Select the tab for the type of search. Each tab has everything you need to do to perform that type of search.

(Results of more than 500 will not return images.)

This search will show only accessions that have material that may be requested, including those not seasonally available.
You may list accessions with separators (commas or semicolons, as shown below) or by entering them on separate lines, such as
PI 651794
PI 651649
PI 651650
When searching a range of accessions, use the Advanced Search tab with the Accession Identifier Range criterion.

The more information you provide, the better the search will be.


Scientific name (any part, no hybrid symbols)

Plant name


Genebank
Country of Origin


Other search criteria:



With genomic data With NCBI link With images Only non-Genetically Engineered

If your results aren't what you expected, try using the Advanced Search tab and filling in more information.
Your query included: All accessions

View Observation Data

Selected item(s) below:


ACCESSIONPLANT NAMETAXONOMYORIGINGENEBANKIMAGEAVAILABILITYRECEIVEDSOURCE TYPESOURCE DATECOLLECTION SITECOORDINATESELEVATIONHABITATIMPROVEMENT LEVELNARRATIVE
0PI 608773BS7Zea mays L. subsp. mays Iowa, United StatesNC7KERNELS1998DEVELOPEDBreeding materialBS7 is a yellow dent semi-exotic breeding population derived from CBK [CBK I (PI 329228)] by two cycles of mass selection in Iowa. CBK I was formed at Kitale, Kenya, by the Major Cereal Project in Africa, with USAID, USDA-ARS, the East African Agriculture and Forestry Research Organization, and the Kenya Ministry of Agriculture, cooperating. CBK I included approximately 50% Corn Belt germplasm and approximately 50% exotic material. The Corn Belt sources were: BSSS2 (PI 550444), BSAA (PI 550448), BSBB (PI 550449), Iowa Two-ear Synthetic #1 (PI 550446), Krug Mass Selection, Nebraska Population V, Nebraska Population L, Pioneer 2-Ear Composite, Pioneer hybrids, DeKalb hybrids, Funk hybrids, and PAG hybrids. The exotic material was: French lines (F2, F7, F47, F49, F52, and F431), NBZ (Corn Belt X Brazilian varieties), Nebr. (Eto X early USA), Nebr. (Eto X Gaspe Flint), Alaskan Composite (Gaspe Flint X early USA double crosses), Kenya Katumani Panmix (composite of Central American material), Kenya Katumani IV (probably derived from Salvadureno), Kenya Embu II (composite of 14 Central American varieties), and Kenya Pp Coastal (composite of coastal Kenya material and Central American sources of Puccinia polysora resistance). Synthesis was done in five seasons of random mating at Kitale as follows: A bulk sample of all entries was planted over a 10-day period; pollen from this bulk was carried to a row for each entry of the synthetic. Entry identification of the "female" was maintained for the five cycles of synthesis to insure thorough recombination. A regional diallel grown in the Corn Belt indicated that the yield of CBK is slightly less than those of improved Corn Belt synthetics and that other agronomic characters are satisfactory (Crop Sci. 11:911-914). Seed color is segregating white and yellow.1002682PI 608773
1PI 608771BSL(S)C4Zea mays L. subsp. mays Iowa, United StatesNC7KERNELS1992DEVELOPEDBreeding materialBSL(S)C4 is a yellow dent breeding population developed from the open-pollinated Lancaster Surecrop variety by four cycles of recurrent S1 selection for stalk-rot resistance. Lancaster Surecrop (PI 213697) was obtained from the North Central Regional Plant Introduction Station, Ames, Iowa, in 1955. S1 progenies were grown with three replications at Ames, Iowa, each cycle and artificially inoculated with spores of Diplodia zeae (Schw.) Lev. The selection intensity was 12, 6, 12, and 11%, respectively, for the four cycles of selection. BSL(S)C0, Cl, C2, and C3 were evaluated as populations per se and in testcross with two unrelated single-cross testers for several agronomic characters (Iowa State J. Sci. 43 (3):229-237; Iowa State J. Sci. 43(3):239-251). BSL(S)C3 was slightly taller, 3 days later in silk emergence, more resistant to natural stalk rot and field stalk lodging, and similar for grain yield (but higher in testcross yields) than Lancaster Surecrop. BSL(S)C4, the next cycle of selection, is resistant to D. zeae as a variety and should be a superior source of inbred lines with satisfactory resistance to stalk rot and field stalk breakage.1082054PI 608771
2PI 608772BS5Zea mays L. subsp. mays Iowa, United StatesNC7KERNELS1992DEVELOPEDBreeding materialBS5 is an early yellow dent synthetic that was developed by intermating twenty-three inbred lines: A265, A548, A554, A575, A619, B8, Ch9, F2, F7, F47, F49, F52, F431, Mt42, ND203, WD, WH, WJ, W9, W59M, W97A, W75, and W153R. This early synthetic was formed in the following manner: single crosses among lines, double crosses among single crosses; all possible double-double crosses among double crosses; and randomly mating the composite for two generations. The purpose for developing this synthetic was to provide an early population for recurrent selection and line development. No selection has been practiced in the synthetic, and the relative yield potential of the synthetic is unknown. BS5 is an early synthetic for central Iowa, requiring approximately 70 days from planting to silking.1082046PI 608772
3PI 608821BS8Zea mays L. subsp. mays Iowa, United StatesNC7KERNELS1970DEVELOPEDBreeding materialBS8 is a semi-exotic synthetic derived from Kenya SK (CBK II) by two cycles of mass selection in Iowa. SK (PI 347266) was formed at Kitale, Kenya, by the Major Cereals Project in Africa, with USAID, USDA-ARS, the East African Agriculture and Forestry Research Organization, and the Kenya Ministry of Agriculture, cooperating. SK includes germplasm from the southern USA and the Corn Belt and exotic material from Central and South America, Africa and Europe. The sources were: N. Carolina Jarvis and Indian Chief, DeKalb southern hybrids, Funk Deep South Syn., Funk Tropical Syn., Coker hybrids, Pioneer southern hybrids, Pioneer West Indies Synthetic (Iowa), Pioneer West Indies Synthetic (Tenn.), Pioneer Caribbean Composite, Pioneer Jamaica Synthetic, Tuxpeno X Lancaster, Yugoslav hybrids, Diacol V254, Diacol V540C, Nigeria Late Composite, Nigeria Composite C, Zambia SR52, Zambia Kalahari Syn., Ecuador 573, Puerto Rico GPO2 and GPO6, Cuba 40-Hawaii 5, Cometico, Israel hybrids, USA X Camalia, Kenya Embu I (composite of Central America and USA Germplasm), Nigeria Bulk 2 (NS-1, Tsolo, Diacol V103, Miss.6002, Miss.6004, Metro, EAAFRO 270, EAAFRO 237, Br.155, and Metro). Synthesis was done in five seasons of random mating at Kitale as follows: A bulk sample of all entries was planted over a 10-day period; pollen from this bulk was carried to a row for each entry of the synthetic. Entry identification of the "female" was maintained for the five cycles of synthesis to insure thorough recombination. SK was evaluated in a regional diallel grown in seven southern locations (Crop Sci. 11:911-914). Seed color is segregating white and yellow.1002687PI 608821