL 3981'PLANTER'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506.1026424NSL 3981
88NSL 3983'LEOTI'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936).1026433NSL 3983
89NSL 3984'FOLGER'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506.1026442NSL 3984
90NSL 3985'WHITE AFRICAN'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936).1026443NSL 3985
91NSL 3986'ATLAS'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature references -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506 3) Texas Bul. 496 4) Kansas Bul. 304 5) Oklahoma Bul. 210.1026449NSL 3986
92NSL 3987'MCLEAN'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature references -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) U.S.D.A. Tech. Bul. 506 3) Texas Bul. 496.1026452NSL 3987
93NSL 3988'REX'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936).1026459NSL 3988
94NSL 3989'COLLIER'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Literature reference -- 1) Agron. Jour. 28:1027 (1936) 2) Texas Bul. 496.1026461NSL 3989
95NSL 3991'SUGAR DRIP'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Texas, United States Historic1960DONATED1960Information from 1936 J Amer Soc Agron 28(12);1027-1028; Texas Bul. 965 (1960); USDA Tech. Bul. 506:79; and Oklahoma Bul. 210. Plants midseason, mid-tall to tall; stems mid-stout, juicy, sweet; tillers freely; branches mid-freely; mid-leafy; midribs cloudy; leaf sheaths overlapping moderately; panicles erect, mid-size, dense or mid-compact, cylindroid or approacing cylindroid; rachis 75 to 90 percent of head length; rachis branches mid-long, appressed, heavily fruited; glumes small, usually appressed, thinly pubescent on the margins, black to reddish brown, indurate, veins hardly perceptible except near the apex, broadly ovate, apices acute or approaching truncate in some instances; lemmas not awned; kernels plump, very much exposed and extending nearly half their length beyond the apices of the glumes, mid-size, reddish brwon where exposed but lighter in color underneath the glumes, decidely obovoid with the apex rounded so that the seed on the head appears globose, endosperm starchy, corneous layer thick, nucellar layer present; pedicellate spikelets small, inconspicuous, mostly deciduous at maturity; coleoptiles red, or green in some strains. Very similar to Colman.1026470NSL 3991
96CSR 213'Black Spanish Dwarf'Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench subsp. bicolor Historic1939Cultivar1004399CSR 213
97CSR 54'CLEVELAND 54'Gossypium hirsutum L. South Carolina, United States Historic1939DEVELOPEDCultivarIntermediate group.1001730CSR 54
98CSR 55'PIEDMONT CLEVELAND 2-1'Gossypium hirsutum L. Georgia, United States Historic1939DEVELOPEDCultivarRound-boll, short-staple group.1001737CSR 55
99CSR 56'Wannamaker Cleveland'Gossypium hirsutum L. South Carolina, United States Historic1939DEVELOPEDCultivarRound-boll, short-staple group.1001774CSR 56
100CSR 57'Delta and Pine Land 8'Gossypium hirsutum L. Mississippi, United States Historic1939DEVELOPEDCultivarIntermediate group.1001785CSR 57
101CSR 58'Delta and Pine Land 10'Gossypium hirsutum L. Mississippi, United States Historic1939DEVELOPEDCultivarIntermediate group.1001826CSR 58
102CSR 59'Dixie 14'Gossypium hirsutum L. South Carolina, United States Historic1939DEVELOPEDCultivarMedium-late, small-boll, short-staple group.1001838CSR 59
103CSR 60'Pima'Gossypium hirsutum L. Arizona, United States Historic1939DEVELOPEDCultivar1001871CSR 60
104CSR 61'Rowden'Gossypium hirsutum L. Texas, United States Historic1939DEVELOPEDCultivarBig-boll, medium-staple group.1001880CSR 61
105CSR 62'Stoneville'Gossypium hirsutum L. Mississippi, United States Historic1939DEVELOPEDCultivarIntermediate group.1001917CSR 62
106CSR 63'Wilds'Gossypium hirsutum L. South Carolina, United States Historic1939DEVELOPEDCultivarBig-boll, long-staple group.1001924CSR 63
107CSR 64'Deltapine'Gossypium hirsutum L. Mississippi, United States Historic1939DEVELOPEDCultivar1001962CSR 64