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 taxonomy genus name like Corylus

View Observation Data

Selected item(s) below:


ACCESSIONPLANT NAMETAXONOMYORIGINGENEBANKIMAGEAVAILABILITYRECEIVEDSOURCE TYPESOURCE DATECOLLECTION SITECOORDINATESELEVATIONHABITATIMPROVEMENT LEVELNARRATIVE
0PI 699709OSU 1529.019Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCOROut of Season2021COLLECTEDPRE 2021Wild materialShawn Mehlenbacher (OSU) selection from OP seed lots imported from Georgia. Collected by Michele Pisetta and Nana Mirotadze.2132814PI 699709
1PI 699710OSU 1529.070Corylus avellana L. Balakən, AzerbaijanCOROut of Season2021COLLECTEDPRE 202140.45899800, 49.92029500Wild materialShawn Mehlenbacher (OSU) selection from OP seed lot from Georgia2132815PI 699710
2PI 699711OSU 1609.048Corylus avellana L. RomaniaCOROut of Season2021COLLECTEDPRE 2021Wild materialShawn Mehlenbacher (OSU) selection from OP seed lot from Romania2132816PI 699711
3PI 699712OSU 1609.066Corylus avellana L. RomaniaCOROut of Season2021COLLECTEDPRE 2021Wild materialShawn Mehlenbacher (OSU) selection from OP seed lot from Romania2132817PI 699712
4PI 699713OSU 1610.081Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCOROut of Season2021COLLECTEDPRE 2021Wild materialShawn Mehlenbacher (OSU) selection from OP seed lot from Georgia2132818PI 699713
5PI 699714OSU 1610.090Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCOROut of Season2021COLLECTEDPRE 2021Wild materialShawn Mehlenbacher (OSU) selection from OP seed lot from Georgia2132819PI 699714
6PI 699715OSU 1611.025Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCOROut of Season2021COLLECTEDPRE 2021Wild materialShawn Mehlenbacher (OSU) selection from OP seed lot from Georgia2132820PI 699715
7PI 699716OSU 1611.072Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCOROut of Season2021COLLECTEDPRE 2009Wild materialShawn Mehlenbacher (OSU) selection from OP seed lot from Georgia2132821PI 699716
8PI 699717OSU 1633.042Corylus avellana L. NorwayCOROut of Season2021COLLECTEDPRE 2021Kommersoya village59.52520000, 10.317300001222Wild materialShawn Mehlenbacher (OSU) selection from OP seed lot from Norway2132822PI 699717
9PI 699726OSU 1613.073Corylus avellana L. K'akheti, GeorgiaCOROut of Season2021COLLECTED2010Lagodekhi District, kakheti41.82630000, 46.26949000460Wild materialSelection from OSU, seedling of CCOR 961, from K'akheti, Georgia. 2132833PI 699726
10PI 699727OSU 1564.064Corylus avellana L. K'akheti, GeorgiaCOROut of Season2021COLLECTED2010Lagodekhi District, K'akheti41.82630000, 46.26949000460Wild materialSelection from OSU, seedling of CCOR 961, from K'akheti, Georgia. 2132834PI 699727
11PI 699728Corylus avellana L. Historic2021Cultivated materialSelection from OSU, Seedling of CCOR 956, from K'akheti, Georgia; OP seedling of 'Zolotoy orekh'2132835PI 699728
12PI 699729OSU 1646.042Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2021COLLECTED08/201241.04900000, 47.59600000Wild materialSelection from OSU, seedling of CCOR 995, from Azerbaijan, Xacmaz Market2132836PI 699729
13PI 693270OSU 1520.044Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCOROut of Season2020COLLECTED2009Wild materialRooted layber received from S. Mehlenbacher in March 31, 2020. Mehlenbacher had received from Pisetta in Republic of Georgia. EFB susceptible according to Shawn Mehlenbacher.2104865PI 693270
14PI 693271OSU 1529.011Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCOROut of Season2020COLLECTED2009Wild materialRooted layber received from S. Mehlenbacher in March 31, 2020. Mehlenbacher had received from Pisetta in Republic of Georgia.No EFB? according to Shawn Mehlenbacher.2104866PI 693271
15PI 690306OSU 1529.011Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2019DONATED2009Wild materialRooted layer received from S. Mehlenbacher in April, 2019. Mehlenbacher had received from Pisetta in Republic of Georgia. No EFB cankers observed in Mehlenbacher breeder collection suggesting possible resistance. Incompatibility S-alleles: 22 312091614PI 690306
16PI 688901'Amarillo'Corylus avellana L. ChileCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957876PI 688901
17PI 688902'Amarillo Tardio'Corylus avellana L. ChileCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957877PI 688902
18PI 688903'Verde'Corylus avellana L. ChileCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957878PI 688903
19PI 688904'Anakliuri'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957879PI 688904
20PI 688905'Ashrafi'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957880PI 688905
21PI 688906'Ata Baba'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957881PI 688906
22PI 688907'Barli'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957882PI 688907
23PI 688908'Bomba'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957883PI 688908
24PI 688909'Dedoplistiti'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957884PI 688909
25PI 688910'Elbari'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957885PI 688910
26PI 688911'Firavan'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957886PI 688911
27PI 688912'Gahk Faresh'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957887PI 688912
28PI 688913'Galib'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as grafted tree.1957888PI 688913
29PI 688914'Ganja'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957889PI 688914
30PI 688915'Gizil Findik'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957890PI 688915
31PI 688916'Gobekli'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957891PI 688916
32PI 688917'Gulshishvela'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957892PI 688917
33PI 688918'Nemsa'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957893PI 688918
34PI 688919'Qabala'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957894PI 688919
35PI 688920'Sachakhli'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957895PI 688920
36PI 688921'Shveliskura'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957896PI 688921
37PI 688922'Tala'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957897PI 688922
38PI 688923'Topkhara'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DONATEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957898PI 688923
39PI 688924'Uzum Sakar'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCOROut of Season2018DONATEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957899PI 688924
40PI 688925'Yagli Findiq'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957900PI 688925
41PI 688926'Zaqatala 9'Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957901PI 688926
42PI 688927Moscow N02 RedleafCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.EFB Resistant1957902PI 688927
43PI 688928Moscow N06Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957903PI 688928
44PI 688929Moscow N08 RedleafCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957904PI 688929
45PI 688930Moscow N11 RedleafCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957905PI 688930
46PI 688931Moscow N12 RedleafCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957906PI 688931
47PI 688932Moscow N23Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree. EFB Resistant1957907PI 688932
48PI 688933Moscow N26Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as grafted tree. EFB Resistant1957908PI 688933
49PI 688934Moscow N28Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957909PI 688934
50PI 688935Moscow N33Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957910PI 688935
51PI 688936Moscow N34 RedleafCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957911PI 688936
52PI 688937Moscow N35 RedleafCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957912PI 688937
53PI 688938Moscow N36Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957913PI 688938
54PI 688939Moscow N37 RedleafCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree. EFB Resistant1957914PI 688939
55PI 688940Moscow N38Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957915PI 688940
56PI 688941Moscow N43 RedleafCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957916PI 688941
57PI 688942Moscow N45 RedleafCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDCultivarReceived as self-rooted tree.1957917PI 688942
58PI 688048C. avellana ALB-2015-013 BogeCorylus avellana L. Shkodër, AlbaniaCORNot Available2016COLLECTED09/14/2015Boge - below the houses of the village42.38614000, 19.63450000877Wild material1940888PI 688048
59PI 688051'Burgundy Lace'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2015DEVELOPEDCultivarDescription: Leaves of ‘Burgundy Lace’ are dark reddish purple when young, are deeply incised and narrower than most European hazelnut cultivars, forming a delicate, lacey tree canopy. ‘Burgundy Lace’ inherited resistance from the cultivar ‘Gasaway’ to the Oregon race of Anisogramma anomala, the fungus that causes eastern filbert blight. The growth habit and moderate vigor of ‘Burgundy Lace’ will make it easy to maintain in a landscape setting, as the tree will be under 35’ at maturity. To maintain a tree form, basal suckers must be removed several times per year. The red leaf color fades to green as leaves age, but leaf midribs, husks and young catkins retain their red color. Male catkins are dark red and are showy when blooming in late winter. Cold hardiness of ‘Burgundy Lace’ is expected to be suitable for USDA zones 4-8, but has not been tested.

Background: ‘Burgundy Lace’ is a unique hazelnut selection for the ornamental landscape tree market. It is the only European hazelnut (Corylus avellana) cultivar in the nursery trade that combines dissected leaves (the cutleaf trait), red leaf color and resistance to the Oregon strain of eastern filbert blight (EFB). The tree is moderately vigorous and has a desirable upright-spreading growth habit that should be easy to manage in a landscape setting. ‘Burgundy Lace’ was selected at Oregon State University from a family of seedlings developed by crossing 2 half-sib selections, OSU 562.034 and OSU 562.062 in 1998. The nuts are small and the kernels are edible, but nut production will be minimal unless a second hazelnut cultivar is planted nearby to provide compatible pollen. The female flowers are inconspicuous, but the red male catkins are showy and provide very interesting appeal when blooming in late winter. -- http://icoregon.technologypublisher.com/technology/21725

1927656PI 688051
60PI 68805010-50Corylus hybr.Nebraska, United StatesCORNot Available2015DEVELOPEDBreeding materialCCOR 1022 - Corylus hybrid 10-50 About 5000 seedlings, believed to be advanced-generation hybrids of C. americana and C. avellana, originated at the Badgersett Research Farm in Canton, Minnesotta and were planted at the Arbor Day Farm in Nebraska City, Nebraska in 1996. Hybrid 10-50 is from a group of high-yielding selections identified at the Arbor Day Farm. Using DNA markers, Sathuvalli and Mehlenbacher showed that most of the Arbor Day accessions clustered with C. americana 'Winkler'. Their results are logical because 'Winkler' was used extensively by Weschcke in his breeding efforts. Rutter relied heavily on Weschcke's material in establishing plantings at the Badgersett Farm. Hybrid seedlings from Badgersett have been distributed throughout the midwestern and eastern states. See: http://www.badgersett.com/ -- Capik and Molnar. 20121935366PI 688050
61PI 688049'Red Dragon'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCOROut of Season2015DEVELOPED03/2008Cultivar‘Red Dragon’ is a new ornamental hazelnut (Corylus avellana L.) cultivar. It was released by the Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station in Mar. 2008. ‘Red Dragon’ has red leaves, contorted growth habit, and resistance to eastern filbert blight (EFB) caused by Anisogramma anomala (Peck) E. Müller.

Origin: ‘Red Dragon’, tested as OSU 897.078, resulted from a cross of OSU 487.055 × OSU 367.039 (Fig. 1) made in 1997. OSU 487.055 is from a cross of ‘Contorta’ (syn. Corylus avellana var. contorta) × VR 6-28, and OSU 367.039 is a redleaf selection from seeds derived from open pollination of ‘Contorta’. VR 6-28 is from a cross of ‘Riccia di Talanico’ from southern Italy and ‘Gasaway’. We believe that ‘Rode Zeller’ (syn. ‘Rote Zellernuss’) is the donor of the redleaf trait, which is conferred by a dominant allele at the leaf anthocyanin locus. A tree of ‘Rode Zeller’ was near the ‘Contorta’ tree from which open-pollinated nuts were collected. ‘Red Dragon’, OSU 487.055, and VR 6-28 carry in a heterozygous state a dominant allele for complete resistance to EFB in Oregon from ‘Gasaway’ (Mehlenbacher et al., 1991). Contorted growth habit is conferred by a recessive allele from ‘Contorta’ (Smith and Mehlenbacher, 1996). ‘Contorta’ was discovered in a hedgerow in Frocester, U.K., approximately 1863 and has been propagated by graftage or layerage (Wakefield, 1962). The nursery trade often calls it ‘Harry Lauder's Walking Stick’. Hybrid seeds from the cross OSU 487.055 × OSU 367.039 were harvested in Aug. 1997, stratified, and seedlings with contorted growth habit grown in the greenhouse during the summer of 1998 using standard practices (Thompson et al., 1996). From this cross, 42 seedlings with contorted growth habit were planted in the field in Oct. 1998. The designation OSU 897.078 indicates the row and tree location of the original seedling. Nuts were first observed on the original seedling in 2002. Grafted trees of ‘Contorta’ and 19 contorted selections, three or four trees of each, were planted in a trial in Mar. 2004. The trial was a randomized design in a single row located at the Smith Horticulture Research Farm in Corvallis. Trees in the trial were observed from 2004 to 2008. In 2006 and 2007, 10 nursery growers were invited to take notes on the trees and comment as to which were more desirable. These comments supplemented the notes recorded by the hazelnut breeding program (S.A. Mehlenbacher and D.C. Smith).Description: Compared with ‘Contorta’, grafted trees of ‘Red Dragon’ are slightly more vigorous with a desirable growth habit that is spreading rather than pendulous and have moderate branching. Too little branching would result in a “leggy” appearance, whereas too much branching would result in a very dense canopy. The moderate vigor of ‘Red Dragon’ should facilitate propagation. The degree of contortion is moderate, which is also considered desirable. Because of the natural growth habit of ‘Red Dragon’, it should be possible to maintain a desirable tree form with minimal pruning. Catkins, leaf buds, and young leaves are dark purple in color. Leaf size is medium, allowing the contorted growth to be visible in the summer months. The leaves of ‘Red Dragon’, like those of ‘Contorta’, are somewhat curled. Compared with other selections in the trial, ‘Red Dragon’ showed better retention of red leaf color in late summer in leaves near the shoot terminals. Comments on ‘Red Dragon’ from nursery growers were overwhelmingly positive, especially for growth habit and color retention. ‘Red Dragon’ and several similar selections were propagated by tie-off layerage of the suckers in the summers of 2003 through 2005 and harvested in late November to early January. The layers of ‘Red Dragon’ rooted with a higher frequency and produced more roots than most other contorted selections, and the layers were moderately vigorous (data not shown). In May 2002, DNA was extracted from several contorted seedlings and amplified with the polymerase chain reaction. Random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers UBC 152800, UBC 268580, and AA12850 that are linked to the EFB resistance gene from ‘Gasaway’ (Mehlenbacher et al., 2004) are present in ‘Red Dragon’. Scions were collected from ‘Red Dragon’ and several other contorted selections in the spring of 2004 and three trees of each were grafted to rooted layers of C. avellana. The shoot tips of the grafted trees were inoculated in the greenhouse with a spore suspension of A. anomala and then held under high humidity (Lunde et al., 2000). All three inoculated trees of ‘Red Dragon’ remained free of disease as did the resistant ‘Gasaway’ controls, whereas those of several other selections and the susceptible ‘Daviana’ controls in the same test developed cankers. The lack of cankers confirmed the results of the RAPD markers and indicates complete resistance to the isolate of EFB in Oregon. The response of ‘Red Dragon’ to inoculation with other isolates of EFB from the eastern United States has not been tested. Susceptibility to bacterial blight caused by Xanthomonas campestris pv. corylina has not been determined, although no trees have been lost to the disease in our trial plots. Damage by bud mites (primarily Phytoptus avellanae Nal.) was rated on ‘Red Dragon’, ‘Contorta’, and eight other contorted selections in the trial planted in Spring 2004. Ratings from 1 (no blasted buds) to 5 (many blasted buds) were recorded on three or four trees of each genotype in December for 3 years (2005 to 2007). Bud mite susceptibility ratings for ‘Red Dragon’ (3.1) and ‘Contorta’ (2.6) were not significantly different [least significant difference (lsd) (0.05) = 0.9]. Bud mite ratings on the original seedlings of ‘Red Dragon’ and other contorted selections recorded in Dec. 2000 to 2002 and 2004 were similar to those in the trial. The number of catkins was rated in the trial simultaneously with bud mite ratings on a scale of 1 (no catkins) to 5 (many catkins). ‘Red Dragon’ (2.3) sets fewer catkins than ‘Contorta’ (3.2) but more than several other selections (lsd 0.05 = 0.6). Hazelnuts flower in midwinter with few other plants. Catkins elongate in mid- to late winter in response to warm temperatures and, combined with the contorted growth habit, make an attractive display in the garden. The catkins are purple (Fig. 3), but the pollen is yellow. Pollen shed and female receptivity occur late in the season, at a similar time to ‘Contorta’. ‘Red Dragon’ is being released for its ornamental value rather than nut production. ‘Red Dragon’ sets a few nuts that are small, slightly long, and compressed. The nuts are borne in clusters of one or two in husks equal in length to the nuts. ‘Red Dragon’ has incompatibility alleles S6 and S26. Both alleles are expressed in the stigmas, but only S6 is expressed in the pollen. Fingerprints from simple sequence repeat markers show that ‘Red Dragon’ is different from the recently introduced C. avellana ‘Red Majestic’ (Plant Patent 16048) and that trees of ‘Red Majestic’ from two sources showed different fingerprints. ‘Red Majestic’ combines red leaf color and contorted growth habit, but the Plant Patent does not mention resistance to EFB. -- Mehlenbacher and Smith. 2009. HortScience 44:843-844.

1940579PI 688049
62PI 688052C. pontica GEO-14-74 GhulelebiCorylus avellana L. GeorgiaCOROut of Season2014COLLECTED09/2014Ghulelebi village in Tianeti District.41.93819000, 44.931420001060Wild material1921325PI 688052
63PI 688053C. colurna GEO-14-75 LadzgveriaCorylus colurna L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2014COLLECTED09/2014Found on road side in Ladzgveria, Tsageri Dist.42.52053000, 42.63928000Wild materialCollector notes: Geo14-75: Corylus collurna This was found on road side in Ladzgveria, Tsageri Dist. Although occur in abundance, nut are hard to find. Past seed maturity period.1921324PI 688053
64PI 688054'Suvodol'Corylus avellana L. Kharkiv, UkraineCORNot Available2014DEVELOPEDCultivar1917817PI 688054
65PI 688055'Lozovskoy Sharovidnii'Corylus avellana L. Kharkiv, UkraineCORNot Available2014DEVELOPEDCultivar1917816PI 688055
66PI 688056'Crvenje'Corylus avellana L. SerbiaCORNot Available2014DEVELOPEDCultivarHighly resistant to Eastern Filbert Blight1917815PI 688056
67PI 688057'Menoia'Corylus avellana L. ItalyCORNot Available2014DEVELOPEDCultivar1917814PI 688057
68PI 688058'Reka 2'Corylus avellana L. SerbiaCORNot Available2014DEVELOPEDCultivar1917813PI 688058
69PI 688059ALB-2013-044Corylus avellana L. Gjirokastër, AlbaniaCORNot Available2014COLLECTED10/05/2013Collected near town of Belerat.40.20630000, 20.20310000975Associated vegetation: Oriental hornbeam, maple, oak, walnut, field maple, rowan.Wild material1914873PI 688059
70PI 688060ALB-2013-042Corylus colurna L. Gjirokastër, AlbaniaCOROut of Season2014COLLECTED10/05/2013Collected near town of Belerat.40.19450000, 20.217500001006Associated vegetation: cherry plum, wild cherry.Wild material1914872PI 688060
71PI 686862'Alli'Corylus avellana L. EstoniaCORNot Available2013DEVELOPEDCultivar1908308PI 686862
72PI 686863'Borovskoi'Corylus avellana L. UkraineCORNot Available2013DEVELOPEDCultivar1908309PI 686863
73PI 686864'Catalan'Corylus avellana L. PolandCORNot Available2013DEVELOPEDCultivar1908310PI 686864
74PI 686865'Dnepr 1'Corylus avellana L. UkraineCORNot Available2013DEVELOPEDCultivar1908311PI 686865
75PI 686866'Ducalovici'Corylus avellana L. SerbiaCORNot Available2013DEVELOPEDCultivar1908312PI 686866
76PI 686867'Gauna'Corylus avellana L. ArgentinaCORNot Available2013DEVELOPEDCultivar1908313PI 686867
77PI 686868'Mar del Plata'Corylus avellana L. ArgentinaCORNot Available2013DEVELOPEDCultivar1908314PI 686868
78PI 686869'Reka 1'Corylus avellana L. SerbiaCORNot Available2013DEVELOPEDCultivar1908315PI 686869
79PI 686871'Uebov'Corylus avellana L. SerbiaCORNot Available2013DEVELOPEDCultivar1908318PI 686871
80PI 686872'Veletan'Corylus avellana L. UkraineCORNot Available2013DEVELOPEDCultivar1908319PI 686872
81PI 688061ALB-2012-039Corylus avellana L. AlbaniaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2012Wild material1905982PI 688061
82PI 688062ALB-2012-027Corylus avellana L. AlbaniaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2012Wild material1905981PI 688062
83PI 688063ALB-2012-025Corylus avellana L. AlbaniaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2012Wild material1905980PI 688063
84PI 688064AZN 12-96Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2012COLLECTED08/2012market in Xacmaz41.04900000, 47.59600000Wild material1903507PI 688064
85PI 665923Sochi RedleafCorylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2012DEVELOPED2011Cultivar1901295PI 665923
86PI 665924OSU 1200.070Corylus avellana L. IranCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2003River valley south of Tonekabon36.72900000, 50.84300000Wild materialAccession split into separate PI numbers. 01/08/20221901297PI 665924
87PI 665925OSU 1217.005Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2003near Abasha42.42400000, 42.39300000Wild materialSplit accession to cover different seedlings selected by OSU Hazelnut Breeding program1901298PI 665925
88PI 688065C. avellana Alushka-Simferopol-5Corylus avellana L. Krym, UkraineCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2002Nuts from vendor 5 along highway from Alushka to Simferopol.44.89000000, 33.93000000Wild material1901296PI 688065
89PI 699590OSU 1217.034Corylus avellana L. IranCORNot Available2012COLLECTED200336.72900000, 50.84300000Wild materialAccession split into separate PI numbers. 01/08/20222125443PI 699590
90PI 699591OSU 1217.090Corylus avellana L. IranCORNot Available2012COLLECTED200336.72900000, 50.84300000Wild materialAccession split into separate PI numbers. 01/08/20222125444PI 699591
91PI 699592OSU 1225,046Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED200342.42400000, 42.39300000Wild materialSplit accession to cover different seedlings2125445PI 699592
92PI 699593OSU 1225.067Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED200342.42400000, 42.39300000Wild material2125446PI 699593
93PI 665897OSU 1120.034Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2001Breeding material1902219PI 665897
94PI 665922C. fargesii OSU 640.060Corylus fargesii (Franch.) C. K. Schneid. Gansu Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED1982Cultivated material1899698PI 665922
95PI 665918C. avellana ALB-2011-014Corylus avellana L. Pogradec, AlbaniaCOROut of Season2011COLLECTED09/14/2011From fruit market just beyond the lake while traveling up the mountain after Perrenjas.40.86241000, 20.69537000840Market sample said to have been collected in nature nearby.Wild material1891847PI 665918
96PI 665919C. avellana ALB-2011-030Corylus avellana L. AlbaniaCOROut of Season2011COLLECTED09/15/201140.23797000, 20.64339000869From riparian area along Barmash River.Wild material1891855PI 665919
97PI 665920C. avellana ALB-2011-049Corylus avellana L. AlbaniaCOROut of Season2011COLLECTED09/17/201142.29936000, 19.54058000490Wild material1891861PI 665920
98PI 665921C. avellana ALB-2011-056Corylus avellana L. AlbaniaCOROut of Season2011COLLECTED09/18/2011Gimaj Village42.32649000, 19.77298000510decidous woods by guest house of Maria and PrelaWild material1891893PI 665921
99PI 699572C. avellana ALB-2011-090Corylus avellana L. Tepelene, AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/22/2011Village of Progonat40.21378000, 19.94491000930in fence-row by home in villageWild material1891989PI 699572
100PI 665902C. avellana AdygeyskCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTED2002Nuts from roadside vendor in Adygeysk, Russia44.89980000, 39.16180000Wild material1874103PI 665902
101PI 665903C. avellana Homskij-1Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTEDWild material1874105PI 665903
102PI 665904C. avellana Homskij-2Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTEDWild material1874106PI 665904
103PI 665905C. avellana Homskij-3Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTEDWild material1874107PI 665905
104PI 665906OSU 1168.009Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTEDWild materialTransfer of OSU selection number to a new PI number KH 20221874109PI 665906
105PI 665907C. avellana Krasnodar-4Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTED200245.05030000, 38.98000000Wild material1874110PI 665907
106PI 665908C. avellana MaikopCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTED2002Nuts collected from trees at Maikop VIR station44.60980000, 39.97580000Wild material1874111PI 665908
107PI 665909C. avellana Sochi InstituteCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTED2002Nuts from trees growing at theVIR station in Sochi.43.57400000, 39.75290000Wild material1874112PI 665909
108PI 665910C. avellana Sochi-2Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTED2002Nuts obtained from vendor 2 at Sochi farmers market.43.58500000, 39.71950000Wild material1874113PI 665910
109PI 665911C. avellana Sochi-3Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTED2002Nuts obtained from vendor 3 at Sochi farmers market.43.58500000, 39.71950000Wild material1874114PI 665911
110PI 665912OSU 1184.096Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTED2002Nuts from vendor 4 at Sochi farmers market.43.58500000, 39.71950000Wild material1874115PI 665912
111PI 665913OSU 1169.021Corylus avellana L. Krym, UkraineCORNot Available2011COLLECTED2002Nuts from vendor 1 along highway from Alushka to Simferopol.44.72700000, 34.32100000Wild material1874116PI 665913
112PI 665914C. avellana Alushka-Simferopol-1Corylus avellana L. Krym, UkraineCORNot Available2011COLLECTED2002Nuts from vendor 1 along highway from Alushka to Simferopol.44.72700000, 34.32100000Wild material1874151PI 665914
113PI 665915OSU 1169.072Corylus avellana L. Krym, UkraineCORNot Available2011COLLECTED2002Nuts from vendor 2 along highway from Alushka to Simferopol.44.77500000, 34.27500000Wild material1874152PI 665915
114PI 665916C. avellana Alushka-Simferopol-4Corylus avellana L. Krym, UkraineCORNot Available2011COLLECTED2002Nuts from vendor 4 along highway from Alushka to Simferopol.44.83900000, 34.14800000Wild material1874157PI 665916
115PI 665917C. avellana Nikita Botanic GardenCorylus avellana L. Krym, UkraineCORNot Available2011COLLECTED2002Nuts from trees growing at Nikita Botanical Garden.44.51700000, 34.20200000Wild material1874162PI 665917
116PI 699573OSU 1187.112Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTEDPRE 2011Kholmsk, Russia Market - collected from wild nearby47.06574000, 142.0584350058Wild materialTransfer of OSU selection number to a new PI number KH 20222125425PI 699573
117PI 699574OSU 1168.013Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available2011COLLECTEDPRE 2011Kholmsk market47.06574000, 142.0584350052Wild materialTransfer of OSU selection number to a new PI number KH 2022 Seeds were purchased at a market but were gathered in the wild for sale at the market.
Kholmsk, known until 1946 as Maoka, is a port town and the administrative center of Kholmsky District of Sakhalin Oblast, Russia. It is located on the southwest coast of the Sakhalin Island, on coast of the gulf of Nevelsky in the Strait of Tartary of the Sea of Japan, 83 kilometers west of Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk.
2125426PI 699574
118PI 699589OSU 1169.032Corylus avellana L. UkraineCORNUTNot Available2011COLLECTED200244.72700000, 34.32100000Wild materialTransfer of OSU selection number to a new PI number KH 2022 2125442PI 699589
119PI 686870'Trbusani'Corylus avellana L. SerbiaCORNot Available2011DEVELOPEDCultivar1908316PI 686870
120PI 690307OSU 1565.090Corylus avellana L. K'akheti, GeorgiaCOROut of Season2010COLLECTED2019Lagodekhi District, kakheti41.82630000, 46.26949000460Breeding materialSeedling inventory CCOR 956.003 evaluated as OSU 1565.090 did not exhibit symptoms of EFG and has S-alleles: 4 20.1850733PI 690307
121PI 690308C. avellana G10-110Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTEDDezertiri Market, Tbilisi41.72112000, 44.79364000420Wild materialEvaluated at OSU as selection 1564.006. Susceptible to EFB. S-alleles: 2 30.1850732PI 690308
122PI 693803Khrustala O.P. G 10-112Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTEDLagodekhi District, kakheti41.82630000, 46.26949000460Breeding material1850734PI 693803
123PI 699449C. avellana GeorgiaCorylus avellana L. CORNot Available2010Breeding materialgerminated by OSU hazelnut program and donated to NCGR in 20211850738PI 699449
124PI 699569C. avellana G10-109Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTEDNinigori41.82583000, 46.21062000360Cultivated material1850731PI 699569
125PI 699570C. avellana GavazuriCorylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTEDGavazi, district Kvareli41.85401000, 45.86652000260Cultivated material1850739PI 699570
126PI 699571C. colurna G10-159Corylus colurna L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTEDTbilisi Botanical Garden41.68526000, 44.80471000500Wild material1850742PI 699571
127PI 665926OSU 529.001Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED199041.80480000, 123.4330000055Wild material1901590PI 665926
128PI 665927OSU 567.004Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED1991Wild materialSplit accession into separate PI and CLOCAL number for seedlots1901591PI 665927
129PI 699594OSU 529.008Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED199041.80480000, 123.4330000055Wild material2125447PI 699594
130PI 699595OSU 529.011Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED199041.80480000, 123.4330000055Wild material2125448PI 699595
131PI 699596OSU 529.017Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED199941.80480000, 123.43300000Wild material2125449PI 699596
132PI 699597OSU 529.020Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED199941.80480000, 123.4330000055Wild material2125450PI 699597
133PI 699598OSU 529.025Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED199941.80480000, 123.4330000055Wild material2125451PI 699598
134PI 699599OSU 529.027Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED199941.80480000, 123.4330000055Wild material2125452PI 699599
135PI 699600OSU 529.030Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED199941.80480000, 123.4330000055Wild material2125453PI 699600
136PI 699601OSU 529.033Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED199941.80480000, 123.4330000055Wild material2125454PI 699601
137PI 699602OSU 529.037Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED199941.80480000, 123.4330000055Wild material2125455PI 699602
138PI 699603OSU 567.011Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED1991Wild material2125456PI 699603
139PI 699604OSU 567.013Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED1991Wild material2132315PI 699604
140PI 699605OSU 567.018Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED199155Wild material2132316PI 699605
141PI 693933'York'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2010DEVELOPED2011Cultivar‘York’ and ‘Felix’ are two new hazelnut (Corylus avellana) pollenizers. They were released by the Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station in Feb. 2012 to provide compatible pollen for cultivars Yamhill, Dorris, Wepster, McDonald and Jefferson. ‘York’ sheds pollen in midseason and is recommended as a pollenizer for ‘Yamhill’, ‘Dorris’, ‘Wepster’, and ‘McDonald’. ‘Felix’ sheds pollen in late midseason and is recommended as a pollenizer for the late-flowering ‘Jefferson’. Nut yields of the new pollenizers are lower than for cultivars but kernel quality is high. The presence of random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers linked to a dominant allele from ‘Gasaway’ indicates that ‘York’ and ‘Felix’ have a high level of resistance to eastern filbert blight (EFB) incited by Anisogramma anomala. ‘Felix’ developed no cankers following greenhouse inoculation, and both pollenizers have remained free of cankers over several years of field exposure. The name ‘York’ honors the slave owned by William Clark who made major contributions to the success of the Lewis and Clark expedition.

‘York’, tested as OSU 878.048, was selected from a population of 183 seedlings from a cross of OSU 479.027 × OSU 504.065 made in 1997 (Fig. 1). The pedigree includes germplasm from Greece (‘Tombul Ghiaghli’), Italy (‘Tonda Gentile delle Langhe’ and ‘Montebello’), and Spain (‘Barcelona’ and ‘Casina’). Grower selections ‘Butler’ and ‘Compton’ are believed to be hybrids of ‘Barcelona’ and the pollenizer ‘Daviana’, which is of English origin. A dominant allele from ‘Gasaway’ confers EFB resistance (Mehlenbacher et al., 1991) to its parent OSU 504.065 and grandparent VR 17-15. Hybrid seeds from the cross were harvested in Aug. 1997, stratified, and planted in flats in the greenhouse as radicles emerged. The resulting seedlings were transplanted to 2.8-L pots and grown in the greenhouse during the Summer of 1998, then moved outdoors to harden before planting in the field in October. The designation OSU 878.048 indicates the row and tree location of the original seedling. ‘Felix’, tested as OSU 941.016, was selected from a population of 157 seedlings from a cross of OSU 384.095 × ‘Delta’ made in 1998 (Fig. 1). The pedigree includes germplasm from Greece (‘Extra Ghiaghli’, which is a clone of ‘Tombul’ from Turkey), Italy (‘Tonda Gentile delle Langhe’), and Spain (‘Casina’). ‘Delta’ carries a dominant allele from ‘Gasaway’ for resistance to EFB. Hybrid seeds from the cross were stratified and the resulting seedlings grown in the greenhouse and planted in the field as described for ‘York’ but 1 year later. The designation OSU 941.016 indicates the row and tree location of the original seedling.
Propriety rights OSU
1901294PI 693933
142PI 665886OSU 1091.140Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNUTNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Wild material1901776PI 665886
143PI 665887OSU 1092.032Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Wild material1901777PI 665887
144PI 665888OSU 1092.073Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNUTNot Available2010COLLECTED2001market in Xacmaz41.04900000, 47.59600000Wild material1901778PI 665888
145PI 665889Ata Baba #1Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Breeding material1901779PI 665889
146PI 665890OSU 1120.052Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Breeding material1901780PI 665890
147PI 665891OSU 1121.036Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNUTNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Wild material1901781PI 665891
148PI 665892KakhetiCorylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNUTNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Wild material1901783PI 665892
149PI 665893OblateCorylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Breeding material1901784PI 665893
150PI 665894Georgia Small Round #2Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Breeding material1901785PI 665894
151PI 665895OSU 1090.112 - Khachapura Dark Shell #1Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Breeding material1901786PI 665895
152PI 665896OSU 1120.025 - Large Round #1Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Breeding material1902218PI 665896
153PI 665898OSU 1133.036 - Large Round #2Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Breeding material1902221PI 665898
154PI 665899OSU 1116.059Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2010COLLECTED2001market in Xacmaz41.04900000, 47.59600000Wild material1901782PI 665899
155PI 665900Georgia Kakheti OSU 1120.020Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Breeding material1902217PI 665900
156PI 665901OSU 1133.009Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED2001Breeding material1902220PI 665901
157PI 665883C. sieboldiana JPN-2009-098Corylus sieboldiana Blume Hokkaidô, JapanCORNot Available2009COLLECTED09/14/2009Bibai, Hokkaido Forestry Research Institute43.29106000, 141.8547300056Cultivated plants in demonstration garden. Originally collected from the wild in Hokkaido.Wild materialFrom September 7 to 25, 2009, U.S. scientists K. Hummer and J. Postman from the USDA Agricultural Research Service and Japanese scientists H. Iketani and H. Imanishi from the Japanese Ministry of Forestry and Fisheries/National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, and Akita Agricultural University collaborated on an expedition to collect temperate fruit genera in Hokkaido and northern Honshu, Japan. An agreement between Japan and the USDA specified the terms of exchange, and materials collected were shared between scientists of both countries.1824033PI 665883
158PI 665884C. heterophylla JPN-2009-142Corylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Iwate, JapanCOROut of Season2009COLLECTED09/21/2009Near Morioka City.39.74382000, 141.15778000210At edge of dense forest where some light filters through, growing with Euonymoun, Morus, Quercus, Rubus palmatum and Castanea mollisima.Wild materialFrom September 7 to 25, 2009, U.S. scientists K. Hummer and J. Postman from the USDA Agricultural Research Service and Japanese scientists H. Iketani and H. Imanishi from the Japanese Ministry of Forestry and Fisheries/National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, and Akita Agricultural University collaborated on an expedition to collect temperate fruit genera in Hokkaido and northern Honshu, Japan. An agreement between Japan and the USDA specified the terms of exchange, and materials collected were shared between scientists of both countries.1824034PI 665884
159PI 665885C. sieboldiana JPN-2009-144Corylus sieboldiana Blume Iwate, JapanCORNot Available2009COLLECTED09/21/2009Near Morioka City.39.74382000, 141.15778000210In young regrowth area by open meadow, about 200 m away from woods, growing under Pinus and Prunus with fern, Salix and Castanea mollisima.Wild materialFrom September 7 to 25, 2009, U.S. scientists K. Hummer and J. Postman from the USDA Agricultural Research Service and Japanese scientists H. Iketani and H. Imanishi from the Japanese Ministry of Forestry and Fisheries/National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, and Akita Agricultural University collaborated on an expedition to collect temperate fruit genera in Hokkaido and northern Honshu, Japan. An agreement between Japan and the USDA specified the terms of exchange, and materials collected were shared between scientists of both countries.1824036PI 665885
160PI 693931C. sieboldiana JPN-2009-073Corylus sieboldiana Blume Hokkaidô, JapanCORNot Available2009COLLECTED09/12/2009Shinsen numa (marsh) near Kyowa town.42.90668000, 140.59001000766Dry upland site near board walk, mostly sunny; growing with Quercus cuspidata, Abies, Ligustrum vulgare, Viburnum, Acer palmatum and 2 bamboo species.Wild materialFrom September 7 to 25, 2009, U.S. scientists K. Hummer and J. Postman from the USDA Agricultural Research Service and Japanese scientists H. Iketani and H. Imanishi from the Japanese Ministry of Forestry and Fisheries/National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, and Akita Agricultural University collaborated on an expedition to collect temperate fruit genera in Hokkaido and northern Honshu, Japan. An agreement between Japan and the USDA specified the terms of exchange, and materials collected were shared between scientists of both countries.1824032PI 693931
161PI 693932C. heterophylla JPN-2009-143Corylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Iwate, JapanCORNot Available2009COLLECTED09/21/2009Near Morioka City.39.74382000, 141.15778000210In young regrowth area by open meadow, about 200 m away from woods, growing with fern, birch, mulberry and Sasa bamboo.Wild materialFrom September 7 to 25, 2009, U.S. scientists K. Hummer and J. Postman from the USDA Agricultural Research Service and Japanese scientists H. Iketani and H. Imanishi from the Japanese Ministry of Forestry and Fisheries/National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, and Akita Agricultural University collaborated on an expedition to collect temperate fruit genera in Hokkaido and northern Honshu, Japan. An agreement between Japan and the USDA specified the terms of exchange, and materials collected were shared between scientists of both countries.1824035PI 693932
162PI 665875OSU 1042.090 EstoniaCorylus avellana L. EstoniaCORNot Available2009COLLECTEDBreeding material1801664PI 665875
163PI 665874'G-17'Corylus avellana L. England, United KingdomCORNot Available2009DONATED03/17/2009Breeding material1801663PI 665874
164PI 665882'Emoa-35'Corylus avellana L. NetherlandsCORNot Available2009DONATED03/17/2009Breeding material1808137PI 665882
165PI 688066'Sun Harvest'Corylus americana Marshall COROut of Season2009DONATED01/22/2009Breeding materialAmerican Hazelnut Accession 9083247: Sun Harvest. USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) field office collections of hazelnut were assembled at the Plant Materials Center (PMC) between 1989 and 1992. Thirty-six accessions collected from Illinois and Missouri were stratified and placed in the greenhouse in 1993. Twenty-one accessions germinated and were grown out in two-gallon containers. These accessions were placed in a randomized complete block with eight replications. The planting was established May 3 and 4, 1994, in Field #11E on the PMC. The summer of 1994 had several significant dry spells and many plants were stressed, lost leaves, and resprouted. Four plants in the evaluation block failed to survive in 1994. Th assembly was evaluated from 1995-1998. The following accessions were selected in 1997 as a nut production composite: 9057168 (Iroquois County, Illinois), 9057188 and 9068528 (Coles County, Illinois), 9068562 (Adams County, Illinois), and 9068573 and 9068574 both from Chariton County, Missouri. The selection criteria for these accessions are as follows: growth habit (form), canopy spread, plant height and fruit production and resistance to insect and disease. Based on the evaluation criteria, th six accessions were selected for a polycross nursery in 2003 and assigned accession 9083247 and will be recognize as Sun Harvest germplasm. Five seedlings were received at NCGR in January, 2009 and designated 'Sun Harvest 1' through 'Sun Harvest 5'. -- From release documentation provided by USDA-NRCS, Elsberry Plant Materials Center, 2007.1796882PI 688066
166PI 665876AZN-64Corylus avellana L. California, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED11/06/2008Breeding materialSeed collected from Corylus avellana cultivar at the Parzivan Experimant Station in Zakatala, Azerbaijan (40d 47.782' N, 48d 19.141' E)1808131PI 665876
167PI 665877AZN-65Corylus avellana L. AzerbaijanCORNot Available2008COLLECTED2008Breeding materialSeed collected from Corylus avellana cultivar at the Parzivan Experimant Station in Zakatala, Azerbaijan (40d 47.782' N, 48d 19.141' E)1808132PI 665877
168PI 665878Ata Baba O.P. AZN-66 Corylus avellana L. Zaqatala, AzerbaijanCORNot Available2008COLLECTED2008Breeding materialSeed collected from Corylus avellana cultivar at the Parzivan Experimant Station in Zakatala, Azerbaijan (40d 47.782' N, 48d 19.141' E)1808133PI 665878
169PI 665879AZN-67Corylus avellana L. California, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED11/06/2008Breeding materialSeed collected from Corylus avellana cultivar at the Parzivan Experimant Station in Zakatala, Azerbaijan (40d 47.782' N, 48d 19.141' E)1808134PI 665879
170PI 665880AZN-68Corylus avellana L. California, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED11/06/2008Breeding materialSeed collected from Corylus avellana cultivar at the Parzivan Experimant Station in Zakatala, Azerbaijan (40d 47.782' N, 48d 19.141' E)1808135PI 665880
171PI 665881Ganja O.P.AZN-69Corylus avellana L. Zaqatala, AzerbaijanCORNot Available2008COLLECTED2008Breeding materialSeed collected from Corylus avellana cultivar at the Parzivan Experimant Station in Zakatala, Azerbaijan (40d 47.782' N, 48d 19.141' E)1808136PI 665881
172PI 654989OSU 793.088Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008Breeding material1784424PI 654989
173PI 657895OSU 793.088Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008Breeding materialHazelnut advanced selection from Oregon State University with Gassaway resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight (EFB).1791542PI 657895
174PI 657896OSU 820.004Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008Breeding materialHazelnut advanced selection from Oregon State University with Gassaway resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight (EFB).1784425PI 657896
175PI 657897OSU 852.027Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008Breeding materialHazelnut advanced selection from Oregon State University with Gassaway resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight (EFB).1784426PI 657897
176PI 657898'Dorris'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DEVELOPED2012CultivarHazelnut for the blanched kernel market. Origin: Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, by S.A. Mehlenbacher, D.C. Smith, and R.L. McCluskey. OSU 309.074 × Delta; crossed 1997; selected 2003; tested as OSU 876.041; introd. 2012. USPP 25,022; 3 July 2014. Nut: medium size 3.3g; 43% kernel by weight; pellicle has little fiber; 90% of pellicle removed by dry heat; husk 25% longer than nut and most slit; 90% free-husking; flavor and texture excellent; few nut and kernel defects; nuts mature with Barcelona. Tree: low vigor and spreading, 60% of size of Barcelona; productive; very high resistance to eastern filbert blight, (Anisogramma anomala); highly resistant to bud mite, (Phytoptus avellanae); incompatibility alleles S1 S12.1784427PI 657898
177PI 657899OSU 880.054Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008Breeding materialHazelnut advanced selection from Oregon State University with Gassaway resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight (EFB).1784428PI 657899
178PI 657900OSU 894.044Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008Breeding materialHazelnut advanced selection from Oregon State University with Gassaway resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight (EFB).1784429PI 657900
179PI 657901'Felix'Corylus avellana L. CORNot Available2008DEVELOPED2012CultivarHazelnut pollenizer. Origin: Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, by S.A. Mehlenbacher, D.C. Smith, and R.L. McCluskey. OSU 384.095 × Delta; crossed 1998; selected 2007; tested as OSU 941.016; introd. 2012. USPP 24,973; 21 Oct. 2014. Nut: small 2.6g, 50% kernel by weight; pellicle has much fiber; 90% of pellicle removed by dry heat; husk 50% longer than nut and most slit on side; 80% free-husking; flavor and texture very good; few nut and kernel defects; nuts mature 3 d before Barcelona. Tree: vigorous; 120% of size of Barcelona; upright-spreading; moderately productive; catkins abundant; high pollen viability; pollen sheds in late midseason with Hall's Giant; very high resistance to eastern filbert blight, (Anisogramma anomala); moderately resistant to bud mite, (Phytoptus avellanae); incompatibility alleles S15 S21. 1784430PI 657901
180PI 657902'Jefferson'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008CultivarHazelnut selection from Oregon State University with Gassaway resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight (EFB). Potential new cultivar expected to be released in 2009. Well suited to the in-shell market, it combines high yield, large nut size and a vigorous tree. Nut maturity is with 'Barcelona' or up to three days later. Requires a late-shedding polinizer. The Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station announces the release of a new hazelnut (Corylus avellana L.) cultivar 'Jefferson' for th in-shell market with high nut yields, attractive nuts and kernels, good kernel quality, resistance to bud mite (primarily Phytoptus avellanae Nal.), and complete resistance to eastern filbert blight caused by Anisogramma anomala (Peck) E. M ller. 'Jefferson' (OSU 703.007) resulted from a cross of OSU 252.146 x OSU 414.062 made in 1993. OSU 252.146 is a seedling from a cross of OSU 41.083 (= 'Montebello' x 'Compton') x OSU 17.028 (= 'Barcelona' x 'Tombul Ghiaghli'), and OSU 414.062 is from a cross of OSU 23.017 (= 'Barcelona' x 'Extra Ghiaghli') x VR 11-27 (= 'Montebello' x 'Gasaway'). Compared to the standard 'Barcelona', 'Jefferson' has smaller trees, higher nut yields per tree, and higher nut yield efficiency. Nuts of 'Jefferson' are large (3.2-4.2 g) and similar in size to 'Barcelona' (3.8 g) and have a slightly higher percent kernel (45% vs. 43%). About 80% of the nuts fall free of the husk at maturity and can be mechanically harvested with 'Barcelona' or up to 3 days later. The kernels fill the nuts well, which is unusual for a large nut. Raw kernels have a moderate to heavy amount of fiber on their pellicles, similar to 'Barcelona'. Blanching ratings are slightly better than 'Barcelona', indicating that slightly more than half of the pellicle is removed by dry heat. Kernel quality is suitable for many end uses, although they are larger than the size desired by most chocolate makers and bakers. The frequency of blanks, poorly filled nuts, and double is less than for 'Barcelona'. 'Jefferson' has a low frequency of moldy kernels, which was especially striking in 2005 when mold was a problem on 'Lewis' and many other genotypes. 'Jefferson' has more kernels with black tips than 'Barcelona', which i a reflection of the occasional hairline splits where the two halves of the shell join at the apex. 'Jefferson' has complete resistance to eastern filbert blight, conferred by a dominant allele from 'Gasaway'. 'Jefferson' appears to be susceptible to bacterial blight, as is 'Barcelona'. Copper sprays are recommended for control of bacterial blight.

'Jefferson' has incompatibility alleles S1 and S3, the same as 'Willamette'. Both alleles are expressed in the stigmas, but only S3 is expressed in the pollen. Pollen is shed in mid-season, but female receptivity is very late. Pollinizers that shed pollen very late are recommended. We recommend one-third of 'Eta' (S11 S26) and two-thirds 'Theta' (S5 S15). 'Yamhill' pollen is effective on early-emerging females of 'Jefferson', so planting orchards of two cultivars, alternating 'Jefferson' and 'Yamhill' at double density, is also an option.

'Jefferson' is being released as a public cultivar and may be propagated fo sale in the United States without restriction. A list of nurseries and micropropagators is available from S. A. Mehlenbacher, Department of Horticulture, 4017 Agricultural and Life Sciences Building, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331-7304. Small quantities of scion wood may be obtained from the same address. Legal protection for 'Jefferson' will be sought in Chile, and a licensing agreement pursued with a micropropagator and a nursery.

Shawn Mehlenbacher, Release notice for 'Jefferson' 2009.

1784431PI 657902
181PI 657903OSU 688.010Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008Breeding materialHazelnut selection from Oregon State University with Gassaway resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight (EFB). Potential new cultivar (2008).1784432PI 657903
182PI 657904'Eta'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008CultivarHazelnut selection from Oregon State University with resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight (EFB). Late shedding pollenizer for 703.007.

'Eta', tested as OSU 984.075, resulted from a cross of OSU 581.039 x OSU 553.0990 made in 1999. 'Eta' has incompatibility alleles S11 and S26; both are expressed in the pollen. The trees set catkins in moderate to high numbers, and pollen is very late, a few days after 'Epsilon' and 'Zeta'. The pollen shedding period is of intermediate length. It is a suitable pollenizer for OSU 703.007 which we propose to release as new cultivar 'Jefferson'. Nuts and kernels resemble those of 'Casina' but kernels blanch better.

The OSU hazelnut breeding program proposes the release of two selections as pollinizers. The proposed names are 'Eta' and 'Theta', which are the next letters in the Greek alphabet. Their release comes after the release of 'Gamma', Delta', 'Epsilon', and 'Zeta' in 2001. All six have complete resistance to eastern filbert blight (EFB). We propose the release of 'Eta' and 'Theta' as pollenizers for OSU 703.007, which we propose to release as a new EFB-resistant cultivar 'Jefferson' for the in-shell market.

Four EFB-resistant selections (VR4-31, VR11-27, VR20-11 and VR23-18) released in 1991 as pollenizers for 'Barcelona' (S1 S2), express incompatibility allele S3 in their pollen. In 2001, four additional pollenizers were released, following the release of 'Lewis' in 1997 and 'Clark' in 1999. Pollen of 'Gamma' (S2 S10) and 'Delta' (S1 S15) is compatible on female inflorescences of 'Lewis' (S3 S8), which are receptive in mid-season. Pollen of 'Epsilon' (S1 S4) and 'Zeta' (S1 S1) is compatible on females of 'Clark' (S3 S8), which are receptive very late in the season. We are proposing the release of OSU 703.007 (S1 S3) whose female inflorescences are receptive very late in the season. Of the eight pollenizers listed above, seven are incompatible on OSU 703.007. The only compatible pollenizer, 'Gamma', sheds its pollen too early in the season to be a dependable pollenizer for OSU 703.007, although in some years 'Gamma' pollen shed overlaps receptivity of the earliest females of OSU 703.007. The duration of pollen shed of 'Yamhill' better overlaps receptivity of early-emerging OSU 703.007 females, but its vigor is lower than ideal for a pollenizer in a high-density orchard. In fact, no available pollenizer or cultivar combines the EFB resistance, compatibility, and late pollen shed needed for use as pollenizers in 'Jefferson' orchards. We propose to release 'Eta' and 'Theta' to fill the need for EFB-resistant pollenizers that shed pollen very late in the season and are compatible on female inflorescences of 'Jefferson'.

The need for late-shedding pollinizers for 'Jefferson' is urgent, as large numbers of trees are currently being planted. The release of additional EFB-resistant pollinizers is also desirable because it will Oregon's hazelnut growers more options when establishing new orchards. We anticipate release of several additional EFB-resistant cultivars in future years. 'Eta' and 'Theta' could be useful as pollenizers for them. Nut yield and quality are not primary concerns in the selection o pollinizers. In older orchards, pollinizers represent about 11% of the total number of trees. In recent years, 5.5% is more common, but nut yields often suffer because of insufficient pollination. The planting of three pollenizers that shed pollen a different times during the winter flowering season increases the likelihood that females of the main cultivar will be pollinated.

S. Mehlenbacher. Release notice for 'Eta' 2009.

1784433PI 657904
183PI 657905'Yamhill'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008Cultivar1784435PI 657905
184PI 658547'Theta'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008CultivarHazelnut selection from Oregon State University with resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight (EFB). Late shedding pollenizer for 703.007.

'Theta', tested as OSU 1001.008, resulted from a cross of OSU 561.184 x 'Delta' made in 1999. 'Theta' has incompatibility alleles S5 and S15; both are expressed in the pollen. The trees set many catkins, and pollen is shed very late in the season, a few days after 'Epsilon', 'Zeta' and 'Eta'. It is a suitable pollenizer for OSU 703.007 which we propose to release as new cultivar 'Jefferson'. The nuts are small and nearly round, and mature a few days later than 'Barcelona'. Kernel quality is acceptable for many uses.

The OSU hazelnut breeding program proposes the release of two selections as pollinizers. The proposed names are 'Eta' and 'Theta', which are the next letters in the Greek alphabet. Their release comes after the release of 'Gamma', Delta', 'Epsilon', and 'Zeta' in 2001. All six have complete resistance to eastern filbert blight (EFB). We propose the release of 'Eta' and 'Theta' as pollenizers for OSU 703.007, which we propose to release as a new EFB-resistant cultivar 'Jefferson' for the in-shell market.

Four EFB-resistant selections (VR4-31, VR11-27, VR20-11 and VR23-18) released in 1991 as pollenizers for 'Barcelona' (S1 S2), express incompatibility allele S3 in their pollen. In 2001, four additional pollenizers were released, following the release of 'Lewis' in 1997 and 'Clark' in 1999. Pollen of 'Gamma' (S2 S10) and 'Delta' (S1 S15) is compatible on female inflorescences of 'Lewis' (S3 S8), which are receptive in mid-season. Pollen of 'Epsilon' (S1 S4) and 'Zeta' (S1 S1) is compatible on females of 'Clark' (S3 S8), which are receptive very late in the season. We are proposing the release of OSU 703.007 (S1 S3) whose female inflorescences are receptive very late in the season. Of the eight pollenizers listed above, seven are incompatible on OSU 703.007. The only compatible pollenizer, 'Gamma', sheds its pollen too early in the season to be a dependable pollenizer for OSU 703.007, although in some years 'Gamma' pollen shed overlaps receptivity of the earliest females of OSU 703.007. The duration of pollen shed of 'Yamhill' better overlaps receptivity of early-emerging OSU 703.007 females, but its vigor is lower than ideal for a pollenizer in a high-density orchard. In fact, no available pollenizer or cultivar combines the EFB resistance, compatibility, and late pollen shed needed for use as pollenizers in 'Jefferson' orchards. We propose to release 'Eta' and 'Theta' to fill the need for EFB-resistant pollenizers that shed pollen very late in the season and are compatible on female inflorescences of 'Jefferson'.

The need for late-shedding pollinizers for 'Jefferson' is urgent, as large numbers of trees are currently being planted. The release of additional EFB-resistant pollinizers is also desirable because it will give Oregon's hazelnut growers more options when establishing new orchards. We anticipate release of several additional EFB-resistant cultivars in future years. 'Eta' and 'Theta' could be useful as pollenizers for them. Nut yield and quality are not primary concerns in the selection o pollinizers. In older orchards, pollinizers represent about 11% of the total number of trees. In recent years, 5.5% is more common, but nut yields often suffer because of insufficient pollination. The planting of three pollenizers that shed pollen a different times during the winter flowering season increases the likelihood that females of the main cultivar will be pollinated.

Shawn Mehlenbacher, Release notice for 'Theta,' 2009.

1784434PI 658547
185PI 658548OSU 848.081Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008Breeding material1791357PI 658548
186PI 658549OSU 821.062Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008Breeding material1791358PI 658549
187PI 658550OSU 879.031Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED09/03/2008Breeding material1791360PI 658550
188PI 654986C. avellana Vandam #18Corylus avellana L. Nagorno-Karabakh, AzerbaijanCORNot Available2007COLLECTED09/30/2007Qabala, Vandam.40.94472000, 47.941110002329Wild material1743481PI 654986
189PI 654987C. avellana Nidj #21Corylus avellana L. Nagorno-Karabakh, AzerbaijanCORNot Available2007COLLECTED09/30/2007Qabala, Nadj, from farmer Najim.40.94500000, 47.669170001555Wild material1743482PI 654987
190PI 654988C. avellana Oroban #34Corylus avellana L. Nagorno-Karabakh, AzerbaijanCORNot Available2007COLLECTED10/01/2007Shaki, Oroban, Bulagdara41.15306000, 47.335830002791Wild material1743483PI 654988
191PI 654985C. americana DelawareCorylus americana Marshall Delaware, United StatesCOROut of Season2007COLLECTED10/25/2007New Castle County, Bellevue State Park (800 Carr Road, Wilmington), off the Northern Delaware Greenway Trail, growing in understory of beach-oak forest.39.78180000, -75.5008000070Growing in woodland duff. Associated plants: Sasafras lbidum, Euonymous americana, Fagus grandifolia, Liquidambar styrasiflua, Quercus alba, Hamamelis virginiana.Wild material1743480PI 654985
192PI 688067C. americana GeorgiaCorylus americana Marshall Georgia, United StatesCORImageNot Available2007COLLECTED06/05/2007Lumpkin County, Chattahoochee National Forest, Blue Ridge Mountain Road intesection with FS 42, Hightower Gap and Rock Creek Roads.34.66382000, -84.12987000900Slope about 20 degrees, on gray loam soil covered with organic duff. Associated with: Impatiens pallida, Commelina virginiaca, Ambrosia artemisiifolia, Quercus, Liriodendron tulipifera.Wild material1733136PI 688067
193PI 657892C. chinensis 2005-194 sdlg. 1Corylus chinensis Franch. ChinaCORNot Available2007COLLECTED09/26/2005Diebu, Luo Da, Mo Gou Forest Area (Mill Valley). Adjacent to cultivated fields, but opposite more natural forest.33.94583000, 103.867500002081Cool, moist, narrow, north running valley; 15 degree slope east facing; rocky, silt-loam soil. Associated with Acer davidii, Abies, Tsuga chinensis, Cercidiphyllum japonicum var. sinense and Fraxinus.Wild material1723897PI 657892
194PI 657893C. chinensis 2005-194 sdlg. 2Corylus chinensis Franch. ChinaCORNot Available2007COLLECTED09/26/2005Diebu, Luo Da, Mo Gou Forest Area (Mill Valley). Adjacent to cultivated fields, but opposite more natural forest.33.94583000, 103.867500002081Cool, moist, narrow, north running valley; 15 degree slope east facing; rocky, silt-loam soil. Associated with Acer davidii, Abies, Tsuga chinensis, Cercidiphyllum japonicum var. sinense and Fraxinus.Wild material1723898PI 657893
195PI 657894C. chinensis 2005-194 sdlg. 3Corylus chinensis Franch. ChinaCORNot Available2007COLLECTED09/26/2005Diebu, Luo Da, Mo Gou Forest Area (Mill Valley). Adjacent to cultivated fields, but opposite more natural forest.33.94583000, 103.867500002081Cool, moist, narrow, north running valley; 15 degree slope east facing; rocky, silt-loam soil. Associated with Acer davidii, Abies, Tsuga chinensis, Cercidiphyllum japonicum var. sinense and Fraxinus.Wild material1723899PI 657894
196PI 654976C. californica B0049 Lane CountyCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTED11/03/1984Near Cougar Reservoir, Willamette National Forest, Lane County.44.13450000, -122.24970000545Wild materialScions or suckers collected from 'Cougar Reservoir' site in Willamette National Forest, Lane County, Oregon by D.M. Brenner (accompanied by C. Johannessen and M. Thompson) on 3 November, 1984 from a native hazelnut tree with superior nut production as reported in his Masters Thesis presented to the University of Oregon in 1986.1715494PI 654976
197PI 654977C. sieboldiana CC1-93Corylus sieboldiana Blume Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2006DONATED12/07/2006Wild material1715495PI 654977
198PI 654978C. californica B0071 Lane CountyCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTED11/03/1984Blue River Lake, Willamette National Forest, Lane County.44.20420000, -122.26110000550Wild materialScions or suckers collected from 'Blue River' site, in the Willamette National Forest, Lane County, Oregon by D.M. Brenner in 1984 from a native hazelnut tree with superior nut production as reported in his Masters Thesis presented to the University of Oregon in 1986. Tree selected by M. Thompson on the basis of good growth habit and abundant catkins.1715496PI 654978
199PI 654979C. sieboldiana 86028Corylus sieboldiana Blume Korea, SouthCORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTEDWild material1715497PI 654979
200PI 654980C. sieboldiana 86029Corylus sieboldiana Blume Korea, SouthCORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTEDWild material1715498PI 654980
201PI 654981C. sieboldiana 86030Corylus sieboldiana Blume Korea, SouthCORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTEDWild material1715499PI 654981
202PI 654982C. sieboldiana 86031Corylus sieboldiana Blume Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2006DONATED12/07/2006Wild material1715500PI 654982
203PI 660749'Gulshishvela'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2006COLLECTED09/19/2006Tbilisi41.75193000, 44.77120000423CultivarCultivar that bears only female flowers.1715493PI 660749
204PI 665873C. avellana GE-2006-106Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTED09/23/2006Kakheti, near site of old Nekresi village.41.98642000, 45.76513000487At forest edge near stream.Wild material1715492PI 665873
205PI 654983'Santiam'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2006DEVELOPED2005Cultivarand#8216;Santiamand#8217; (OSU 509.064) was developed and evaluated at Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, and it was released in February 2005. This cultivar has complete resistance to eastern filbert blight (EFB) caused by Anisogramma anomala (Peck) E. Mand#252;ller. Resistance is conferred by a single dominant gene from and#8216;Gasaway.and#8217; Compared to and#8216;Barcelona,and#8217; and#8216;Santiamand#8217; is a smaller tree and has higher yield efficiency, higher percent kernel, and smaller nuts. Nuts mature and fall free of the husk about 2 weeks before and#8216;Barcelona.and#8217; -- R.L McCluskey, S.A. Mehlenbacher, D.C. Smith, and A.N. Azarenko. 2005.(website active December 2007) http://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalog/html/em/em8890-e/1699813PI 654983
206PI 654984'Sacajawea'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORSTEMNot Available2006DONATED04/10/2006CultivarHazelnut cultivar released by S. Mehlenbacher from Oregon State University with quantitative resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight (EFB).

Sacajawea is the result of a cross of OSU 43.091 x Sant Pere made in 1990 by Shawn A. Mehlenbacher and David C. Smith. 'Sant Pere', a minor cultivar from Tarragona (Spain) with very early nut maturity, was described by Tasias-Valls (1975). We believe that OSU 43.091 resulted from self-pollination of Montebello, which is partially self-compatible (Mehlenbacher and Smith, 1991). Alternatively, the pollen parent of OSU 43.091 might be an unknown cultivar or OSU selection. `Montebello', a Sicilian cultivar, was described by Manzo and Tamponi (1982) and is grown under many synonyms, including Nocchione, Nostrale, Comune di Sicilia, Siciliana, and `Santa Maria del Gesu.

Hybrid seeds from the cross OSU 43.091 x Sant Pere were harvested in Aug. 1990, stratified, and the resulting seedlings grown in the greenhouse during the summer of 1991. In Oct. 1991, 135 seedlings from this cross were planted in the field. The location designation OSU 540.130 for Sacajawea indicates the row and tree within the row of the original seedling. A few nuts were first observed on the original seedling in Sept. 1994 but were not harvested. Nuts were harvested and evaluated in each of the next 4 years. The selected tree was propagated by tieoff layerage of the suckers in the summer of 1997. The resulting rooted layers were lined out in a nursery row in 1998 and used to plant a replicated yield trial in the spring of 1999 at the Smith Horticulture Research Farm in Corvallis. Four trees of each genotype were planted in a randomized complete block design with a single tree of each genotype in each block. Oregon's leading cultivar, `Barcelona', and the recently released `Lewis and `Clark were included as checks. Nuts were harvested and evaluated annually for 5 years (2001 to 2005). The name was chosen to honor the Shoshone woman who accompanied Meriwether Lewis and William Clark and their Corps of Discovery to the Oregon Territory. They spent the winter of 1805 to 1806 near Astoria, OR.

Sacajawea is a new hazelnut (Corylus avellana L.) cultivar for the kernel market. It combines a high level of quantitative resistance to eastern filbert blight caused by the fungus Anisogramma anomala (Peck) E. Muller with excellent kernel quality and acceptable nut yields. Compared with Oregon's leading cultivar, Barcelona, Sacajawea has slightly smaller trees, slightly higher nut yield efficiency, earlier nut maturity, higher percentage of kernel (the ratio of kernel to nut weight), and better pellicle removal ratings. The excellent kernel quality is comparable to the best Italian cultivars.

1699814PI 654984
207PI 654967C. californica B0849 Benton CountyCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTED11/10/1984Prairie Peak, Benton County side of peak.44.27760000, -123.60810000980Soil shallow residual, BasaltWild materialScions or suckers collected from 'Prairie Peak' site (Prairie Mountain), on property owned by Weyerhaeuser in Lane County, Oregon by D.M. Brenner (accompanied by C. Johannessen and M. Thompson) on 10 November,1984 from a native hazelnut tree with superior nut production as reported in his Masters Thesis presented to the University of Oregon in 1986.1699359PI 654967
208PI 654968C. californica B0025 Lane CountyCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTED11/10/1984Alderwood (Oregon State Wayside), Lane County44.15216000, -123.42583000180Soil deep residual, BasaltWild materialScions or suckers collected from 'Alderwood' site, an Oregon State Park in Lane County, Oregon by D.M. Brenner (accompanied by C. Johannessen and M. Thompson) on 10 November, 1984 from a native hazelnut tree with superior nut production as reported in his Masters Thesis presented to the University of Oregon in 1986.1699360PI 654968
209PI 654969C. californica B0812 Lane CountyCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTED11/10/1984Prairie Mountain, Lane County side of peak.44.27760000, -123.60810000980Soil shallow residual, BasaltWild materialScions or suckers collected from 'Prairie Peak' site (Prairie Mountain), on property owned by Weyerhaeuser in Lane County, Oregon by D.M. Brenner (accompanied by C. Johannessen and M. Thompson) on 10 November,1984 from a native hazelnut tree with superior nut production as reported in his Masters Thesis presented to the University of Oregon in 1986.1699361PI 654969
210PI 654970C. californica B0437 Lane CountyCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTED11/10/1984Alderwood (Oregon State Wayside), Lane County44.15216000, -123.42583000180Soil deep residual, BasaltWild materialScions or suckers collected from 'Alderwood' site, an Oregon State Park in Lane County, Oregon by D.M. Brenner (accompanied by C. Johannessen and M. Thompson) on 10 November, 1984 from a native hazelnut tree with superior nut production as reported in his Masters Thesis presented to the University of Oregon in 1986.1699362PI 654970
211PI 654971C. californica B0072 Lane CountyCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose CORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTEDBlue River Lake, Willamette National Forest, Lane County.44.20420000, -122.26110000550Soil deep residual, BasaltWild materialScions or suckers collected from 'Blue River' site, in the Willamette National Forest, Lane County, Oregon by D.M. Brenner in 1984 from a native hazelnut tree with superior nut production as reported in his Masters Thesis presented to the University of Oregon in 1986. Tree selected by M. Thompson on the basis of good growth habit and abundant catkins.1699363PI 654971
212PI 654972C. californica B0509 Lane CountyCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTED02/04/1985Salt Creek, Willamette National Forest, Lane County.44.21680000, -122.34300000530Soil deep alluviumWild materialScions or suckers collected from 'Salt Creek' site, in the Willamette National Forest, Lane County, Oregon by D.M. Brenner on 4 February, 1985 from a native hazelnut tree with superior nut production as reported in his Masters Thesis presented to the University of Oregon in 1986.1699364PI 654972
213PI 654973C. californica #17 (#71) Lane CountyCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose CORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTEDBlue River Lake, Willamette National Forest, Lane County.44.20420000, -122.26110000550Soil deep residual, BasaltWild material1699365PI 654973
214PI 654974C. californica B0070 Lane CountyCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2006COLLECTED11/03/1984Blue River Lake, Willamette National Forest, Lane County.44.20420000, -122.26110000550Soil deep residual, BasaltWild materialScions or suckers collected from 'Blue River' site, in the Willamette National Forest, Lane County, Oregon by D.M. Brenner in 1984 from a native hazelnut tree with superior nut production as reported in his Masters Thesis presented to the University of Oregon in 1986. Tree selected by M. Thompson on the basis of good growth habit and abundant catkins.1699366PI 654974
215PI 654975C. californica B0951 Lane CountyCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2006COLLECTED11/03/1984Lookout Ridge, Willamette National Forest, Lane County.44.21680000, -122.198200001400Shallow stabalized tallus, BasaltWild materialScions or suckers collected from 'Lookout Ridge' site in the Willamette National Forest, Lane County, Oregon by D.M. Brenner (accompanied by C. Johannessen and M. Thompson) on 3 November,1984 from a native hazelnut tree with superior nut production as reported in his Masters Thesis presented to the University of Oregon in 1986.1699367PI 654975
216PI 657891C. americana Illinois 2004 & 2005Corylus americana Marshall Illinois, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season2005COLLECTED08/06/2005Hancock county, east of Carthage, south of U.S. 136, along the side of East County Road 1400, between North County Road 25500 and North County Road 2700.40.39915000, -90.99773000180Wild materialWild hazelnuts (Corylus americana) collected by Mary Harris of Carthage, Illinois (sister of former USDA Plant Exchange Officer George White) in August 2004. Trees were growing along the lane leading to the Roswell Kendal farm in Plymouth, Illinois. Only about 5 seeds germinated, so additional seeds were collected on August 6, 2005 by Glen White of Plymouth, Illinois (brother of George White) and germination was much better. Seeds were sent to NCGR in both years by George White. He noted in his September 2005 note accompanying the second seed shipment, that he assumes the 2005 seeds were collected form the same site as the 2004 seeds. It is uncertain whether they came from the same parent tree/trees or from nearby trees. Samples collected in 2004 have been given the NCGR inventory number COR 857-A and samples from 2005 have been designated 857-B. -- J. Postman, 1-2006.1684618PI 657891
217PI 660748GE-2004-169 - KartliCorylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNUTNot Available2005COLLECTED11/19/2004Kartli (Samtskhe-Javakheti) province, between villages Tsikhis-Jvari and Sakire.41.72580000, 43.305020001605Wild material1677067PI 660748
218PI 641155'Yoder No.5'Corylus hybr.Ohio, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season2005DEVELOPEDBreeding material1672287PI 641155
219PI 657906'McDonald'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2005DONATED02/17/2009CultivarA new variety of disease-resistant hazelnut aimed at the kernel market has been released by Oregon State University. The cultivar, McDonald, was found to be "consistently productive with consistent quality" by a farmers? advisory committee that evaluated the trees. OSU breeder Shawn Mehlenbacher announced the new variety at the annual meeting of the Nut Growers' Society in Portland, Ore., on Jan. 29. While the cultivar has "not excellent yield, but good enough," the kernel fills nearly 51 percent of the shell, which is a high proportion compared to other cultivars, Mehlenbacher said. "More of what you harvest is edible," he said. For example, the Jefferson variety that is popular among Northwest growers produces nuts that fill roughly 43 percent of the shell. McDonald also has a lower incidence of mold than Jefferson - 1 percent versus 4-5 percent, he said. The size of McDonald trees is "grower friendly" at about 70 percent of Barcelona, a traditional industry staple. The new variety's nuts also mature about two weeks earlier. The cultivar is named after Peter McDonald, a hazelnut grower from Wilsonville, Ore., who died last year. "I hope the new release lives up to the name of the man for which it's named, otherwise I'm in trouble," Mehlenbacher told the audience. McDonald was instrumental in funding the breeder position at OSU and kept hope alive when Eastern Filbert Blight, a fungal pathogen, threatened hazelnut production in Oregon. "We went through some dark years, not sure the industry would survive, and he pushed for a brighter future," Mehlenbacher told Capital Press. The McDonald cultivar is meant to supply the kernel market, which uses the nuts for chocolates and similar confectionary products. Currently, roughly half the kernels consumed in the U.S. come from Turkey, the dominant global hazelnut producer. "There's a wonderful opportunity to replace imports," Mehlenbacher said. While the new cultivar contains a gene that confers resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight, McDonald was recently found to display some symptoms of the disease. Such 'strikes' have been known to occur on previously released resistant varieties, which may indicate the resistance gene isn't completely expressed by some trees. When disease pressure is heavy, growers can expect some cankers associated with the disease to develop. McDonald derives its resistance from Gasaway, a hazelnut variety that has been used in breeding since the late 1970s. More recently, hazelnut selections from Russia, Turkey, Ukraine and Georgia have also been found to withstand EFB and will be used to develop future cultivars. "Eventually we hope to pyramid several resistant genes into single cultivars," Mehlenbacher said. Oregon State University will be seeking a plant patent for the cultivar and will collect a 50 cent royalty per tree sold to Oregon growers. The new cultivar is compatible with Wepster and York, previously released pollinizer varieties. -- Mateusz Perkowski, Capital Press, January 2014. 1800354PI 657906
220PI 657907OSU 880.081Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2005DONATED02/17/2009Breeding material1800355PI 657907
221PI 657908OSU 918.045Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2005DONATED02/17/2009Breeding material1800356PI 657908
222PI 657909'Wepster'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2005DEVELOPED2013Cultivar1800357PI 657909
223PI 657910OSU 870.066Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2005DONATED02/17/2009Breeding material1800358PI 657910
224PI 657911OSU 871.033Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2005DONATED02/17/2009Breeding material1800359PI 657911
225PI 660747C. avellana 32-1379 #ACorylus avellana L. Pennsylvania, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2005DONATED01/11/2005Wild materialFrom email received on 1/10/05: 'We do not know much about this plant and it only came to our attention when Tom Molnar was here (Morris Arboretum) looking at Eastern Filbert Blight. We BELIEVE that this plant dates back to the Morris time, making it somewhere around 80 years old. The records are not very good on it and until recently I had not really paid this plant much attention.' Tom Molnar at Rutgers University noticed this plant to be free of filbert blight and has used it in crosses.1672286PI 660747
226PI 641151GE-2004-049Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNUTNot Available2004COLLECTED09/26/2004Tush-Pshav-Kevsureti (Mtskheta-Mtianeti) province, Aregri River valley north of Barisakho.42.51862000, 44.932600001412Wild material1665917PI 641151
227PI 641152GE-2004-054Corylus colurna L. GeorgiaCORNUTNot Available2004COLLECTED09/27/2004Kvemo Kartli province, T'bilisi botanic garden.41.70000000, 44.70000000800Wild material1665918PI 641152
228PI 641153GE-2004-055Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNUTNot Available2004COLLECTED09/28/2004Mtiuleti (Mtskheta-Mtianeti) province.42.44163000, 44.483300001700Wild material1665919PI 641153
229PI 641154GE-2004-074Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNUTNot Available2004COLLECTED10/01/2004Kartli (Samtskhe-Javakheti) province, near Satere.41.73190000, 43.308410001587Wild material1665920PI 641154
230PI 641150C. americana - Plymouth, IllinoisCorylus americana Marshall Illinois, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season2004COLLECTED08/25/2004Wild material1662875PI 641150
231PI 637908'Tokolyi Cosford'Corylus avellana L. AustraliaCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDCultivarFrom Australia (Basil Baldwin, Orange Agricultural College, University of Sydney, Orange, New South Wales, Australia), appears to be good kernel type. Shawn Mehlenbacher 5/23/2003. 1646450PI 637908
232PI 637909'Purple Aveline'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2003DONATED05/23/2003Cultivarsee PI 22483: From Nevada City, Cal. Purchased from Mrs. Felix Gillet, Barren Hill Nurseries. Received at the Plant Introduction Garden, Chico, Cal., March 18, 1908.1646451PI 637909
233PI 637910H 545-7 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding material1646452PI 637910
234PI 637911H 535-8 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding material1646453PI 637911
235PI 637912H 179-27 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding material1646454PI 637912
236PI 637913H 179-34 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding material1646455PI 637913
237PI 637914H 545-4 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding material1646456PI 637914
238PI 637915H 227-11 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding material1646457PI 637915
239PI 637916H 427-42 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding material1646458PI 637916
240PI 637917H 124-28 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding material1646459PI 637917
241PI 637918H 537-20 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding material1646460PI 637918
242PI 637919H 227-24 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding material1646461PI 637919
243PI 637920H 427-2 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding material1646462PI 637920
244PI 637921H 179-35 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding material1646463PI 637921
245PI 637922H 425-36 (INRA)Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNUTNot Available2003DEVELOPEDBreeding materialCytological studies in France1646464PI 637922
246PI 637902C. fargesii 96-574-A GansuCorylus fargesii (Franch.) C. K. Schneid. Gansu Sheng, ChinaCORSTEMNot Available2002COLLECTEDGansu Province, Tian Shui City District, Xiao Long Shan Forest Bureau, Danh Chuan Forest Station, Mai Chao Gou. Two meters above a stream in an open woodland setting along a path in the zone where periodic flooding takes place.34.30417000, 106.207500001650Growing among rocks in silt loam soils deposited by stream; with Lonicera sp., Juglans sp., Salix sp., Carpinus sp., Quercus sp. and serveral herbaceous species.Wild materialSingle-stemmed, deciduous trees with pyramidal spreading habit; seed collected from more than 5 plants; 12-15 m tall; 15-25 cm DBH; papery copper exfoliating bark - exquisite! Beautiful tree that is threatened or rare according to the Chinese Red Data Book, but grows here in large numbers; the bark on young trees looks a lot like immature Betula nigra bark. 1996 Expedition to Shaanxi and Gansu Provinces (collected as QLG 231 on 4 October 1996.) 1641999PI 637902
247PI 637903C. fargesii 96-574-F GansuCorylus fargesii (Franch.) C. K. Schneid. Gansu Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2002COLLECTEDGansu Province, Tian Shui City District, Xiao Long Shan Forest Bureau, Danh Chuan Forest Station, Mai Chao Gou. Two meters above a stream in an open woodland setting along a path in the zone where periodic flooding takes place.34.30417000, 106.207500001650Growing among rocks in silt loam soils deposited by stream; with Lonicera sp., Juglans sp., Salix sp., Carpinus sp., Quercus sp. and serveral herbaceous species.Wild materialSingle-stemmed, deciduous trees with pyramidal spreading habit; seed collected from more than 5 plants; 12-15 m tall; 15-25 cm DBH; papery copper exfoliating bark - exquisite! Beautiful tree that is threatened or rare according to the Chinese Red Data Book, but grows here in large numbers; the bark on young trees looks a lot like immature Betula nigra bark. 1996 Expedition to Shaanxi and Gansu Provinces (collected as QLG 231 on 4 October 1996.)1642000PI 637903
248PI 637904C. fargesii 96-574-G GansuCorylus fargesii (Franch.) C. K. Schneid. Gansu Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2002COLLECTEDGansu Province, Tian Shui City District, Xiao Long Shan Forest Bureau, Danh Chuan Forest Station, Mai Chao Gou. Two meters above a stream in an open woodland setting along a path in the zone where periodic flooding takes place.34.30417000, 106.207500001650Growing among rocks in silt loam soils deposited by stream; with Lonicera sp., Juglans sp., Salix sp., Carpinus sp., Quercus sp. and serveral herbaceous species.Wild materialSingle-stemmed, deciduous trees with pyramidal spreading habit; seed collected from more than 5 plants; 12-15 m tall; 15-25 cm DBH; papery copper exfoliating bark - exquisite! Beautiful tree that is threatened or rare according to the Chinese Red Data Book, but grows here in large numbers; the bark on young trees looks a lot like immature Betula nigra bark. 1996 Expedition to Shaanxi and Gansu Provinces (collected as QLG 231 on 4 October 1996.)1642001PI 637904
249PI 637905C. fargesii 96-574-H GansuCorylus fargesii (Franch.) C. K. Schneid. Gansu Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2002COLLECTEDGansu Province, Tian Shui City District, Xiao Long Shan Forest Bureau, Danh Chuan Forest Station, Mai Chao Gou. Two meters above a stream in an open woodland setting along a path in the zone where periodic flooding takes place.34.30417000, 106.207500001650Growing among rocks in silt loam soils deposited by stream; with Lonicera sp., Juglans sp., Salix sp., Carpinus sp., Quercus sp. and serveral herbaceous species.Wild materialSingle-stemmed, deciduous trees with pyramidal spreading habit; seed collected from more than 5 plants; 12-15 m tall; 15-25 cm DBH; papery copper exfoliating bark - exquisite! Beautiful tree that is threatened or rare according to the Chinese Red Data Book, but grows here in large numbers; the bark on young trees looks a lot like immature Betula nigra bark. 1996 Expedition to Shaanxi and Gansu Provinces (collected as QLG 231 on 4 October 1996.)1642002PI 637905
250PI 637906C. fargesii 96-574-I GansuCorylus fargesii (Franch.) C. K. Schneid. Gansu Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2002COLLECTEDGansu Province, Tian Shui City District, Xiao Long Shan Forest Bureau, Danh Chuan Forest Station, Mai Chao Gou. Two meters above a stream in an open woodland setting along a path in the zone where periodic flooding takes place.34.30417000, 106.207500001650Growing among rocks in silt loam soils deposited by stream; with Lonicera sp., Juglans sp., Salix sp., Carpinus sp., Quercus sp. and serveral herbaceous species.Wild materialSingle-stemmed, deciduous trees with pyramidal spreading habit; seed collected from more than 5 plants; 12-15 m tall; 15-25 cm DBH; papery copper exfoliating bark - exquisite! Beautiful tree that is threatened or rare according to the Chinese Red Data Book, but grows here in large numbers; the bark on young trees looks a lot like immature Betula nigra bark. 1996 Expedition to Shaanxi and Gansu Provinces (collected as QLG 231 on 4 October 1996.)1642003PI 637906
251PI 637907C. fargesii 96-574-J GansuCorylus fargesii (Franch.) C. K. Schneid. Gansu Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2002COLLECTEDGansu Province, Tian Shui City District, Xiao Long Shan Forest Bureau, Danh Chuan Forest Station, Mai Chao Gou. Two meters above a stream in an open woodland setting along a path in the zone where periodic flooding takes place.34.30417000, 106.207500001650Growing among rocks in silt loam soils deposited by stream; with Lonicera sp., Juglans sp., Salix sp., Carpinus sp., Quercus sp. and serveral herbaceous species.Wild materialSingle-stemmed, deciduous trees with pyramidal spreading habit; seed collected from more than 5 plants; 12-15 m tall; 15-25 cm DBH; papery copper exfoliating bark - exquisite! Beautiful tree that is threatened or rare according to the Chinese Red Data Book, but grows here in large numbers; the bark on young trees looks a lot like immature Betula nigra bark. 1996 Expedition to Shaanxi and Gansu Provinces (collected as QLG 231 on 4 October 1996.)1642004PI 637907
252PI 637894C. cornuta CC2.50 MinnesotaCorylus cornuta Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2002DONATED11/26/2002Breeding material1641991PI 637894
253PI 637895C. cornuta CC3.01 New YorkCorylus cornuta Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2002DONATED11/26/2002Breeding material1641992PI 637895
254PI 637896C. cornuta CC3.47 WisconsinCorylus cornuta Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2002DONATED11/26/2002Breeding material1641993PI 637896
255PI 637897C. cornuta CC3.58 MaineCorylus cornuta Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2002DONATED11/26/2002Breeding material1641994PI 637897
256PI 637898C. cornuta CC3.113 QuebecCorylus cornuta Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2002DONATED11/26/2002Breeding material1641995PI 637898
257PI 637899C. cornuta CC4.46 North DakotaCorylus cornuta Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2002DONATED11/26/2002Breeding material1641996PI 637899
258PI 637900C. cornuta CC4.53 ManitobaCorylus cornuta Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2002DONATED11/26/2002Breeding material1641997PI 637900
259PI 637901CCOR 821Corylus cornuta Marshall Oregon, United States Historic2002DONATED11/26/2002Breeding material1641998PI 637901
260PI 637890C. avellana ARM-02-009 Kapan ArmeniaCorylus avellana L. ArmeniaCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTED09/01/2002Wild material1640906PI 637890
261PI 637891MichaCorylus avellana L. ArmeniaCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTED09/02/2002Cultivar1640908PI 637891
262PI 637892Vodka Man - WildCorylus avellana L. ArmeniaCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTED09/02/2002Wild material1640911PI 637892
263PI 637893ShnoghCorylus avellana L. ArmeniaCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTED09/12/2002Wild material1640913PI 637893
264PI 665872OSU 02143Corylus avellana L. ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED09/02/2002Wild material1640910PI 665872
265PI 637889C. colurna ARM-540Corylus colurna L. ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED08/20/2001Cultivated material1640905PI 637889
266PI 637886C. cornuta OSU 661.081 ManitobaCorylus cornuta Marshall Manitoba, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTED0Cultivar1640899PI 637886
267PI 637887OSU 662.006 SaskatchewanCorylus cornuta Marshall Saskatchewan, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTED0Cultivar1640902PI 637887
268PI 637888C. cornuta OSU 662.084 New YorkCorylus cornuta Marshall New York, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTED0Cultivar1640903PI 637888
269PI 634203OSU 681.078Corylus avellana L. Moskva, Russian FederationCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636826PI 634203
270PI 637882'Gamma'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2002DEVELOPED01/22/2002Cultivar'Gamma' (OSU589.028) Hazelnut Pollinizer Cultivar

Flowering characteristics
- Incompatibility alleles: S2S10 (only S10 expressed in the pollen)
- Time of pollen shed: Midseason (about the same time as 'Daviana')
- Catkin density: Many catkins
- Duration of pollen shed: Short Nut characteristics (Figure 2)
- Size: Slightly larger than 'Casina'
- Blanching: Poor removal of pellicle
- Maturity: Few days before 'Barcelona'

Pest tolerance
- Eastern filbert blight: Complete resistance from 'Gasaway'
- Kernel mold: Very low
- Big bud mite: Intermediate (similar to 'Casina')

Important note: This cultivar should not be used as the only pollinizer in a planting. It is a suitable pollinizer for 'Lewis' and 'Barcelona', blooms too early for 'Clark', and is incompatible with 'Casina'. The seedling tree growth was vigorous.

1636822PI 637882
271PI 637883'Delta'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2002DEVELOPED01/22/2002Cultivar1636823PI 637883
272PI 637884'Epsilon'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2002DEVELOPED01/22/2002Cultivar1636824PI 637884
273PI 637885'Zeta'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2002DEVELOPED01/22/2002Cultivar1636825PI 637885
274PI 641130VR 11-27Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2002DONATED04/04/2002Breeding material1636820PI 641130
275PI 641131VR 20-11Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2002DONATED04/04/2002Breeding material1636821PI 641131
276PI 641132OSU 681.043Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636857PI 641132
277PI 641133OSU 681.048 AkcakocaCorylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636858PI 641133
278PI 641134OSU 681.074Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002DONATEDBreeding material1636859PI 641134
279PI 641135OSU 686.058 AkcakocaCorylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636860PI 641135
280PI 641136OSU 686.124 Giresun-OrduCorylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636861PI 641136
281PI 641137OSU 687.019Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636862PI 641137
282PI 641138OSU 687.023Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636863PI 641138
283PI 641139OSU 687.053 TrabzonCorylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636864PI 641139
284PI 641140OSU 687.077Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002DONATEDBreeding material1636865PI 641140
285PI 641141OSU 687.125 TrabzonCorylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636866PI 641141
286PI 641142OSU 693.073Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636868PI 641142
287PI 641143OSU 693.109Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636869PI 641143
288PI 641144OSU 693.121Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNot Available2002DONATEDBreeding material1636871PI 641144
289PI 641145OSU 702.004 East Black SeaCorylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636872PI 641145
290PI 641146OSU 702.031 East Black SeaCorylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636873PI 641146
291PI 641147OSU 702.037Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636874PI 641147
292PI 641148OSU 702.041 East Black SeaCorylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636875PI 641148
293PI 641149OSU 723.042Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636876PI 641149
294PI 654966OSU 693.040Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636867PI 654966
295PI 693802OSU 693.117 East Black SeaCorylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNot Available2002COLLECTEDBreeding material1636870PI 693802
296PI 634202'Ganja'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2002DONATED03/08/2002CultivarGandja (Ganja) - This is an Azerbaijanian local variety of filbert; has been cultivated in Georgia since 1957. The bush is vigorous; the flowering is abundant (both male and female blossoms). The nuts are medium in size and resemble a turnip in shape; light brown with dark stripes running from the apex to the base. The shell is glabrous, thin, smooth, its cavity filled to capacity which makes the nut feel heavy. The productivity is regular and good, an average crop being from 860 to 1,900 kg per hectare. The kernel makes 52-57% of nut weight and contains 67-68% oil. It was first introduced in Georgia in 1966 for cultivating all over the Republic, in all horticultural zones and areas of both Eastern and Western Georgia. -- from a book at the Institute of Horticulture, Viticulture and Wine Making, photocopied by M.M. Thompson during her visit in March, 2002. Handwritten note on translation: Ganja has a problem with split sutures. Nut yields lower than for some other cultivars1636817PI 634202
297PI 641127'Ashrafi'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2002DONATED03/08/2002CultivarAshrafi (=KTH-30-B) - This is an Azerbaijanian variety of filbert of popular selection, that has been cultivated in Georgia since 1957. The bush is vigorous. The nut is large, measuring 1.6 x 1.7 x 1.5 cm, round, compressed from the sides and weighing averagely 2.2 g; there are 260 nuts to a kilogram. The shell is slightly costate, medium brittle and thick (0.2-1.0 cm). The kernel accounts for 45-48% of nut weight and contains 67.5% oil. The nuts ripen rather late, viz. at the end of September. The variety is noted for high productivity and regular annual crops, as well as for adaptability to climatic conditions, which makes it appreciably industrially. -- -- from a book at the Institute of Horticulture, Viticulture and Wine Making, photocopied by M.M. Thompson during her visit in March, 2002.1636816PI 641127
298PI 641128'Kudriavchik'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2002DONATED03/08/2002CultivarKudryavchik (curly) - This variety of filbert occurs under the synonyms Kerasund Round, Uchatkhili, and in Turkey it is known as Tambul. It was imported into Georgia from Turkey in 1900, occurs in the Gagra, Lagodekhi, and Sukhumi Districts of the Georgian SSR, where it has been officially endorsed for cultivation (1963). The bush is medium. The involucre is slightly longer tha the nut, and as the latter ripens the former curls up (hence the name). The nuts grow in foursomes, fivesomes, etc. up to ten in a cluster. The nuts are small, measuring 1.8 x 1.7 x 1.6 cm, glossy, oval in shape, slightly costate. the shell is thin, light-brown, with darker stripes. the average weight of a nut is 1.7 g, and it takes from 400-430 nuts to make one kilogram. The kernel makes 47.2% of a nut, weight and contains 70.2% of oil. The nuts ripen in the middle of July; the crops are regular. -- from a book at the Institute of Horticulture, Viticulture and Wine Making, photocopied by M.M. Thompson during her visit in March, 2002. Handwritten note on translation: Kudryavchik is similar to 'Tombul', a leading cultivar in Turkey.1636818PI 641128
299PI 641129'Izyum Shakar'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2002DONATED03/08/2002CultivarIzyum Shakar (=KX-29) - This variety of filbert occurs under different synonyms: Kakhian-29 or K-kh-29. It is an Azerbaijanian variety of popular selection and has been under testing in Georgia since 1957. The bush is spreading, medium dense; the coppice shoots are not so numerous; the productivity is low and crops are periodic. The nut is of medium size, measuring 2.0 x 1.8 x 1.6 cm, yellow-gray, with a thick shell. The average weight of one nut is 2.0 g and it takes 492 nuts to make one kilogram. The involucre is slightly longer than the nut and covered with pubescence. the kernel makes 46% of nut weight and contains 65.2% of oil. The nuts ripen at the end of August - beginning of September. -- from a book at the Institute of Horticulture, Viticulture and Wine Making, photocopied by M.M. Thompson during her visit in March, 2002.1636819PI 641129
300PI 654965Oland O.P.Corylus avellana L. Gotlands län, SwedenCORNUTNot Available2001COLLECTED2001Wild material1631356PI 654965
301PI 688071C. sieboldiana var. mandshurica VV186Corylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Russian FederationCOROut of Season2001COLLECTED09/01/2001Wild materialShrub 1 m tall; fruit green, turning tan. 1636690PI 688071
302PI 688072NA 71274Corylus sieboldiana Blume var. mandshurica (Maxim. & Rupr.) C. K. Schneid. Primorye, Russian FederationCORNUTNot Available2001COLLECTED09/07/2001Shkotovsk district, Birch creek up Livadiskaya mountain, north of Anisimovka, evelation 400-700m43.12167000, 132.79500000400Open Acer, Abies, Picea woods beside stream on rocky mountainsideWild materialBroad rounded shrub 4 m tall. 1636746PI 688072
303PI 637879HVSC-056Corylus sieboldiana Blume var. mandshurica (Maxim. & Rupr.) C. K. Schneid. Habarovskij kraj, Russian FederationCORNot Available2001COLLECTED47.39167000, 134.5486100070Mosquito ridden area with medium drained humus/duff soil, surrounded by Acer, Populus, Syringa mandshurica, Juglands mandshurica.Wild material1631137PI 637879
304PI 637880HVSC-069Corylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Habarovskij kraj, Russian FederationCOROut of Season2001COLLECTED49.13833000, 136.5144400042Located near the road on the edge of a forest with NE exposure, on a flat sandy loam with medium drainage surrounded by White birches, Alms, Grasses, Salix populationWild material1631138PI 637880
305PI 637881HVSC-073Corylus sieboldiana Blume var. mandshurica (Maxim. & Rupr.) C. K. Schneid. Habarovskij kraj, Russian FederationCORNot Available2001COLLECTED49.39222000, 137.67750000364Near the road on the edge of a forest with 10% NE exposure, on moderate (40 deg.) slope in a sandy loam with medium drainage surrounded by Maples firs Anus Koreanus, Ragweed Copper birch, Polygonum, Actunidia, Kolomikta, Asters.Wild material1631139PI 637881
306PI 637867C. avellana Alvare ArboretumCorylus avellana L. CORNUTNot Available2001DONATED04/10/2001Wild material1613693PI 637867
307PI 631155OSU 446.106Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2001DONATED03/30/2001Cultivar1616881PI 631155
308PI 634201OSU 440.007Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2001DONATED03/30/2001Cultivar1616880PI 634201
309PI 637862'Yamhill'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2001DONATED03/30/2001CultivarHazelnut released by S. Mehlenbacher from Oregon State University with Gassaway resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight (EFB). A high yielding cultivar for the kernel market. A cross of OSU 296.082 x VR 8-32 made in 1990. OSU 296.082 is a seedling from a cross of OSU 17.068 (= Barcelona x Tombul Ghiaghli) x Willamette, and VR 8-32 is from a cross of the Sicilian cultivar Montebello x Gassaway. Compared to Barcelona, Yamhill is a smaller tree with higher nut yields per tree and a much higher yield efficiency. Nuts of Yamhill are smaller (2.3 g) than those of Barcelona (3.8 g) and have a higher percent kernel (49% vs 43%). Nuts fall free of the husk at maturity and can be mechanically harvested about 10 days earlier than Barcelona. The kernels fill the nuts well even with a heavy crop. Raw kernels are attractive, having little fiber on their light brown pellicles. Blanching ratings are equal to Barcelona, indicating that about half ot the pellicle is removed by dry heat. Kernel quality is suitable for many end uses, and it competitive with kernels imported from Turkey. 'Yamhill' has complete resistance to eastern filbert blight conferred by a dominant allele from 'Gasaway', and has incompatibility alleles S8 and S26. 'Yamhill' was released as a public cultivar and may be propagated without restriction.

The Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station announces the release of a new hazelnut (Corylus avellana L.) cultivar 'Yamhill' for the kernel market with high nut yields, early-maturing nuts, high percent kernel, very good kernel quality, resistance to bud mite (primarily Phytoptus avellanae Nal.), and complete resistance to eastern filbert blight caused by Anisogramma anomala (Peck) E. Muller.

'Yamhill' (OSU 542.102) resulted from a cross of OSU 296.082 x VR 8-32 made in 1990. OSU 296.082 is a seedling from a cross of OSU 17.068 (= 'Barcelona' x 'Tombul Ghiaghli') x 'Willamette', and VR 8-32 is from a cross of the Sicilian cultivar 'Montebello' and the obsolete pollinizer 'Gasaway'. Compared to the standard 'Barcelona', 'Yamhill' has smaller trees, higher nut yields per tree, and much higher nut yield efficiency. Nuts of 'Yamhill' are smaller (2.3 g) than those of 'Barcelona' (3.8 g) and have a higher percent kernel (49% vs. 43%). The nuts fall free of the husk at maturity and can be mechanically harvested 10 to 15 days earlier than 'Barcelona'. The kernels fill the nuts well even with a heavy crop. Raw kernels are attractive, having little fiber on their light brown pellicles. Blanching ratings are equal to 'Barcelona', indicating that about half of the pellicle is removed by dry heat. Kernel quality is suitable for many end uses, and is competitive with kernels imported from Turkey. The frequency of blanks, poorly filled nuts, and doubles is less than for 'Barcelona'. 'Yamhill' has a low frequency of moldy kernels, which was especially striking in 2005 when mold was a problem on 'Lewis' and many other genotypes. 'Yamhill' has complete resistance to eastern filbert blight, conferred by a dominant allele from 'Gasaway'.

'Yamhill' has incompatibility alleles S8 and S26. Both alleles are expressed in the stigmas, but only S8 is expressed in the pollen. Pollen shed and female receptivity occur early in the season, about with 'Barcelona'. Pollinizers that shed pollen in early midseason are recommended. We recommend one-third each of 'Gamma' (S2 S10) and 'Santiam' (S3 S15) which shed pollen early in the season and have a short shedding time. For the remaining third, a mixture of later-shedding types is recommended, of which several are suitable: 'Delta' (S1 S15), 'Epsilon' (S1 S4), 'Zeta' (S1 S1) and OSU 703.007 (S1 S3). All four have complete resistance to eastern filbert blight.

1616882PI 637862
310PI 637868Berriedale Tree 1Corylus avellana L. Scotland, United KingdomCORNUTNot Available2001COLLECTED2001Orkney Islands, Hoy, north of Rackwick in the Berriedale wood. British Ordnance Survey location HY202014.58.89261000, -3.3864100065Wild materialOne of three known wild hazelnut trees in the north part of the Orkney island of Hoy. Cuttings were collected in March, 2001 with the permission of the Scottish Natural Heritage under section 28(5) of the wildlife and countryside act in a collaboration with Erica Benson at the University of Abertay in Dundee, Scotland in an effort to propagate these trees for conservation and re-introduction. PI 637868 and PI 637869 are from the Berriedale wood north of Rackwick, and PI 637870 is nea The Bu Ruins at the northeast end of the island. -- Correspondence from E.E. Benson to B.M. Reed at NCGR Corvallis, March, 2001.1613694PI 637868
311PI 637869Berriedale Tree 2Corylus avellana L. Scotland, United KingdomCORNot Available2001COLLECTED2001Orkney Islands, Hoy, north of Rackwick in the Berriedale wood. British Ordnance Survey location HY202014.58.89261000, -3.3864100065Wild materialOne of three known wild hazelnut trees in the north part of the Orkney island of Hoy. Cuttings were collected in March, 2001 with the permission of the Scottish Natural Heritage under section 28(5) of the wildlife and countryside act in a collaboration with Erica Benson at the University of Abertay in Dundee, Scotland in an effort to propagate these trees for conservation and re-introduction. PI 637868 and PI 637869 are from the Berriedale wood north of Rackwick, and PI 637870 is nea The Bu Ruins at the northeast end of the island. -- Correspondence from E.E. Benson to B.M. Reed at NCGR Corvallis, March, 2001.1613695PI 637869
312PI 637870The Bu (Tree1)Corylus avellana L. Scotland, United KingdomCORNot Available2001COLLECTED2001Orkney Islands, Hoy, southwest of and near to Bu. British Ordnance Survey location HY234046.58.92191000, -3.3320100045Wild materialOne of three known wild hazelnut trees in the north part of the Orkney island of Hoy. Cuttings were collected in March, 2001 with the permission of the Scottish Natural Heritage under section 28(5) of the wildlife and countryside act in a collaboration with Erica Benson at the University of Abertay in Dundee, Scotland in an effort to propagate these trees for conservation and re-introduction. PI 637868 and PI 637869 are from the Berriedale wood north of Rackwick, and PI 637870 is nea The Bu Ruins at the northeast end of the island. -- Correspondence from E.E. Benson to B.M. Reed at NCGR Corvallis, March, 2001.1613696PI 637870
313PI 637863'Grosse Kugelnuss'Corylus avellana L. GermanyCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivarsee PI 76369 received from Berlin in 1928: Grosse Kugelnuss1613690PI 637863
314PI 637864'Kurzhullige Zellernuss'Corylus avellana L. England, United KingdomCORNUTNot Available2001DONATED02/27/2001Cultivarsee PI 557095 origin: United Kingdom, historical origin: Germany. cultivar: Kurzhullige Zellernuss. remarks: Upright and compact, fair cropper, husk is exceptionally short, nuts very small and in clusters. Perennial. Cultivar. Cutting.1613691PI 637864
315PI 637865'Minna's Zellernuss'Corylus avellana L. GermanyCORNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivarSee also: PI 263741, PI 557096, PI 113685 and PI 86259.1613692PI 637865
316PI 637866'Volle Zellernuss'Corylus avellana L. England, United KingdomCORNUTNot Available2001DONATED02/27/2001Cultivar1616895PI 637866
317PI 637871'Vistula'Corylus avellana L. PolandCORNUTNot Available2001COLLECTEDCultivar1616883PI 637871
318PI 637872'Tapparona di Mezzanego'Corylus avellana L. Liguria, ItalyCORNUTNot Available2001COLLECTEDCultivarReceived as Tapparona di Mezzanego. This clone of cultivar Tapparona came from the village of Mezzanego, in Liguria reqion of Italy.1616884PI 637872
319PI 637873'Pruhovany'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2001DONATED02/2001Cultivar1616885PI 637873
320PI 637874'Rimsky'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2001DONATED02/2001Cultivar1616886PI 637874
321PI 637875'Obrovsky Novy'Corylus avellana L. SlovakiaCORNUTNot Available2001COLLECTEDCultivar1616887PI 637875
322PI 637876'd'Algers'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2001DONATED02/2001Cultivar1616888PI 637876
323PI 637877'Hempelov Zellsky'Corylus avellana L. SlovakiaCORNUTNot Available2001COLLECTED2001Cultivar1616889PI 637877
324PI 637878OSU 556.019Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2001COLLECTEDBreeding material1616890PI 637878
325PI 637846Big RedCorylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612408PI 637846
326PI 637847MyokaCorylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612409PI 637847
327PI 637848NutwasherCorylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612410PI 637848
328PI 637849Super Big RedCorylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612411PI 637849
329PI 637850Large EarlyCorylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612412PI 637850
330PI 637851Gellatly SpecialCorylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612413PI 637851
331PI 637852C. cornuta Peace RiverCorylus cornuta Marshall British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DONATED01/25/2001Cultivar1612414PI 637852
332PI 637853NearokaCorylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612416PI 637853
333PI 637854SE 3Corylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612417PI 637854
334PI 637855SE 4Corylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612418PI 637855
335PI 637856SE 6Corylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612420PI 637856
336PI 637857SE 7Corylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612421PI 637857
337PI 637858SE 9Corylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612422PI 637858
338PI 637859SE 15Corylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612423PI 637859
339PI 637860NormokaCorylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612424PI 637860
340PI 637861CometCorylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNot Available2001DONATED01/25/2001CultivarOriginated in Westbank, British Columbia, Canada, by J.U. Gellatly. Introduced in 1928. Seedling of unknown parentage. Nut: very attractive; long, thin shell; kernel clean, smooth, plump. Tree: produces good crops if cross-pollinated. Now obsolete. 1612425PI 637861
341PI 657890OkandaCorylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivar1612415PI 657890
342PI 617280OSU 99037Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2000DONATED12/13/2000Breeding material1607106PI 617280
343PI 617272OSU 557.119 WisconsinCorylus americana Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season2000DONATED05/03/2000Breeding material1604589PI 617272
344PI 617273OSU 557.122 WisconsinCorylus americana Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season2000DONATED05/03/2000Breeding material1604590PI 617273
345PI 617274OSU 557.136 WisconsinCorylus americana Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2000DONATED05/03/2000Wild material1604591PI 617274
346PI 617275OSU 557.138 MassachusettsCorylus americana Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season2000DONATED05/03/2000Wild material1604592PI 617275
347PI 617276OSU 557.153 WisconsinCorylus americana Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season2000DONATED05/03/2000Wild material1604593PI 617276
348PI 617277OSU 557.190 MassachusettsCorylus americana Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season2000DONATED05/03/2000Wild material1604594PI 617277
349PI 617278OSU 558.178 MichiganCorylus americana Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season2000DONATED05/03/2000Wild material1604595PI 617278
350PI 617268'Clark'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORSTEMNot Available2000DEVELOPED01/1999CultivarRelease of 'Clark' Hazelnut. The Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station announces the release of a new hazelnut (Corylus avellana L.) cultivar. 'Clark' has smaller trees, higher yield efficiency, higher percent kernel, and kernels that are more easily blanched than the standard 'Barcelona'. The nuts fall free of the husk at maturity and can be mechanically harvested about 8 days earlier than 'Barcelona'. 'Clark', tested as OSU 276.142, resulted from a cross of 'Tombul Ghiaghli' from Greece with'Willamette' made in 1982. Light roasting and rubbing removes most of the pellicle of 'Clark' kernels, making them suitable for sale on the blanched kernel market. 'Clark' has a higher frequency of moldy kernels than 'Barcelona' but fewer than 'Willamette'. 'Clark' has a high level of quantitative resistance to eastern filbert blight caused by Anisogramma anomala (Peck) E. Muller, as determined by measuring the cankers which developed after exposure of potted trees under structures topped with diseased wood. Although not immune to eastern filbert blight, growers should be able to manage orchards of 'Clark' in the presence of the disease. Resistance to big bud mite (primarily Phyloplus avellanae Nal.) is also good. 'Clark' has incompatibility alleles S3 and S8. Both alleles are expressed in the stigmas and pollen. Female anthesis is very late, even later than 'Ennis'. Therefore, very late-shedding pollinizers are needed. 'Hall's Giant' is recommended for the earliest females to emerge.Very late-shedding OSU selections are recommended as pollinizers for the peak of female anthesis. 'Clark' is being released as a public variety and may be propagated without restriction. A list of nurseries propagating trees of 'Clark' may be obtained from the industry web site (www.oregonhazelnuts.org) or S. A. Mehlenbacher, Dept. of Horticulture, 4017 Agricultural and Life Sciences Bldg., Corvallis, OR 97331-7304.1598257PI 617268
351PI 617269OSU 556.27Corylus avellana L. İstanbul, TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2000COLLECTED1990Breeding material1598258PI 617269
352PI 617270OSU 556.11Corylus avellana L. İstanbul, TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2000COLLECTED1990Breeding material1598259PI 617270
353PI 617271OSU 622.30Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available2000DEVELOPEDBreeding material1598260PI 617271
354PI 617279L. Smith Pioneer HazelnutCorylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available2000COLLECTED03/08/2000Scottsburg, Oregon43.65417000, -123.8155600014Cultivar1603149PI 617279
355PI 608046C. heterophylla 99018 Yanji CityCorylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1999DEVELOPED07/06/2000Wild material1585885PI 608046
356PI 617264C. heterophylla 559.057 LiaoningCorylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1999DONATED07/26/1999Wild material1583727PI 617264
357PI 617265Medium Long 18-32 EFB-resistantCorylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1999DONATED07/26/1999Breeding material1583728PI 617265
358PI 617266OSU 408.040Corylus avellana L. CORNUTNot Available1999DEVELOPED07/28/1999Breeding material1583729PI 617266
359PI 617267Fryer Pioneer HazelnutCorylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1999COLLECTED06/04/1999Fryer Homestead in Scottsburg, Oregon43.66667000, -123.8000000010Umqua river valley at tidewaters upper reach.CultivarLayer taken from one of the oldest cultivated hazelnut in Oregon. 1587251PI 617267
360PI 634200C. colurna var. chinensisCorylus chinensis Franch. China Historic1998COLLECTEDCultivated material1575466PI 634200
361PI 617226'Acorn Hazelnut'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558061PI 617226
362PI 617227'Frango 2'Corylus hybr. PolandCORNUTNot Available1998DEVELOPEDCultivar1558062PI 617227
363PI 617228'Frango 4'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558063PI 617228
364PI 617229'Frango 5'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558064PI 617229
365PI 617230'Goc'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558065PI 617230
366PI 617231'Karol'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558066PI 617231
367PI 617232'Lech'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558067PI 617232
368PI 617233'Lenka 3'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558068PI 617233
369PI 617234'Lenka 4'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558069PI 617234
370PI 617235'Little Poland'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558070PI 617235
371PI 617236'Maria'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558071PI 617236
372PI 617237'Syrena'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558072PI 617237
373PI 617238'Volski'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558073PI 617238
374PI 617239'Tapparona'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998CultivarTapparona originated in the Liguria reqion of Italy. This clone of cultivar Tapparona was received from the Z. Piskornik collection in Poland. It had been collected in the village of Colombano Cortenoli in Italy.1558074PI 617239
375PI 617240'Dal Rosso'Corylus avellana L. ItalyCORNUTNot Available1998DEVELOPEDCultivar'Dal Rosso' or 'Del Rosso' or 'Rossa'; it is a cultivar from Liguria (North Italy), it is a Corylus avellana natural selection. - Roberto Botta (e-mail correspondence 1 Apr 2009)1558075PI 617240
376PI 617241'Barrettona'Corylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED05/06/1998Cultivar1558076PI 617241
377PI 617215CCOR 643Corylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Oregon, United States Historic1998DONATED03/27/1998Cultivated material1556936PI 617215
378PI 617216C. heterophylla x C. avellanaCorylus hybr.Oregon, United States Historic1998DONATED03/27/1998Breeding material1556941PI 617216
379PI 617217C. heterophylla x C. avellanaCorylus hybr.Oregon, United States Historic1998DONATED03/27/1998Breeding material1556942PI 617217
380PI 617218C. heterophylla x C. avellanaCorylus hybr.Oregon, United States Historic1998DONATED03/27/1998Breeding material1556943PI 617218
381PI 617219C. heterophylla x C. avellanaCorylus hybr.Oregon, United States Historic1998DONATED03/27/1998Breeding material1556944PI 617219
382PI 617220C. heterophylla x C. avellanaCorylus hybr.Oregon, United States Historic1998DONATED03/27/1998Breeding material1556945PI 617220
383PI 617221C. heterophylla x C. avellanaCorylus hybr.Oregon, United States Historic1998DONATED03/27/1998Breeding material1556946PI 617221
384PI 617222C. heterophylla x C. avellanaCorylus hybr.Oregon, United States Historic1998DONATED03/27/1998Breeding material1556947PI 617222
385PI 617223C. heterophylla x C. avellanaCorylus hybr.Oregon, United States Historic1998DONATED03/27/1998Breeding material1556948PI 617223
386PI 617224C. heterophylla x C. avellanaCorylus hybr.Oregon, United States Historic1998DONATED03/27/1998Breeding material1556949PI 617224
387PI 617225C. heterophylla x C. avellanaCorylus hybr.Oregon, United States Historic1998DONATED03/27/1998Breeding material1556950PI 617225
388PI 61724288317Corylus americana Marshall Illinois, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1998COLLECTED1988Wild material1566610PI 617242
389PI 61724388323Corylus americana Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1998DONATED02/1998Wild material1566611PI 617243
390PI 61724488325Corylus americana Marshall North Dakota, United StatesCOROut of Season1998COLLECTED1988Wild material1566612PI 617244
391PI 61724588302Corylus americana Marshall Pennsylvania, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998COLLECTED1988Wild material1566613PI 617245
392PI 61724688306Corylus americana Marshall West Virginia, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998COLLECTED1988Wild material1566614PI 617246
393PI 61724788307Corylus americana Marshall West Virginia, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998COLLECTED1988Wild material1566615PI 617247
394PI 61724888311Corylus americana Marshall Kentucky, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1998COLLECTED1988Wild material1566616PI 617248
395PI 61724988316Corylus americana Marshall Michigan, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1998COLLECTED1988Wild material1566617PI 617249
396PI 61725089306Corylus americana Marshall Indiana, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998COLLECTED1989Wild material1566618PI 617250
397PI 61725188317Corylus americana Marshall Indiana, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1998COLLECTED1988Wild material1566619PI 617251
398PI 61725288324Corylus americana Marshall Wisconsin, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1998COLLECTED1988Wild material1566620PI 617252
399PI 61725388301Corylus americana Marshall Pennsylvania, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1998COLLECTED1988Wild material1566621PI 617253
400PI 61725488303Corylus americana Marshall Maryland, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1998COLLECTED1988Wild material1566622PI 617254
401PI 61725586025Corylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Kyonggi, Korea, SouthCOROut of Season1998DONATED1986Wild material1566623PI 617255
402PI 61725686026Corylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Kyonggi, Korea, SouthCORNUTNot Available1998DONATED1986Wild material1566624PI 617256
403PI 61725786027Corylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Kyonggi, Korea, SouthCOROut of Season1998DONATED1986Wild material1566625PI 617257
404PI 61725887172Corylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Nebraska, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1998COLLECTED1987Wild material1566626PI 617258
405PI 61725987176Corylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Nebraska, United StatesCOROut of Season1998COLLECTED1987Wild material1566627PI 617259
406PI 61726086033Corylus americana Marshall New Jersey, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1998COLLECTED1986Wild material1566628PI 617260
407PI 61726187141Corylus americana Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1998DONATED02/1998Wild material1566629PI 617261
408PI 61726287142Corylus americana Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1998DONATED02/1998Wild material1566630PI 617262
409PI 617263C. americana 87143 MichiganCorylus americana Marshall Michigan, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1998COLLECTED1987Wild material1566631PI 617263
410PI 617212C. sieboldiana v. mandshuricaCorylus sieboldiana Blume var. mandshurica (Maxim. & Rupr.) C. K. Schneid. Jilin Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available1997COLLECTED09/04/1997Changbaishan mountain, Antu county, Jilin province, China42.34833000, 127.893890001085On forest edge along moist ditches and natural wetlands with Betula costata, Pinus koraiensis and Acer mono. 10 degree slope.Wild material1552173PI 617212
411PI 637923Corylus Virus CollectionCorylus sp.Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997Genetic material1548787PI 637923
412PI 691950Apple mosaic virus in BarcellonaCorylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CultivarApple mosaic virus in Barcellona2097848PI 691950
413PI 691951Apple mosaic virus in San GiovaniCorylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CultivarApple mosaic virus in San Giovani2097849PI 691951
414PI 691952Apple mosaic virus in Tonda RosaCorylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CultivarApple mosaic virus in Tonda Rosa2097850PI 691952
415PI 617210'Lewis'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORSTEMNot Available1997DEVELOPED01/23/1997Cultivar'Lewis' is precocious, and it is more productive and has a smaller tree size than 'Barcelona.' Harvest is earlier than 'Barcelona,' and the nuts have fewer defects. Tree growth habit: 'Lewis' is a 'grower-friendly' tree, with a good balance between vegetative and reproductive growth and can be managed much like a 'Barcelona.' Tree size is 75% of 'Barcelona' as measured by the trunk cross sectional area. Flowering characteristics: Female flowers bloom at the same time as 'Barcelona.' The incompatibility alleles are S3 S8. The recommended pollinizers are 'Tonda di Giffoni' and 'Hall's Giant.' Yield and yield efficiency: 'Lewis' has out-yielded 'Barcelona' in the first 4 bearing years and yields were similar in 1997. 'Lewis' is a more efficient nut producer than 'Barcelona' (i.e. yields are greater and tree size is smaller). More of the tree's resources are used to produce nuts and less to develop leaves and wood. Harvest time: Nut clusters contain 3-4 nuts. Nuts are freehusking and ready to harvest 5-7 days earlier than 'Barcelona.' Nut and kernel quality: 'Lewis' nuts are smaller than 'Barcelona.' Only 17% of the nuts had defects in 1997, compared to 28 percent for 'Barcelona.' Most defects in 'Lewis' are shriveled, poorl filled, or moldy nuts. In 1997, only I% of the nuts were blanks, 'Barcelona' had 8%. Kernel is 4-5% greater than 'Barcelona.' Raw kernels have very little fiber. Kernels blanch slightly better than 'Barcelona' and have good flavor and texture. Propagation: 'Lewis' is easy to propagate by the 'tie-off' method. Layers are well rooted and vigorous. Pest tolerance: A major strength is its tolerance to eastern filbert blight. Its tolerance to the pathogen is better than 'Willamette' and 'Hall' Giant.' Big bud mite tolerance is comparable to 'Casina.'1544654PI 617210
416PI 617211OSU 244.001Corylus avellana L. CORNUTNot Available1997DEVELOPED04/19/1999Cultivar1544655PI 617211
417PI 263731'Bergeri'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568131PI 263731
418PI 263732'Bondnut'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568132PI 263732
419PI 263733'Engelse Zeller'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568133PI 263733
420PI 263734'Fruchess'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568134PI 263734
421PI 263735'Fruhe von Frauendorf'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568135PI 263735
422PI 263736'Garibaldi'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568136PI 263736
423PI 263737'Lambert Filbert'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568137PI 263737
424PI 263738'Lange Spaanse'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568138PI 263738
425PI 263739'Luisen'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568139PI 263739
426PI 263740'Medium Long'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568140PI 263740
427PI 263741'Minna's Zeller'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568141PI 263741
428PI 263742'Neue Riesen'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568142PI 263742
429PI 263743'Rode Zeller'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568143PI 263743
430PI 263744'Roodpit Lambertsnoot'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568144PI 263744
431PI 263745'Verbeterde Cosford'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568145PI 263745
432PI 263746'Webb's Prize Cob'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568146PI 263746
433PI 263747'Witpit Lambertsnoot'Corylus avellana L. Gelderland, Netherlands Historic1997DONATED03/01/19601568147PI 263747
434PI 617209C. avellana - SchubergCorylus avellana L. Gotlands län, SwedenCORNUTNot Available1996COLLECTED09/19/1996Southeastern Gotland, close to and 2 km along coast south of the stream Naarsaan, 20 km south of Ljugarn.57.33333000, 18.6666700010Coastal deep sandyloam high in calcium over chalc rock. Former pasture for cattle, sheep and horse. Associated with Quercus robur, Betula pendula, Fraxinus exelsior and Ulmus carpinifolia.Wild materialPlants were removed from the wild and placed in the garden of Hakan Schuberg's parents. The seeds were collected from the plants in the garden.1541930PI 617209
435PI 617207C. avellana - Albania 55Corylus avellana L. AlbaniaCORNUTNot Available1996COLLECTED08/26/1996Approx. 1 km further along road returning to Gjirokaster from the Pastures of Cajup.40.20277778, 20.158333331260Growing along a west facing rocky hillside.Wild materialTree 4m tall, 3-4m wide. Numerous.1533587PI 617207
436PI 617208C. avellana - Albania 80Corylus avellana L. AlbaniaCORNUTNot Available1996COLLECTED08/28/1996Korce, market.40.61972000, 20.78222000320Collected in surrounding mountains presumably from wild populations.Wild material1533594PI 617208
437PI 688068'Khachapura'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available1995DEVELOPEDCultivarThis is a local variety of filbert of popular selection; cultivated in Guria, western Georgia, where it is of industrial importance. This variety was approved for cultivation in 1954. The bush is vigorous, spreading, with numerous root sprouts. The productivity is medium, but crops are regular. There are many male flowers with a lengthy blooming period, therefore this variety can be successfully used as a pollinator. The nuts are large, compressed, reddish-brown and with darker colour stripes running from the apex to the base. The involucre is readily detachable from the nut, whose average weight is 2.5 g. The shell is of medium thickness. The weight of the kernel makes 46.7% of that of a nut; oil content is 65.9%. The taste is good. Since 1966 this variety of filbert has been cultivated all over Georgia as pollinator. -- from a book at the Institute of Horticulture, Viticulture and Wine Making, photocopied by M.M. Thompson during her visit in March, 2002. Handwritten note on translation: Khachapura has oblate nuts.1517476PI 688068
438PI 688069'Tskhensis dzudzu'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available1995DEVELOPEDCultivarTskhenisdzudzu - This is a popular local hazelnut variety that originated in Georgia. The bush is vigorous, spreading, thick; the root sprouts are not numerous. the flowering begins at the end of December and lasts from 45-55 days; The nuts grow in threesomes, foursomes, fivesomes and sixsomes and ripen in the middle of July. The nuts of this variety are oblong, slightly flattened, with a protruding pubescent apex and with lateral furrows; reddish-brown in colour; a nut of this variety normally measures 2.2 x 1.5 x 1.1 cm and weighs from 2.1 to 2.3 g, 370-410 of them making 1 kilogram. The kernel makes 53.0% of nut weight and contains 69% of oil. This variety is considered fairly productive, one bush normally yielding crop of up to 4.3 kg, which accounts for 1.2-1.3 tonne per hectare. -- from a book at the Institute of Horticulture, Viticulture and Wine Making, photocopied by M.M. Thompson during her visit in March, 2002. Handwritten note on translation: Tskhenis dzudzu has long nuts.1517474PI 688069
439PI 688070'Pirozhok'Corylus avellana L. UkraineCORNUTNot Available1995DEVELOPEDCultivar1495609PI 688070
440PI 617213C. colurnaCorylus colurna L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1994DONATED12/20/1994Cultivated material1552501PI 617213
441PI 617214C. americanaCorylus americana Marshall Oregon, United StatesCORNUTOut of Season1994DONATED12/20/1994Breeding material1552502PI 617214
442PI 617205C. heterophyllaCorylus heterophylla Fisch. ex Trautv. Korea, SouthCORNUTNot Available1993COLLECTEDWild material1007397PI 617205
443PI 617204C. chinensis OSU 91502Corylus chinensis Franch. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORSTEMNot Available1993DEVELOPEDWild material1007389PI 617204
444PI 617206C. jacquemontii OSU 88501Corylus jacquemontii Decne. IndiaCORSTEMNot Available1993DEVELOPEDWild material1007405PI 617206
445PI 617191Farris 88 BSCorylus hybr.Michigan, United StatesCORSTEMNot Available1993DEVELOPEDCultivar1007268PI 617191
446PI 617192'Cosford'Corylus avellana L. England, United KingdomCORNUTNot Available1993DEVELOPEDCultivar1007275PI 617192
447PI 617193C. jacquemontii (Arnold)Corylus jacquemontii Decne. UncertainCORNUTNot Available1993COLLECTEDCultivar1007281PI 617193
448PI 617194'Tonda Romana 41'Corylus avellana L. ItalyCORNUTNot Available1993DEVELOPEDCultivar1007287PI 617194
449PI 617195'Tonda Francescana'Corylus avellana L. ItalyCORNUTNot Available1993DEVELOPEDBreeding materialHazelnut for the blanched kernel market. Origin: Università di Perugia, Italy by A. Tombesi and D. Farinelli. Tonda Gentile Romana x Tonda di Giffoni; crossed 1982; selected 1988; tested as F6P200; introduced in 2012. 1007295PI 617195
450PI 617196'Tonda Romana 45'Corylus avellana L. ItalyCORNUTNot Available1993DEVELOPEDCultivar1007310PI 617196
451PI 617197SCS 4-6Corylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1993COLLECTEDWild material1007328PI 617197
452PI 617198SCS 13-3Corylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1993COLLECTEDWild material1007338PI 617198
453PI 617199SCS 25-3Corylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1993COLLECTEDWild material1007344PI 617199
454PI 617200SCS 53-6Corylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1993COLLECTEDWild material1007352PI 617200
455PI 617201SCS 66-5Corylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1993COLLECTEDWild material1007368PI 617201
456PI 617202SCS 19-4Corylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1993COLLECTEDWild material1007374PI 617202
457PI 617203SCS 13-5Corylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1993COLLECTEDWild material1007382PI 617203
458PI 617189'Grande'Corylus avellana L. SpainCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivar1007190PI 617189
459PI 617190'Amandi'Corylus avellana L. SpainCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivar1007204PI 617190
460PI 654964'Pinyolenc'Corylus avellana L. SpainCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivar1007213PI 654964
461PI 617184Jemtegaard 76Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivar1007145PI 617184
462PI 617185'Grand Traverse'Corylus hybr.Michigan, United StatesCORSTEMNot Available1992DEVELOPEDBreeding materialFrom Brooks and Olmo: Orig. in Lansing, Mich., by Cecil Farris. Introd. in 1989. Faroka x Royal; cross made in 1977; selected in 1981; tested as 81C. Nut: nearly round, brown; 51% kernel by weight; ripens with Ennis; kernel plump, clean, excellent flavor. Introduced for the in-shell trade. Tree: vigorous, productive, not precocious, winter hardy. Resistant to big bud mites. 1007151PI 617185
463PI 617186'Manoka'Corylus hybr.British Columbia, CanadaCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDBreeding material1007161PI 617186
464PI 617187Weschcke TP-3Corylus hybr.Wisconsin, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1992COLLECTEDCarl Weschcke's farm in WisconsinBreeding material1007165PI 617187
465PI 617188'Black Hills #2'Corylus hybr.South Dakota, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1992COLLECTEDBlack Hills of South DakotaWild material1007174PI 617188
466PI 617182'Red Fortin'Corylus avellana L. Washington, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDPRE 1992CultivarDeveloped by Michael Dolan, Burnt Ridge Nursery, Onalaska, Washington. Probably not desirable for commercial nut productin, but has colorful red foliage and ornamental qualities. Susceptible to big bud mite. 1007118PI 617182
467PI 617183'Purple Fortrin'Corylus avellana L. Washington, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivarDeveloped by Michael Dolan, Burnt Ridge Nursery, Onalaska, Washington. Probably not desirable for commercial nut productin, but has colorful foliage and ornamental qualities. Susceptible to big bud mite. 1007126PI 617183
468PI 617175'Skorospelka'Corylus avellana L. GeorgiaCORNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivarEarly flowering, protogynous, and cold-tender in Maykop 1007023PI 617175
469PI 617176C. maximaCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivarThe leading cultivar in the USSR, often used as a parent in breeding. Was a standard cv as early as 1949 1007035PI 617176
470PI 617177'Kudryavchik'Corylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivarEarly maturing, high yielding, and reistant to insects. Considered one of the two best cultivars in Sochi. 1007051PI 617177
471PI 617178'Pioneer'Corylus avellana L. UkraineCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivarRecommended for the Black Sea coast 1007064PI 617178
472PI 617179C. maximaCorylus avellana L. Russian FederationCORNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivarVery similar to Adygeiskij I but has a higher oil content and better flavor 1007065PI 617179
473PI 617180'Kerasund Dlinnyi'Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivar1007075PI 617180
474PI 617181'Cosford'Corylus avellana L. England, United KingdomCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivarWas Corylus multiflorum 11/95 - need to verify this taxon, not found in literature. Has a long nut and a long husk 1007092PI 617181
475PI 617171Vilcea-22Corylus avellana L. RomaniaCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDBreeding material1006989PI 617171
476PI 617172'Cozia'Corylus avellana L. RomaniaCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivar1007005PI 617172
477PI 617173'Romavel'Corylus avellana L. RomaniaCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivar1007007PI 617173
478PI 617174'Aveline rouge'Corylus avellana L. RomaniaCORNUTNot Available1992DEVELOPEDCultivar1007020PI 617174
479PI 617170C. siebolidanaCorylus sieboldiana Blume Toyama, JapanCORNUTNot Available1991COLLECTED08/21/1991Hirayu, Mt. Norikura-dake, Nyukawa-mura, Yoshiki-gun, Gifu36.50000000, 136.500000001600Hirayu, Mt. Norikura-dake, Nyukawa-mura, Yoshiki-gun, GifuWild material(This accession was part of the PL,SD 'breakout' - 1992) 1006846PI 617170
480PI 557233'Romai'Corylus avellana L. ItalyCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDCultivarNo additional information provided upon receipt1452205PI 557233
481PI 557234'Willamette'Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORSTEMNot Available1991DEVELOPED1990CultivarThis cultivar originated in Corvallis, Oregon by Shawn A. Mehlenbacher and Maxine M. Thompson of Oregon State University in 1978 from the cross Montabello x Compton (Barcelona x Daviana hybrid). The cultivar was selected in 1979 and tested as OSU 43-58. It was introduced in 1990. The nuts of Willamette are medium and dark brown. They are attractive but not acceptable for in-shell sales because the presence of fiber of the pellicle imparts a bitter taste to the nuts. The nuts yield 50% more marketable kernels than Barcelona (which is the leading cultivar in Oregon), however, Willamette kernels are smaller and are thinner-shelled. They also mature one week later than the Barcelona. The kernels blanch easily and are of excellent quality for use in pastries and confections. The husk is 50% longer than the nut but not entirely free-husking. The trees are vigorous, productive, susceptible to eastern filbert blight, and intermediately susceptible to big bud mites.1452206PI 557234
482PI 557274C. californica #8/DCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialNo additional information provided upon receipt1452246PI 557274
483PI 557275C. californica # 2/SCorylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORSTEMNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialNo additional information provided upon receipt1452247PI 557275
484PI 557276C. californica #3Corylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialNo additional information provided upon receipt1452248PI 557276
485PI 557277C. californica #15Corylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialNo additional information provided upon receipt1452249PI 557277
486PI 557278C. californica #16Corylus californica (A. DC.) Rose Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialNo additional information provided upon receipt1452250PI 557278
487PI 557425OSU 54-1/DCorylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialNo additional information provided upon receipt1452397PI 557425
488PI 557426OSU 193.055Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialNo additional information provided upon receipt1452398PI 557426
489PI 557427Henneman #3Corylus avellana L. Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialNo additional information provided upon receipt1452399PI 557427
490PI 557428OSU 54-42Corylus avellana L. TurkeyCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialNo additional information provided upon receipt1452400PI 557428
491PI 557023C. americana x C. avellanaCorylus hybr.Oregon, United StatesCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialMay be either F2 cross with other hybrids or natural back- cross to C. americana. Resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight 1451995PI 557023
492PI 557221'Pauetet'Corylus avellana L. SpainCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDCultivar1452193PI 557221
493PI 557222'Tonda di Biglini'Corylus avellana L. FranceCORNot Available1991DEVELOPEDCultivar1452194PI 557222
494PI 557223'Comun'Corylus avellana L. PortugalCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDCultivar1452195PI 557223
495PI 557224'da Viega'Corylus avellana L. PortugalCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDCultivar1452196PI 557224
496PI 557225'Molar'Corylus avellana L. PortugalCORNot Available1991DEVELOPEDCultivar1452197PI 557225
497PI 557226TGDL x Cosford sel. 119Corylus avellana L. ItalyCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialNuts 48-50% kernel, kernels hard, medium fiber, poor pellicle removal, shell medium-thick 1452198PI 557226
498PI 557227Daria (104E)Corylus avellana L. ItalyCORNUTNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialNuts 48-54% kernel, kernels hard, little fiber, very good pellicle removal, shell medium-thick 1452199PI 557227
499PI 557228TGDL x Cosford sel. 123FCorylus avellana L. ItalyCORNot Available1991DEVELOPEDBreeding materialNuts 45-47% kernel, kernels hard, little fiber 1452200PI 557228