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Your query included: All accessions taxonomy genus name like Pyrus

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ACCESSIONPLANT NAMETAXONOMYORIGINGENEBANKIMAGEAVAILABILITYRECEIVEDSOURCE TYPESOURCE DATECOLLECTION SITECOORDINATESELEVATIONHABITATIMPROVEMENT LEVELNARRATIVE
0PI 707050 QT24375CPyrus sp.Guangdong Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2025DONATED03/1984Cultivar2190078PI 707050 Q
1PI 707060'J Russell Smith Timber Pear'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai CORNot Available2025CultivarSmith (1874-1966) wrote the book Tree Crops - A Permanent Agriculture whichwrote about the life and breeding efforts of John Hershey. He was an early advocate of perennial agricultural systems, soil conservation, andagroforestry. He is best known though for advancing the field of geography. A friend of Eleanor Roosevelt, he almost convinved Congress to pass a bill to fund agroforestry experimental stations all around the country which failed by one vote. In his later years, he ran a nursery in Virginia that propagated useful tree crops, including fruit and nut trees. He worked to breed blight resistant chestnuts and also was an early importer of a number of Asian persimmons accessions. In amongst the overgrown rows of his remaining nursery block, Buzz Ferver and Zach Elfers spotted a lone pyrifolia type pear that towered over even the nut trees at over 40 feet tall. Being that is was growing in-between existing rows it is a probable seedling possibly a second generation naturalized seedling from something that was once there. In general shape, color, and appearance it is resemblance to Okusankichi. Joseph and I viewed historical records as well as compared it to Okusankichi and it appears to have a completely different flavor, different ripening period, different scaly russet pattern, and a longer neck. In short, it is an excellent late-season Pyrus pyrifolia pear.2190085PI 707060
2PI 706708'Bergamotte Bufo'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2025CultivarBergamotte Bufo. 1. Leroy Dict. Pom. 1:228, fig. 1867. 2. Hogg Fruit Man. 498. 1884. Kroten Bergamotte. 3. Mathieu Nom. Pom. 244. 1889. Le Lectier says this pear was cultivated at Orléans in 1628 under the name of Crapant or Toad on account of the rough character of its skin. It was also known in Germany in 1690 under this latter name and as Oignon rosat by reason of its shape and the perfume of its juice. In 1846 in France, because of the supposed inelegance of the word "crapant," its name was changed to Bufo, the Latin name of a toad. Fruit above medium, globular-oblate, even and regular like a true Bergamot; skin rough, dark yellow, dotted and marbled with fawn and usually also bearing some large brown stains; flesh white, melting, fine; juice sufficient, vinous, acidulous, sugary, savory, recalling the scent of the rose; excellent dessert pear; late Oct.2172459PI 706708
3PI 706709'Beurré Alexandre Lucas'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2025CultivarBeurré Alexandre Lucas. 1. Le Bon Jard. 358. 1882. 2. Jour. Hort. 18:216. 1889. The parent tree was a wilding found in 1836 in a wood of the Department of Loir-et-Cher, Fr., and in foliage and growth much resembles Doyenné Boussock. Fruit large to very large, handsome, pyriform, clear green, dotted with maroon or chestnut-colored spots; flesh fine, melting, perfumed, juicy, in flavor superior perhaps to Doyenné Boussock; first; Nov. to Jan. See also PI 541132.2172460PI 706709
4PI 706710'Beurré Baltet Père'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2025CultivarBeurré Baltet Père. 1. Guide Prat. 109. 1876. 2. Mas Pom. Gen. 7:47, fig. 504. 1881. 3. Garden 52:356, 397. 1897. Baltet Senior. 4. Mathieu Nom. Pom. 171. 1889. Obtained by Baltet Brothers, Troyes, Fr., about 1865. Fruit large, turbinate, yellowish-green; flesh very fine, melting, juicy and richly flavored; first, "there are few pears of better quality." (Gard. 52:356.) Oct. and Nov.2172461PI 706710
5PI 706711'Chaumontel'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2025CultivarChaumontel. 1. Downing Fr. Trees Am. 718. 1869. 2. Bunyard Handb. Hardy Fr. 163. 1920. Besi de Chaumontel. 3. Duhamel Trait. Arb. Fr. 2:199, PI- XL. 1768. 4. Leroy Dict. Pom. 1:266, fig. 1867. Merlet writing in his L'Abrégé des bon fruits of 1675 said that the Chaumontel pear originated from a wilding growing at Chaumontel, Fr. In 1765 Duhamel du Monceau saw the parent tree, at that time more than a century old, bearing a fine crop. Fruit large; form variable, but always long, obtuse, bossed, pyriform, yellow or yellowish-green in the shade, dotted with numerous brownish-red spots and brownish-red or deep rich red on the side exposed to the sun; flesh white, semi-fine, melting, buttery, rich and sugary; juice abundant, vinous, highly perfumed; a high class dessert pear.2172462PI 706711
6PI 706712'Condo'Pyrus communis L. NetherlandsCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2025CultivarFruit size med/large. Shape pyriform/long pyriform. Color pale green becoming pale gold wih slight pink flush, some russet, mainly around eye, fine russet lenticles. Eye open. Sepals free/linked, erect. Basin shallow. Stalk short, med/quite thick, inserted erect/angle. Cavity absent/slight (Book of Pears, Morgan, 2015, p. 212. ISBN: 978-1-60358-666-5)2172463PI 706712
7PI 706713'Docteur Lentier'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2025CultivarDocteur Lentier. 1. Leroy Dict. Pom. 2:37, fig. 1869. 2, Guide Prat. 74, 256. 1895. From seed sown in 1847 by M. Grégoire, Jodoigne, Brabant. Fruit medium, ovate, somewhat elongated, smooth, greenish or lemon-yellow, splashed and dotted with cinnamon-russet; flesh whitish, fine-grained, tender, buttery, melting, juicy, exceedingly rich, sweet and perfumed; first, of the highest merit; Oct.2172464PI 706713
8PI 706714'Ferdinand de Lesseps'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2025CultivarFerdinand de Lesseps. 1. Leroy Dict. Pom. 2:154, fig. 1869. Raised by André Leroy in 1864. Fruit medium, ovate, not very regular, bright yellow, extensively washed and marbled with brown-russet; flesh white, very fine, melting; juice very abundant, acidulous, very sugary, with an exquisite flavor; first; early Oct.2172465PI 706714
9PI 706715'Levard'Pyrus communis L. BelgiumCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2025CultivarLevard. 1. Leroy Dict. Pom. 2:340, fig. 1869. Grown on the seed beds of M. Leroy, Antwerp, Bel., and fruited in 1863. Fruit below medium, globular-turbinate, irregular, bossed and always less swollen on one side than on the other; color yellowish-green, dotted with brown and fawn, and entirely covered with bronze-russet on the cheek exposed to the sun: flesh greenish-white, fine, melting and juicy, gritty around the core, sugary, acidulous, musky and very rich in flavor; first; Nov.2172466PI 706715
10PI 706716'Marechal de Cour'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2025CultivarMaréchal de Cour. 1. Leroy Dict. Pom. 2:390, fig. 1869. 2. Hogg Fruit Man, 612. 1884.
A seedling of Van Mons of which he sent grafts to Alexandre Bivort, five months before his death, in April, 1842. Fruit large, sometimes very large, oblong-pyriform or obtuse-turbinate, one side always smaller than the other, thickly encrusted with russet so that but little of the yellow ground is visible; flesh white, semi-fine, melting, gritty at center, extremely juicy, sugary, vinous, perfumed; first; Sept. to Nov.
2172467PI 706716
11PI 706717'Pierre Tourasse'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2025CultivarPierre Tourasse. 1. Rev. HorL 542. 1894. Exhibited in France by M. Tourasse, its originator, in 1894. Tree vigorous, upright, stocky, productive. Fruit of good size, broadly turbinate, spotted with brilliant fawn color upon a clear yellow ground, washed with orange and saffron; flesh fine, melting, very juicy, rich in sugar; last of Sept. and first of Oct.2172468PI 706717
12PI 706718'Monarch 'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2025CultivarMonarch, 1. Hogg Fruit Man. 312. 1866. 2. Bunyard Handb. Hardy Fr. 188. 1920. Knight Monarch. 3. Downing Fr. Trees Am. 796. 1869.
Raised by Thomas Andrew Knight, Downton Castle, Eng., in 1830. Bunyard says: ""Tree easily recognized in winter by its very large oval buds, which stand out like those of a red currant. ""Fruit medium, globular, yellowish-green, much covered with brown-russet and strewed with gray-russet specks; flesh yellowish, buttery, melting and very juicy, with a rich, vinous, sugary, and agreeably-perfumed flavor; first, one of the most valuable; Dec. and Jan. Knight's Monarch. Planted Spring 1893. Tree a medium grower and productive. Fruit of medium size. Skin yellowish green. Flesh white, juicy, buttery, sweet. Season December to March. See also: ""The Fruit Manual: Containing The Descriptions And Synonyms Of The Fruits And Fruit Trees Of Great Britain"", by Robert Hogg.
2172469PI 706718
13PI 706720US-Mich 437Pyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2025DEVELOPED02/202539.34630000, -77.88210000182Breeding materialImportant breeding selection from USDA Michigan. Between 1916 and 1919, a cooperative breeding program between USDA and the Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station (established by Michigan Agriculture College, now known as Michigan State University) in South Haven, MI was initiated (Magness, 1937; van der Zwet and Keil, 1979). It was led by USDA Botanists William F. Wight and Don Ward along with graduate student Stanley Johnston (later a Michigan State University professor) (Magness, 1937; van der Zwet and Keil, 1979). The aim of this program was to intercross pear germplasm with moderate fire blight resistance with high fruit quality pears. The most impactful crosses were generated from seedlings of ‘Barseck’ ([‘Bartlett’ × ‘Seckel’] × ‘Barlett’). The breeding line Mich-US 437, believed to be ‘Barseck’ × ‘Barlett’ was produced and was featured prominently as a parent in the later USDA breeding program (van der Zwet and Keil, 1979). As with ‘Waite’, genotyping analyses found that Mich-US 437 is actually ‘Vermont Beauty’ × ‘Barlett’ (Montanari et al., 2020) (Supplementary Figure 2), with ‘Vermont Beauty’ a descendant of ‘Seckel’ and ‘White Doyenné’, a parent of ‘Bartlett’ (Montanari et al., 2020). Quote from Gottschalk et al. 2024. Direction of cross is unknown.2172471PI 706720
14PI 706721US-309Pyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2025DEVELOPED02/202539.34630000, -77.88210000182Breeding materialCross conducted by USDA scientist John R. Magness in Beltsville, MD. Important founders from USDA. Direction of cross is unknown. See also PI 617595 CPYR 2519.2172472PI 706721
15PI 706722US-342Pyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2025DEVELOPED02/202539.34630000, -77.88210000182Breeding materialCross conducted by USDA scientist John R. Magness in Beltsville, MD. Direction of cross is unknown. Important founder from USDA.2172473PI 706722
16PI 706723US-447Pyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2025DEVELOPED02/202539.34630000, -77.88210000182Breeding materialCross conducted by USDA scientist John R. Magness in Beltsville, MD. Direction of cross is unknown. Important founder from USDA.2172474PI 706723
17PI 706724US-446Pyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2025DEVELOPED02/202539.34630000, -77.88210000182Breeding materialCross conducted by USDA scientist John R. Magness in Beltsville, MD. Direction of cross is unknown. Important founder from USDA.2172475PI 706724
18PI 706725Illinois 76Pyrus hybr.West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2025DEVELOPED02/202539.34630000, -77.88210000182Breeding materialOne of the most impactful discoveries in this screening was that ‘Illinois 76’, a Pyrus ussuriensis × P. pyrifolia hybrid, produced a number of progeny that were highly resistant to fire blight (van der Zwet et al., 1974b). ‘Illinois 76’ was a selection that originated from the Rutgers University pear breeding program. Quote from Gottschalk et al. 2024. Direction of cross is unknown.2172476PI 706725
19PI 706726'Gem'Pyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2025DEVELOPED02/202539.34630000, -77.88210000182CultivarCultivar, Published pedigree Sheldon x US 62563-004, SNP chip pedigree is Rutter x unknown. Direction of cross is unknown.2172477PI 706726
20PI 706728'Bell'Pyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2025DEVELOPED02/202539.34630000, -77.88210000182CultivarCultivar. Pedigree outlined on intake sheet.2172479PI 706728
21PI 706730'Sunrise'Pyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2025DEVELOPED02/202539.34630000, -77.88210000182CultivarCultivar. Pedigree outlined on intake sheet.2172481PI 706730
22PI 707049 Q'Buerré Vanille'Pyrus communis L. Nova Scotia, CanadaCORNot Available2025DONATED05/2018Cultivar2190077PI 707049 Q
23PI 707051 QBP 3Pyrus sp. South AfricaCORNot Available2025DONATED08/1980Breeding material2190079PI 707051 Q
24PI 707053 Q'Holmer'Pyrus communis L. United KingdomCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2003Cultivar2190080PI 707053 Q
25PI 707059 Q'Teddington Green'Pyrus communis L. United KingdomCORNot Available2025DONATED02/2003Cultivar2190081PI 707059 Q
26PI 706234Olton BroussardPyrus communis L. CORNot Available2024CultivarChris Homanics Already here as Broussard?2169502PI 706234
27PI 706233Dearborn's SeedlingPyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2024DONATEDCultivarOld cultivar from Dunlap Nursery, Bloomington, IL, 1930s. May also be known as Hagar Grove.2169501PI 706233
28PI 706227Pyrus x sinkiangensis 6-4Pyrus ×sinkiangensis T. T. Yu Yunnan Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2024COLLECTED2015Pyrus x sinkiangensis 6-42169487PI 706227
29PI 706226Pyrus x sinkiangensis 6-3Pyrus ×sinkiangensis T. T. Yu Yunnan Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2024COLLECTED2015Pyrus x sinkiangensis 6-32169486PI 706226
30PI 706225Pyrus x sinkiangensis 6-2Pyrus ×sinkiangensis T. T. Yu Yunnan Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2024COLLECTED2015Pyrus x sinkiangensis 6-22169485PI 706225
31PI 706224Pyrus x sinkiangensis 6-1Pyrus ×sinkiangensis T. T. Yu Yunnan Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2024COLLECTED2015Pyrus x sinkiangensis 6-12169484PI 706224
32PI 706223Marble HillPyrus communis L. CORNot Available2024Marble Hill Comice Type, Buzz, Vermont (Joseph)2169483PI 706223
33PI 706222Tremblay Jesuit PearPyrus communis L. CORNot Available2024Tremblay Jesuit Pear2169482PI 706222
34PI 706221Riverside Askin Jesuit PearPyrus communis L. CORNot Available2024Riverside Askin Jesuit Pear2169481PI 706221
35PI 706220Renaud Line Jesuit PearPyrus communis L. CORNot Available2024Renaud Line Jesuit Pear2169480PI 706220
36PI 706219Navarre Trading PostPyrus communis L. CORNot Available2024Navarre Trading Post2169479PI 706219
37PI 706218Historic Fort Wayne Jesuit PearPyrus communis L. CORNot Available2024Historic Fort Wayne Jesuit Pear2169478PI 706218
38PI 705656CPYR 3146Pyrus sp.Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2024DONATEDCultivarNotes from donor Bill Braunworth: This is an existing tree on my home site and was growing there likely since since the late 1970’s or 1980’s. We moved to this home in 1993 and it was a well established tree in 1993. The fruit is a bit like a comice pear but more round. It has a very brief time of good eating as it seems to ripen quickly and then turn mushy internally. We cook it into a pear sauce that we freeze. It is very good that way. I do not see a commercial value to this fruit. The growth habit of the tree could be useful. In the photos I sent the green one is nice and crispy and fairly sweet, but as you can see in the yellow one it has turned mushy.2168981PI 705656
39PI 706719Brooklyn PDXPyrus ×bretschneideri Rehder Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2024DONATED09/2024Uncertain improvement statusThe collector first noticed this street tree in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Portland in 2022. He first thought it was a giant quince tree, however after stopping it was clearly a Pyrus × bretschneideri pear. The owners did not know the history of the tree, but could tell it is on its own roots and is maybe about 30 years old. The tree produces large yellow, barrel-shaped pears that have that classic bretschneideri scaly pattern. Flesh is dense, crispy, and juicy. Free from scab and leaves appear clean. Mildly sweet with a nice, pleasant aroma. Stores until about mid-December. Fruits do not match any samples in the Corvallis collection. A promising selection for the Pacific NW. Direction of cross is unknown.2172470PI 706719
40PI 705109 Q'Broompark'Pyrus communis L. England, United KingdomCORNot Available2024DONATED02/27/1986CultivarQ 25949, 2/27/19861092137PI 705109 Q
41PI 705113 Q'Hecheng Dong Huang Li'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Xinjiang Uygur Zizhiqu, ChinaCORNot Available2024DONATED02/05/1990Landracelarge fruit, 130g, yellow skin, sweet, juicy, fragrant (aromatic), fine texture, top quality, late storage. Collected as P. bretschneideri. Q 27964, 02/05/19901095783PI 705113 Q
42PI 705117 QQ43544CPyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Habarovskij kraj, Russian FederationCORNot Available2024COLLECTED08/15/2001Wild materialCPYR 2726, 08/31/2001, received as SD1631150PI 705117 Q
43PI 705118 Q'Hand Winter'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2024Cultivated materialduplicate accession record for Q44759, CPYR 2899 10/26/20061715524PI 705118 Q
44PI 705119Q43163APyrus communis L. Historic2024Duplicate of PI 7049992166510PI 705119
45PI 705124 Q'Van Marum'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2024CultivarReceived as H49498A42166522PI 705124 Q
46PI 705024 Q'Thurston's Red'Pyrus communis L. United KingdomCORNot Available2024DONATEDCultivarQ 43941 2/28/20031644362PI 705024 Q
47PI 705026 Q'Brown Bess'Pyrus sp.CORNot Available2024CultivarQ 501662166418PI 705026 Q
48PI 705027 Q'Anjou 4N'Pyrus sp.CORNot Available2024Cultivar2166419PI 705027 Q
49PI 704890US97211_098_SFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDBreeding materialOHxF87 rootstock2166168PI 704890
50PI 704891US97211_011_SFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166169PI 704891
51PI 704892US200537_079_SFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166170PI 704892
52PI 704893US200536_016_SFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166171PI 704893
53PI 704894US200502_062_SFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166172PI 704894
54PI 704895US97211_094_RFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166173PI 704895
55PI 704896US97211_077_RFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166174PI 704896
56PI 704897US97211_074_RFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166175PI 704897
57PI 704898US97211_066_RFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166176PI 704898
58PI 704899US97211_009_RFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166177PI 704899
59PI 704900US97211_001_RFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166178PI 704900
60PI 704901US200537_081_SFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166179PI 704901
61PI 704902US200502_297_RFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166180PI 704902
62PI 704903US200502_180_RFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166181PI 704903
63PI 704904US200502_080_RFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166182PI 704904
64PI 704905US200502_061_RFBPyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2023DONATEDOHxF87 rootstock2166183PI 704905
65PI 704950 QHL_400Pyrus sp. CzechoslovakiaCORMISCELLANEOUSNot Available2023DONATED01/26/1989Originally received 1/26/1989 but not assigned PI or Local. New scion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.1095225PI 704950 Q
66PI 704951 Q'Ourev'Pyrus sp. RomaniaCORNot Available2023DONATEDCultivarA winter pear. Originally received 03/25/1995 but not assigned PI or Local. New scion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.1488435PI 704951 Q
67PI 704954 QSEL. ISF 80-51-72Pyrus sp. ItalyCORNot Available2023DONATEDCultivarOriginally received 04/23/1996 but not assigned PI or Local. New scion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock. Resistant to fireblight, harvests second week of August, fruit of 220 g., flesh is juicy and good firmness.1519936PI 704954 Q
68PI 704957 Q'Sabina'Pyrus sp. ItalyCORNot Available2023DONATEDCultivarOriginally received 2/14/2001 but not assigned PI or Local. New scion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.1614130PI 704957 Q
69PI 704958 Q'Carmen'Pyrus communis L. ItalyCORNot Available2023DONATEDCultivarOriginally received 02/20/2001 but not assigned PI or Local. New scion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.1614153PI 704958 Q
70PI 704959 Q'White Longdon'Pyrus communis L. United KingdomCORNot Available2023DONATEDCultivarOriginally received 03/26/1999 but not assigned PI or Local. New scion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.1644363PI 704959 Q
71PI 705000 Q'Bristol Cross'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023CultivarScion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166283PI 705000 Q
72PI 705001 Q'Bel Julie'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023CultivarScion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166284PI 705001 Q
73PI 705002 Q'A Courtrai'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023CultivarScion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166285PI 705002 Q
74PI 705003 QP. communisPyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023Breeding materialScion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166286PI 705003 Q
75PI 705004 Q'Clyde'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023CultivarScion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166287PI 705004 Q
76PI 705005 Q'Williams Tet'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023CultivarScion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166288PI 705005 Q
77PI 705006 Q'B Bedford'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023CultivarScion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166289PI 705006 Q
78PI 705007 Q'Star NJ3'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023CultivarScion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166290PI 705007 Q
79PI 705008 Q'A Thirriot'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023CultivarScion received 3/31/2022 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166291PI 705008 Q
80PI 705009 Q'Elliot #4'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023CultivarScion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166292PI 705009 Q
81PI 705010 Q'D E Orlean'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023CultivarScion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166293PI 705010 Q
82PI 705011 Q'Gentl Bianc'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023CultivarScion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166294PI 705011 Q
83PI 705012 Q'B Davey'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2023CultivarScion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.2166295PI 705012 Q
84PI 699947BarlowPyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORFruitNot Available2022DONATED02/03/2022Cultivated materialDonated by David Ulmer from Eric's orchard. Winter pear picked in October, stored immediately at 30 F and eaten in late December with good texture and no core breakdown. Tree is thorny and spurs stay quite sharp. Fire blight tolerant - does not get as damaged as Bartlett. According to master gardener neighbor, tree was probably planted by retired Portuguese man 50-60 years ago. 2137097PI 699947
85PI 699946Braunworth spreading pearPyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORFruitNot Available2022DEVELOPED01/20/2022Corvallis44.49672160, -123.3418081071generally open, close to wooded area in south CorvallisCultivated materialDonated from Dr. Bill Braunworth. Tree growing in his back yard in Corvallis, Oregon2137089PI 699946
86PI 693077'Pineapple'Pyrus hybr. JapanCORNot Available2020DEVELOPEDCultivar2098858PI 693077
87PI 690285Korean Golden O.P.Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Korea, SouthCORNot Available2019DEVELOPED2018Cultivated materialFruit of "Korea Golden" pears grown in South Korea was purchased in an Asian market in Corvallis, Oregon in early November, 2018. This may be a market name for the cultivar Singo. Seeds were stratified and germinated in February 2019 and several seedlings were maintained. Additional seedlings were donated to local public school garden projects.2091508PI 690285
88PI 690279 Q'Koonce'Pyrus communis L. Illinois, United StatesCORNot Available2019DEVELOPED1889Cultivar‘Koonce’ – A summer pear that has good quality, but decays quickly after maturing. Once grown throughout the United States, the fruit is better quality than other pears of its season, including ‘Early Harvest’ and ‘Lawson’ but the small, unattractive fruit prevented ‘Koonce’ from becoming more popular. It originated in Illinois sometime before 1889. Fruit medium, obovate-obtuse-pyriform, skin pale greenish-yellow with reddish-brown blush. -- The Pears of New York

KOONCE FROST-PROOF, Largest Early Pear. Very early, heavy bearer, large, handsome, good. Does not rot at core. Has never blighted. Frost-Proof—bore in 1894, when all others in same orchard were killed. -- Stark Fruit Book 1896

Originated in Southern Illinois; has been largely planted; the most successful early market Pear in that section. A strong, upright grower; hardy, magnificent foliage; has produced crops when all other varieties were killed by frost. Fruit medium, yellow, with carmine cheek; juicy, spicy, sweet and delicious quality; ripens with the earliest.An excellent shipper; it comes into bearing young. July and August. -- Washington Nursery Co. Toppenish, 1901

1753870PI 690279 Q
89PI 690280 Q'Ewart 4N'Pyrus communis L. Ohio, United StatesCORNot Available2019DEVELOPED1928CultivarEwart 4N (Q49488) obtained from Nova Scotia, Canada collection to replace an accession that was not tetraploid.

Ewart. Originated in East Akron, Ohio, by Mortimer Ewart. Introduced in 1928. Parentage unknown. Fruit: size medium; skin greenish-yellow, russeted, appearance fair; flesh fine, melting, tender, juicy, flavor excellent; quality excellent; season 10 to 20 days after Bartlett, which it resembles; keeps well into December under refrigerated storage. Tree: somewhat more resistant to fire blight than Bartlett; very productive; effectively pollinates Bartlett.

2040777PI 690280 Q
90PI 690281'Phelps'Pyrus communis L. New York, United StatesCORNot Available2019DEVELOPED1925CultivarPhelps (Q 49495) obtained from Kentville, Nova Scotia, Canada collection, Was previously a USDA accession (PI 126572) received in 1933 and no longer in the National Plant Germplasm System.

Phelps. Originated in Geneva, N.Y., by Richard Wellington, New York State Agriculture Experiment Station. Introduced in 1925. Winter Nelis x Russet Bartlett; cross made in 1912. Fruit: skin color duller than Bartlett; flesh juicy, tender, pleasant vinous flavor; ripens 1 month later than Bartlett, and keeping until Christmas. Tree: spreading; vigorous and productive. -- Brooks and Olmo Descriptions of Fruit Varieties

2040778PI 690281
91PI 690282 Q'Hellen's Early'Pyrus communis L. United KingdomCORNot Available2019DEVELOPEDPRE 1710CultivarHellen's Early (Q 50167, PI 690282). A very vigorous growing, large tree, with wide-angled crotches. There are usually a few very tall limbs with numerous long, often pendulous branches. A very heavy cropping variety found near the Gloucestershire-Herefordshire border. Selected by Radcliffe Cooke and named after his estate. One of the best early perry varieties. Leaf: stalk 37-63 mm. Blade 57-79 mm. long, 40-53 mm. wide; ovate or elliptical; tip strongly acute, inclined to acuminate; base rounded, inclined to tapering; margin slightly serrate. Flower: flower buds white with a slight flush. Petals overlapping, wrinkled, cupped. Anthers red; pollen germination poor. Styles straight, equal in length to the stamens. Flowering period mid-season. Fruit: Turbinate, 37-57 mm. long, 42-58 mm. diameter. Stem 20-40 mm., often partially green and usually connected to the fruit by a fleshy lip. Stem basin absent or very slight. Eye basin slight. Calyx variable, usually reflexed; sepals variable, often joined; stamens attached well below base of sepals. Skin greenish yellow, with a slight to heavy flush; russet at stem and eye, often spreading to cheek; lenticels fairly conspicuous, small and brown; scab sometimes present. Core without axial sac. Flesh with concentration of stone cells below eye and a few around the core. Harvest: 2nd to 3rd week of September. Milling; Up to one week after harvest. Juice Analysis: Sp. Gr. 1045; Acidity 0.55; Tannin 0.18. Vintage Quality: A medium acid, low to medium tannin perry; average quality. -- Luckwill & Pollard, 1963.2040779PI 690282 Q
92PI 690283 Q'Judge Amphlett'Pyrus communis L. Worcestershire, United KingdomCORNot Available2019DEVELOPEDCultivarJudge Amphlett (Q50168, PI 690283). A medium size tree in which the trunk is often continued as a centre leader. The limbs have narrow crotches and are furnished with numerous branches of dense twiggy growth. Cropping regular and heavy. A variety of Worcestershire origin, extensively propagated and distributed by Long Ashton Research Station in the early part of the 20th century. One of the heaviest cropping early varieties. Limited plantings in Somerset have been successful. Named after a famous Worcestershire assize courts judge. Leaf: Stalk 30-42 mm. Blade 46-63 mm. long, 32-49 mm. wide; eliptical; tip obtuse; base rounded; serrations absent. Flower: Flower buds white. Sepals ginger, flat. Petals separate, wrinkled and slightly cupped. Anthers purple. Styles straight, or slightly bent at tip, equal to or slightly longer than stamens. Flowering period early. Fruit: Pyriform, 45-59 mm. long, 36-50 mm. diameter. Stem 10-21 mm. Stem basin absent or very slight. Eye basin absent, rarely slight, eye usually raised. Calyx open, usually stiff and upright; sepals touching, sometimes free, or joined at the base, often broken, pubescent on inner surface; stamens attached at base of sepals. Skin yellow or greenish yellow, rarely with flush on cheek or russet; russet around stem, but principally around eye, spreading over cheek; lenticels usually small and inconspicuous; scab absent. Core may have a small axial sac, often ill-defined or filled; seeds dark brown. Flesh with concentration of stne cells below the eye and a few around the core. Harvest: 3rd week of September to 1st week of October. Milling: up to one week after harvest. Juice analysis: Sp. Gr. 1053, Acidity 0.43, Tannin 0.09. Vintage Quality: A medium acid, low tannin perry; pleasant, light, of average quality. -- Luckwill & Pollard, 1963.2040780PI 690283 Q
93PI 688335Romania 2017-01-01Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 1, Sample #11965288PI 688335
94PI 688336Romania 2017-01-02 Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 1, Sample #21965289PI 688336
95PI 688337Romania 2017-01-04 Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 1, Sample #41965290PI 688337
96PI 688338Romania 2017-01-05Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTED09/11/2017Wild materialSite 1, Sample #51965291PI 688338
97PI 688339Romania 2017-01-06Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 1, Sample #61965292PI 688339
98PI 688340Romania 2017-01-07Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 1, Sample #71965293PI 688340
99PI 688341Romania 2017-01-09 Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 1, Sample #91965294PI 688341
100PI 688342Romania 2017-01-10Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 1, Sample #101965295PI 688342
101PI 688343Romania 2017-01-11Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 1, Sample #111965296PI 688343
102PI 688344Romania 2017-01-12 Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 1, Sample #121965297PI 688344
103PI 688345Romania 2017-01-13 Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 1, Sample #131965298PI 688345
104PI 688346Romania 2017-01-14Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTED09/11/2017Wild materialSite 1, Sample #141965299PI 688346
105PI 688347Romania 2017-03-34Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 3, Sample #341965300PI 688347
106PI 688348Romania 2017-03-35Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 3, Sample #351965301PI 688348
107PI 688349Romania 2017-03-36 Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 3, Sample #361965302PI 688349
108PI 688350Romania 2017-04-41Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 4, Sample #411965303PI 688350
109PI 688351Romania 2017-04-42Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 4, Sample #421965304PI 688351
110PI 688352Romania 2017-04-43Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 4, Sample #431965305PI 688352
111PI 688353Romania 2017-04-44Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 4, Sample #441965306PI 688353
112PI 688354Romania 2017-04-46Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 4, Sample #461965307PI 688354
113PI 688355Romania 2017-04-47Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 4, Sample #471965308PI 688355
114PI 688356Romania 2017-06-53Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 6, Sample #531965309PI 688356
115PI 688357Romania 2017-06-54Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 6, Sample #541965310PI 688357
116PI 688358Romania 2017-06-55Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 6, Sample #551965311PI 688358
117PI 688359Romania 2017-06-56Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 6, Sample #561965312PI 688359
118PI 688360Romania 2017-08-58Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 8, Sample #581965313PI 688360
119PI 688361Romania 2017-10-63Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 10, Sample #631965314PI 688361
120PI 688362Romania 2017-11-65 Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 11, Sample #651965315PI 688362
121PI 688363Romania 2017-11-66Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 11, Sample #661965316PI 688363
122PI 688364Romania 2017-16-78Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 16, Sample #781965317PI 688364
123PI 688365Romania 2017-16-79Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 16, Sample #791965318PI 688365
124PI 688366Romania 2017-16-80Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. RomaniaCORNot Available2018COLLECTEDWild materialSite 16, Sample #801965319PI 688366
125PI 684971P. calleryana - Sapa SchoolPyrus ×calleryana Decne. Lào Cai, VietnamCORBRANCHNot Available2018COLLECTED07/25/2017Group No. 6, behind secondary school No 1, Sapa. Grow on plain, around rose.22.34426000, 103.848510001543Wild materialCollected from trees growing behind Secondary School No. 1 in Sapa, Vietnam (Sa Pa, Lào Cai) on 25 July, 2017. Taxon description from collector: Trees to 10 m tall. Trees 5–8 m tall. Branchlets reddish brown when young, grayish brown when old. Leaves simple, alternate. Blade tomentose when young, glabrous when old,  base rounded. Ca(5) Co(5-5), pedicel 5cm.1963353PI 684971
126PI 684973P. pyrifolia - Ta Van CommunePyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Lào Cai, VietnamCORBRANCHNot Available2018COLLECTED07/25/2017Home garden at Ta Van commune.22.29565000, 103.887830001173Cultivated materialFruit collected from tree in home garden, Ta Van commune, Sa Pa, Lào Cai, Vietnam on 25 July, 2017. Taxon description from collector: Trees, to 15 m tall. Petals white, filaments white, anther brown, Fl 4, Fr 7. 1963354PI 684973
127PI 688172'Bartlett - Striped'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2018CultivarScions from a tree at the Kentville, Nova Scotia Agricultural Experiment Station planted in 1971. 1957779PI 688172
128PI 688173Maryland 56112-146Pyrus communis L. Maryland, United StatesCORNot Available2018DEVELOPEDBreeding materialScions received from a tree planted at the Kentville, Nova Scotia Agricultural Experiment Station in 1972. Maryland 56112-146 is a selection from the USDA pear breeding program and is a source of fire blight resistance. This was a parent of the cultivar Shenandoah, released in 2004. 1957781PI 688173
129PI 688177 Q'Covert'Pyrus communis L. New York, United StatesCORNot Available2018DEVELOPED1935CultivarScions from a tree at the Kentville, Nova Scotia Agricultural Experiment Station planted in 1970.

Originated in Geneva, N.Y., by Richard Wellington, New York State Agriculture Experiment Station. Introduced in 1935. Bartlett x Dorset; cross made in 1921; first full crop in 1921. Fruit: one of largest of all pears; similar to Bartlett, but not as pale yellow; flesh tender, granular; develops best quality after a period of cold storage; season December to January. Tree: spreading, dense; vigorous and productive. -- Brooks and Olmo Register of New Fruit and Nut Varieties.

From extension publication 824 (Farmers' Bulletin 156) "Pear Growing in the Annapolis Valley" by R.D.L. Bligh, Experimental Farms Service, Ottawa, Canada, 1949: Covert. —The young tree is hardy, vigorous and comes in bearing early, and is a prodigious cropper. The fruits resemble Bartlett in colour and shape but are much larger and heavier and drop readily near harvest. The season is supposed to be two months later than Bartlett, but it has ripened with us about mid-November. The fruit is firm and handles well, and canning tests indicate the product is near Bartlett quality and much better than the Kieffer canned product. It is meeting with enthusiastic grower acceptance in New York State. Worthy of trial.

In his 1964 book 'Dwarf Fruit Trees for Orchard, Garden and Home" Harold Tukey listed Covert as one of the pear cultivars that is graft compatible with quince rootstock.

1957780PI 688177 Q
130PI 688198'AC Harrow Gold'Pyrus communis L. Ontario, CanadaCORNot Available2018DEVELOPED2002CultivarAC Harrow Gold pear is a high quality, early-season, fresh market pear. the tree is moderately productive with no evidence of a biennial bearing habit, and has excellent resistance to fire blight. Developed by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada at Harrow, Ontario, Canada. Originated from a cross of 'Harvest Queen' x 'Harrow Delight' made in 1975 by H.A. Quamme and G. Spearman. Propagated and evaluated by the Ontario Fruit Testing Association beginning in 1987 as selection HW616. Named and released in 2002 by David Hunter, Frank Kappel, Harvey Quamme and Gordon Bonn. 1957767PI 688198
131PI 688205'AC Harrow Crisp'Pyrus communis L. Ontario, CanadaCORNot Available2018DEVELOPED2002CultivarAC Harrow Crisp is an attractive midseason pear for the fresh market. The tree is moderately productive with no evidence of biennial bearing and has excellent resistance to fire blight. Originated from a cross of 'Bartlett' x US56112-146 (US 309 O.P.) by H.A. Quamme. Selected in 1979 and evaluated in cooperation with the Ontario Fruit Testing Association as selection HW610. Named and released in 2002 by David Hunter, Frank Kappel, Harvey Quamme and Gordon Bonn. 1957766PI 688205
132PI 688196'Peggy'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Washington, United StatesCORNot Available2017DEVELOPED2003CultivarLimb sport of Arirang (=Dan Bae) discovered by D. Keithly in 2003 in Yakima, Washington, and named for his wife, Peggy. Earlier ripening and more russeted than parent tree. More conical shape than other Asian Pears. U.S. Plant Patent applied for. Exclusively offered by Stark Bros. Nursery. -- info from Stark Bros. Catalog, 2017.1947442PI 688196
133PI 693965OwenPyrus sp.Indiana, United StatesCORNot Available2017COLLECTED03/12/2017Uncertain improvement status1946919PI 693965
134PI 688166'David (Germany)'Pyrus communis L. GermanyCORNot Available2017DEVELOPED1999CultivarDavidOrigin: ‘Jules Guyot’ × ‘Comice’ - Breeding no: Pi-BS32/6-l 12.Tree: dwarfing growth with good ramification, flat pyramidal crown.Maturity: late autumn, with ‘Alexander Lucas’, storable to March.Fruit Quality: good after storage, very good transportability after picking. Fruit Appearance: size large, skin green, after storage it turns yellow-green, 180 g. Yield: middle, early bearing, regular. Resistance: no scab or mildew infection, susceptible to fire blight. Pollination: good pollinators include: ‘Bartlett’, ‘Conference’, ‘Anjou’. Needs high temperatures for good fruit set.1946873PI 688166
135PI 688167'Uta'Pyrus communis L. GermanyCORNot Available2017DEVELOPED1999Cultivar'Uta'. Origin: 'Madame Vert€' x 'Bosc's Flaschenbirne'. Breeding no: Na20. Tree: dwarf growth with good loose branching, flat crown. Maturity: winter, like 'Alexander Lucas', storable until February/March. Fruits: excellent quality, size large, skin undercolour green, 100% gold-bronze russeting, very attractive, 280 g. Yield: very high, precocious, regular. Resistance: no scab or mildew infection, only slightly susceptible to fireblight. Rootstocks: not directly compatible with quince rootstock. Pollination: diploid, good pollinators include: ‘Clapp’s’, ‘Bartlett’, ‘Conference’, ‘Tongern’, ‘Paris’, incompatible with ‘Anjou’.1946874PI 688167
136PI 688168'Hortensia'Pyrus communis L. GermanyCORNot Available2017DEVELOPED1999Cultivar'Hortensia'. Origin: 'Nordhauser Winterforelle' x 'Clapps Liebling'. Breeding no: PiBS31/50-44. Tree: medium to vigorous growth with good branching, flat pyramidal crown. Maturity: late autumn, some days before Conference. Fruits: good quality, size large, skin undercolour green-yellow, overcolour to 75 % red to brown red, attractive. Yield: very high, precocious, regular. Resistance: no scab or mildew infection, susceptible to fireblight. Diploid.1946875PI 688168
137PI 688169'Armida'Pyrus communis L. GermanyCORNot Available2017DEVELOPED1999CultivarArmida Origin: ‘Jules Guyot’ × ‘Comice’Tree: very dwarfing growth with good ramification, flat crown.Maturity: autumn, after ‘Bartlett’,Fruit Quality: good taste, but stone cells noted on unsuitable soils. Fruit Appearance: size large, oblong, slim, undercolour green, over colour yellow, 170 g. Yield: middle to high, early bearing, mostly regular, not biennial. Resistance: good resistance against spring frosts, tolerant to scab or mildew infection, susceptible to fire blight.Pollination: diploid, good pollinators include: ‘Bartlett’, ‘Conference’.1946876PI 688169
138PI 688195'Manon'Pyrus communis L. GermanyCORNot Available2017DEVELOPED1999Cultivar1946877PI 688195
139PI 688176'Raja'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai British Columbia, CanadaCORNot Available2017DEVELOPEDCultivar1946882PI 688176
140PI 688171'Moorcroft'Pyrus communis L. England, United KingdomCORNot Available2016DEVELOPEDCultivarScions collected by caretaker at the Nick Botner orchard, Yoncolla, Oregon.1938693PI 688171
141PI 688175'Oldfield'Pyrus communis L. England, United KingdomCORNot Available2016DEVELOPEDCultivarScions collected by caretaker at the Nick Botner orchard, Yoncolla, Oregon.1938694PI 688175
142PI 693963Garden WarriorPyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2015DEVELOPED2015Breeding materialSeedling population from PI 665782, a genetic dwarf selection. 50% of the O.P. seedlings had short internodes and exhibited the genetic dwarf phenotype. To be grown out for fruit and tree evaluation.1926839PI 693963
143PI 693967Rotkottig Frau Ostergotland O.P.Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2015DEVELOPEDPRE 2012Breeding material1926814PI 693967
144PI 693968Summer Blood Birne O.P.Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2015DEVELOPED2015Breeding materialSeedling population grown from open pollinated seed of the red-flesh pear 'Summer Blood Birne'. Seed was collected in 2004. 1926838PI 693968
145PI 688026Bulgaria Domestic Pear SeedPyrus communis L. BulgariaCORNot Available2015COLLECTED2010Cultivated material1925348PI 688026
146PI 688027Kirschensaller PearPyrus communis L. GermanyCORNot Available2015COLLECTED2010Cultivated material1925349PI 688027
147PI 688024P. betulifolia Chaoyang Dist educationalPyrus betulifolia Bunge ChinaCORNot Available2015COLLECTEDUncertain improvement status1924432PI 688024
148PI 688025P. ussuriensis Chaoyang Dist educationalPyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. ChinaCORNot Available2015COLLECTEDUncertain improvement status1924433PI 688025
149PI 688023GEO-14-34Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORNot Available2014COLLECTED09/201441.93819000, 44.931420001074LandraceCollection notes from Aradhya: GEO14-35. I collected more Pyrus caucasica, but seeds were all aborted, especially brown fruited ones (Pictures 56 and 57). The fruits are edible and collected on a private property in the Ghulelebi village in Tianeti Dist. Both brown and green (Picture 41) fruited trees were big and highly vigorous. They may outgrow scions.1921323PI 688023
150PI 688165'Jilin'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2014DEVELOPED04/01/2014CloneFruit was purchased from a market in Antu, Jilin Province, China by Chad Finn in 1999. Finn described the fruit as "Green, oblong, irregular fruit, unlike any other Asian Pear I have seen in this market." The seed was donated to NCGR in 1999 and assigned PI number 637991. Seeds were germinated in 2003 and five seedlings were added to the field germplasm collection in 2005. In 2013 all 5 seedling trees produced fruit and the fruit on the different trees ranged from small, almost wild-type P. pyrifolia on one tree, to intermediate between cultivated and wild-type, to this seedling which had very large, green, oblong fruit, free of disease symptoms or blemishes, and late ripening. Fruit was harvested in late October, and stored well for two months in common, refrigerated storage at 4 C. Ripe fruit was sweet, hard-crisp, and juicy and was well-received at fall fruit tasting events in Oregon and Washington in late 2013. The original seedling inventory number was CPYR 2709.001. -- J. Postman, 04/20141917811PI 688165
151PI 688204'Suij'Pyrus communis L. Washington, United StatesCORNot Available2014DEVELOPEDCultivarVery long keeping pear. Said to be a cross of St. Remy winter pear and Comice. Grown by Ed Suij of Orcas Island, Washington. According to the website of Rolling River Nursery in Oakland, California (03/2019) this pear was developed by Mr. Suij's father, a fruit grower in Holland. The fruit has the flavor of Comice with the more crunchy and long keeping qualities of St. Remy.1917622PI 688204
152PI 693962Flattened PearPyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2014DONATED03/03/2014Uncertain improvement status1917781PI 693962
153PI 688019ALB-2013-027Pyrus spinosa Forssk. Gjirokastër, AlbaniaCORNot Available2014COLLECTED10/05/2013Collected near Fillimi rruges per Cajup.40.14710000, 20.15340000320Associated vegetation: terebinth, Judas tree, common hawthorn.Wild material1914862PI 688019
154PI 688020ALB-2013-046Pyrus spinosa Forssk. Gjirokastër, AlbaniaCORNot Available2014COLLECTED10/05/2013Collected near Belerat.40.20400000, 20.20460000999Associated vegetation: hornbeam, hazelnut,crab apple.Wild material1914874PI 688020
155PI 688021ALB-2013-055Pyrus spinosa Forssk. Tepelene, AlbaniaCORNot Available2014COLLECTED11/03/2013Collected near Peshtan.40.28100000, 20.12900000545Associated vegetation: Oriental hornbeam, Macedonian oak, Judas tree, Eurasian smoke tree, Cornelian cherry.Wild material1914875PI 688021
156PI 688022ALB-2013-064Pyrus spinosa Forssk. Tepelene, AlbaniaCORNot Available2014COLLECTED11/03/2013Collected near Peshtan.40.24920000, 20.08450000180Associated vegetation: Spanish broom, Jerusalem thorn, Phillyrea latifolia, wild fig, Oriental hornbeam, blackberry, Oriental plane, old man's beard, pomegranate.Wild material1914876PI 688022
157PI 693213Fowler PearPyrus communis L. Washington, United StatesCORImageNot Available2013DONATED12/13/2013CultivarUnknown historic pear from Mukilteo, Washington that was planted by Jacob Fowler, a city pioneer, about 1863. The tree had been misidentified as 'Seckel' but is clearly not. The 'Fowler Pear' ripens in early-mid August, is larger than Seckel and while it is mildly sweet, it is not as finely flavored as Seckel. The tree in Mukilteo has sustained damage over the years, and a young tree was propagated and planted in a city park by the Mukilteo Way Garden Club. The Fowler Pear may be one of the oldest living pear trees in Washington State and is a state registered historic landmark. -- info from Bill Davis, Edmonds, Washington, September 2013.

Photograph of mature fruit and ripening season suggests that this may be the same cultivar as the 'Hager Grove Pear' in Salem, Oregon (PI 617686).

1914722PI 693213
158PI 693961Belle PearPyrus communis L. Michigan, United StatesCORNot Available2013DONATED03/01/2013CultivarScions were received from Gero Mitschelen in Malott, Washington from a tree he grafted in 1975 from scions collected from an old pear tree on his grandfather's farm near Bronson, Michigan (between Detroit and Chicago). In 1950, grandfather Boltis C. Warner said that the tree was about 75 years old, suggesting that it was planted prior to 1880 on his property that was homesteaded about 1840. Mr. Mitschelen indicated that the fruit was attractive and ripened in north-central Washington slightly earlier than Bartlett. Photos of the fruit look very similar to cultivar Wilder. Mitschelen said that his grandfather called this a "Bell" pear. -- from email correspondence, February 2013.1907579PI 693961
159PI 688118ALB-2012-030Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2012Wild material1905986PI 688118
160PI 688170ALB-2012-038Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. AlbaniaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2012Wild material1905988PI 688170
161PI 688174ALB-2012-032Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. AlbaniaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2012Wild material1905987PI 688174
162PI 688181ALB-2012-026Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2012Wild material1905984PI 688181
163PI 688194ALB-2012-028Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2012Wild material1905985PI 688194
164PI 688203ALB-2012-024Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. AlbaniaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED2012Wild material1905983PI 688203
165PI 688180Kings Valley Pear 2Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2012COLLECTED10/17/2012CultivarLarge old pear tree with orifice in side of trunk. Small, early ripening fruit had been on the ground and already rotting when we visited in mid-September.1905441PI 688180
166PI 688202Kings Valley Pear 1Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2012Cultivar1905440PI 688202
167PI 665771Xinjiang Fragrant PearPyrus ×sinkiangensis T. T. Yu Xinjiang Uygur Zizhiqu, ChinaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED02/2011CloneSeedling population grown from seed from 5 fruit of Chinese origin purchased at Asian Market in Portland, Oregon. Seedlings very uniform. Same source as CPYR 2934 received in 2008.1901303PI 665771
168PI 665772Ya Li seedling China sourcePyrus ×bretschneideri Rehder ChinaCORNot Available2012COLLECTED02/2011CloneSeedling population grown from seed of 3 Ya Li fruit of Chinese origin purchased at Asian Market in Portland, Oregon. Seed germinated spring 2011.1901304PI 665772
169PI 693214Loreli's FavoritePyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2012DONATED04/18/2012Uncertain improvement statusLoreli Fister encountered this ferile pear tree for a number of years while hunting at the E.E. Wilson Wildlife Area north of Corvallis, Oregon. She was impressed with the fruit quality and shared scionwood with NCGR when she propagated the tree in 2012.1917779PI 693214
170PI 688121'Gem'Pyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2012DEVELOPED2012CultivarA new pear cultivar, 'Gem', has been released jointly by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Oregon State University, Michigan State University and Clemson University. Gem is ideal for the fresh market, combining high yields with excellent appearance, fruit quality and long storage potential. The new cultivar is resistant to fire blight and isn't prone to brown discoloration, called "superficial scald," that affects some pear varieties.

Horticulturist Richard Bell, at the Agricultural Research Service's (ARS) Appalachian Fruit Research Station in Kearneysville, West Virginia, and his colleagues describe Gem in the March 2014 issue of HortScience.

Gem requires at least 3 weeks of cold storage before normal fruit softening, but it will last for at least 28 weeks in cold storage without core breakdown or superficial scald. The fruit can also be eaten immediately after harvest without softening, as it has a crisp, juicy texture. Its flavor is sweet and mildly aromatic. When compared to Bartlett, a popular pear variety, sensory panelists rated Gem similar in appearance, flavor and purchase intent.

The original seedling tree of Gem was from a cross of 'Sheldon' and US62563-004 made in 1970. Bell selected Gem in 1981 from the seedling orchard at the ARS Henry A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center in Beltsville, Maryland.

The source of Gem's fire blight resistance comes from the cultivar 'Barseck'. Subsequently, Gem was evaluated for fruit quality, fire blight resistance and productivity in replicated trials at the Kearneysville location and at research centers at Washington State University, Oregon State University, Michigan State University, Cornell University and Clemson University.

Gem is recommended as a fresh-market pear for both commercial and home orchards. While budwood of Gem is limited, genetic material of this release will be deposited in the National Plant Germplasm System, where it will be available for research purposes, including development and commercialization of the new cultivar. -- By Sharon Durham, USDA Agricultural Research Service, January 2015: http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/pr/2015/150130.htm

1901302PI 688121
171PI 688179'Paragon'Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2012DEVELOPEDPRE 1970CultivarOriginated in Medford, Oregon. Selection from the old "Reimer Block" at the OSU Experiment Station in Medford, with fruit quality that attracted the attention of local growers in the 1980s. The cross may have been made by Frank Reimer in the 1950s, or maybe by someone else after he retired (Vaughn Quackenbush?). 'Paragon' is presumed to be a cross of Max Red Bartlett x Comice, although the fruit does not exhibit any red skin color. Fruit is about the size and shape of 'Bartlett', perhaps a bit lumpier, green ripening to yellow, with exquisite flavor and texture similar to 'Doyenne du Comice'.1899893PI 688179
172PI 688152'Doyenne du Comice - Taylor's Gold'Pyrus communis L. New ZealandCORNot Available2012DEVELOPED1986CultivarThe present invention relates to a new and distinct pear variety. More particularly the new cultivar is designated 'Taylor's Gold' and is a mutation of the 'Doyenne du Comice' variety. The variety was discovered on the inventors' property at Motueka, New Zealand. After the variety was discovered, it was asexually reproduced by grafting onto root stock... The fruit was first observed on the reproduced plants in 1989... Taylor's Gold is distinct from Doyenne du Comice... in that 'Taylor's Gold' is fully russeted, breaks leaf dormancy 7 to 10 days earlier, and the fruit is smaller. In other respects 'Taylor's Gold' is similar to 'Doyenne du Comice'. -- From U.S. Plant Patent 8308 (issued 20 July, 1993). Inventors: Michael B. King-Turner and Wendy M. King-Turner, Motueka, NZ.1897444PI 688152
173PI 665757ALB-2011-007Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/13/2011along road to Burrel41.66981000, 19.85516000112Wild material1891844PI 665757
174PI 665758ALB-2011-010Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/14/2011near Qafe Kerrabe41.16254000, 19.95502000785Wild material1891845PI 665758
175PI 665759P. spinosa ALB-2011-015Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/14/2011Seed collected from about a dozen scattered trees for about .25 km along road40.51708000, 20.70085000923Wild material1891850PI 665759
176PI 665760ALB-2011-024Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/15/2011Seed from single wild tree by side of road in village of Dardhe. 'Dardhe' means 'pear'40.51661000, 20.824680001320Wild material1891853PI 665760
177PI 665761ALB-2011-028Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/15/201140.44420000, 20.67032000909Wild material1891854PI 665761
178PI 665762ALB-2011-034Pyrus spinosa Forssk. Permet, AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/15/2011Along steep winding road to Carcove.40.15175000, 20.56716000629Wild material1891856PI 665762
179PI 665763ALB-2011-038Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/16/2011By cemetary on ridge of mointain road between Permet and Coravode.40.35250000, 20.30463000860Wild material1891857PI 665763
180PI 665764ALB-2011-043Pyrus spinosa Forssk. Malesia e Madhe, AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/17/2011Trees along road from Koplik to Dedaj.42.23315000, 19.47810000190dry, dry, dryWild material1891859PI 665764
181PI 665765P. spinosa ALB-2011-064Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/20/201140.18496000, 19.60700000500Wild material1891869PI 665765
182PI 665766ALB-2011-067Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/20/201140.03606000, 19.88251000260Wild material1891908PI 665766
183PI 665767ALB-2011-070Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/21/201139.91723000, 20.18384000139Wild material1891912PI 665767
184PI 665768P. spinosa ALB-2011-072Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/21/201139.91619000, 20.19865000300Wild material1891916PI 665768
185PI 665769ALB-2011-078Pyrus spinosa Forssk. Tepelene, AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/22/2011Village of Lekdush40.23023000, 19.96202000980Small village in mountains SW of Tepelene. Terraced agricultural slopes, mostly small pastures separated by hedgerows of Cornus mas, Prunus mahaleb, blackberry, oak, pear.Wild material1891931PI 665769
186PI 665770ALB-2011-89aPyrus spinosa Forssk. Tepelene, AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/22/2011Near village of Mezhgoram, east of Tepelene.40.29152000, 20.07928000184Fruit collected from 2 trees (bagged separately as A and B) ~ .5 km apart. Tree A seems to be slightly pyraster-like.Wild material1891945PI 665770
187PI 688120ALB-2011-001Pyrus spinosa Forssk. Mat, AlbaniaCORNot Available2011COLLECTED09/13/2011near Burrel41.70409000, 19.7799600076dry calcarious hillside above riverWild material1891842PI 688120
188PI 688119'Rutter'Pyrus communis L. Pennsylvania, United StatesCORNot Available2011DEVELOPEDNEAR 1850Cultivar1865452PI 688119
189PI 688117'Horner 10'Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2011DEVELOPEDCultivarThe Horner rootstocks originated about 30 years ago when nurseryman David Horner developed more than 500 selections in a remote area of western Oregon. They were open-pollinated crosses of OHxF 40, 51, 87, 333, and 339. Dr. Bill Proebsting, horticulturist with OSU in Corvallis, evaluated them initially for their ease of propagation. Those that were difficult to bulk up were discarded.

In 1995, horticulturists at the Hood River station began to prescreen 13 of the rootstocks for tree size, yield, and fruit size. They also looked for 'fatal flaws' such as too much root suckering and susceptibility to fire blight or Pseudomonas. The scion was d'Anjou, and the trees were spaced 8 by 18 feet. The control was OHxF.97, which Auvil said is similar to seedling. During the seven-year study, two of the rootstocks-Horner 4 and 10-were more productive than OHxF.97 and produced larger fruit.

From: GoodFruit Grower, September 2007

1863774PI 688117
190PI 688137'Horner 4'Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2011DEVELOPEDCultivarThe Horner rootstocks originated about 30 years ago when nurseryman David Horner developed more than 500 selections in a remote area of western Oregon. They were open-pollinated crosses of OHxF 40, 51, 87, 333, and 339. Dr. Bill Proebsting, horticulturist with OSU in Corvallis, evaluated them initially for their ease of propagation. Those that were difficult to bulk up were discarded.

In 1995, horticulturists at the Hood River station began to prescreen 13 of the rootstocks for tree size, yield, and fruit size. They also looked for 'fatal flaws' such as too much root suckering and susceptibility to fire blight or Pseudomonas. The scion was d'Anjou, and the trees were spaced 8 by 18 feet. The control was OHxF.97, which Auvil said is similar to seedling. During the seven-year study, two of the rootstocks-Horner 4 and 10-were more productive than OHxF.97 and produced larger fruit.

From: GoodFruit Grower, September 2007

1863773PI 688137
191PI 665756Bartlett - John Muir Gravesite No. 85Pyrus communis L. CORImageNot Available2011DONATED02/08/2011Cultivar1863775PI 665756
192PI 665754G10-120Pyrus communis L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2010COLLECTED2010Gldani District, Tbilisi41.79709000, 44.81509000495Fruit from market in Gldani from a local cultivar commonly grown in the area.Landrace1850744PI 665754
193PI 665755G10-122Pyrus salicifolia Pall. GeorgiaCORLEAFNot Available2010COLLECTED2010Delisi, Saburtalo District, Tbilisi41.72683000, 44.70170000695Wild material1850745PI 665755
194PI 688192'Faccia della Madonna'Pyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORNot Available2010DONATED03/22/2010Cultivar1837429PI 688192
195PI 688136Mission San Carlos Pear 1Pyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORImageNot Available2010DONATED02/02/2010Cultivar1842983PI 688136
196PI 688151Mission San Carlos Pear 3Pyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORImageNot Available2010DONATED02/02/2010Cultivar1842985PI 688151
197PI 688193Mission San Carlos Pear 2Pyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORImageNot Available2010DONATED02/02/2010Cultivar1842984PI 688193
198PI 665753'Beurre Crapaud'Pyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORNot Available2010DONATED01/22/2010CultivarA new foreign pear, resembling the Doyenn in flavour. Fruit of medium size, obovate. Skin pale greenish-yellow. Flesh buttery, fine-grained and excellent. Ripens in October. - Description of Beurre Crapaud from Downing's Fruits and Fruit Trees of America, 18461837428PI 665753
199PI 665750'Tennosui'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORNot Available2010DONATED01/13/2010CultivarTennousi - Hybrid cultivar, low chill, fire blight resistant. Open pollinated seedling of Tennessee possibly pollinated by Hosui. Developed by Harris County, Texas extension agent Bill Adams, who collected seed of Tennessee about 1992. The only pear flowering nearby at the time was Hosui. Tennousi may be immune to fire blight. In 20 years it has never become infected in Natelson's orchard in Houston. Fruit large, uniform, round like Hosui, but with European pear texture and flavor; Ripens well on the tree; Does not oxidize when cut. One of the best pears for the Houston area. May be self fertile. Tree requires 550-600 chill hours.1837425PI 665750
200PI 665751'Southern King'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORNot Available2010DONATED01/13/2010CultivarSouthern King - Developed by Bill Adams in Harris County, Texas as an open pollinated seedling of Tennessee, possibly pollinated by Hosui. Souther King is a sister seedling from the same seedling population as Tennousi. Fruit is smaller, more pyriform than Tennousi. Tree is productive and fruit must be thinned to improve size. Fruit ripens well on tree. Low chill requirement of about 600 hours.1837426PI 665751
201PI 665752'Lemate'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORNot Available2010DONATED01/13/2010CultivarLemate - Low chill, fire blight resistant hybrid pear selection found by Bob Zehnder in Summervill, South Carolina as an extra tree in a shipment of nursery stock he received from Louisiana in the early 1970s. The cultivar is unknown. The tree was labeled 'Lamate', which is likely the name of a nursery customer whose tree was sent to Zehnder in error. Lon Rombough, of Aurora Oregon, was impressed with the fruit quality and advised Natelson to propagate the tree in 2008 before Mr. Zehnder passed away.1837427PI 665752
202PI 665749Patricke PearPyrus hybr.Louisiana, United StatesCORNot Available2010DONATED01/07/2010CultivarHybrid cultivar, low chill, fire blight resistant, apple shape fruit. The Patricke Pear is a 75-85 year old tree grown from a cutting by the donor's great grandfather Antonio Ventrella on the family's farm along the Atchafalaya River basin near Simmesport, Louisiana, in Pointe Coupee Parish. - http://www.patrickepeartree.com/patrickepeartree.html (January 2010)

When I read Ethan Natelson's narrative about the origination of the Leona pear, in my mind, I began to compare that information with our Leona (=Patricke) pear. My late mother's sister, Marie, the only surviving sibling of five, was born in 1931. She told me her father told her the pear tree we have was planted long before she was born. My grandfather, her father, told me that his father had rooted the tree from a cutting from a tree he saw at a neighboring farm. In 1930, I assume that a pear tree that arrived in the mail at the post office in Converse, La., or wherever, would have had to have been a sapling. However, my great grandfather's rooted tree was already old enough to bear fruit by 1930 and probably before that. Additionally, I mention in my book that my great grandfather had climbed the tree when he was nearly ninety. As he climbed the tree to reach limbs small enough for him to be able to shake pears from out of the top, he lost his footing and hung upside down by one foot, which had gotten caught in a fork of the tree. My uncle Tony, my Aunt Marie's brother, now deceased, told me he saw this incident, as did my Aunt Marie, when I called her this evening to ask her about it. She said she laughed "because I was too young (around 12) to know it wasn't funny." This incident has stayed in the family lore for so long because those who witnessed it were so astonished that a man of his age could still climb trees. There are no pear trees anywhere near our property anymore, so the tree my great grandfather took wood from must have disappeared years ago. But what we do have here is a live eyewitness, my Aunt, a retired professional, to the fact that this pear tree was bearing fruit years before her grandfather climbed it, and that the tree was there throughout all her memory. Since the tree is hollow, its true age can't be determined by ring count. But, suffice it to say, our tree pre-dates the assumed 1930 Converse, La. origination date by some years. Not knowing any official name for the tree, all the elders in my family just called it the pear tree. However, I can vouch with one of Mr. Natelson's observations -- "It takes a few years to come into full bearing on calleryana." The tree in my backyard that bore fruit for the first time this year also took a few years just to begin to bear, and it was rooted from a cutting, not grafted. Additionally, grafts and rooted cuttings show different growth rates, and some of them begin blooming a few years before others of similar age. -- from Michael Bourgeois, 08/2014

1837424PI 665749
203PI 665746JPN-2009-145Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Iwate, JapanCORNot Available2009COLLECTED09/22/2009Hayasaka Kogen (high plateau) near Morioka39.84314000, 141.51410000936Open field along road, several scattered Pyrus trees presentWild materialFruits collected 9/22/2009 near Hayasaka Kogen (high plateau) in Morioka region of Iwate Province. Several scattered pear trees were present in open fields along road. Fruit was collected primarily from one large, broad, spreading tree. A few fruit was collected from two other trees, but the that fruit was smaller had few to no seeds. Fruit round to very slightly pyriform, about 2 cm diameter; large russet dots on skin; many stone cells; calyx mostly persistent; 5 locules.

From September 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.

1824056PI 665746
204PI 665747JPN-2009-148Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Iwate, JapanCORNot Available2009COLLECTED09/22/2009Hayasaka Kogen (high plateau) near Morioka39.84436000, 141.52312000970By edge of forest near road.Wild materialFruits collected 9/22/2009 from single tree near Hayasaka Kogen (high plateau) in Morioka region of Iwate Province. Single tree by edge of forest near road. Broad, open, tall tree, to 8-10 m. about 0.4 km away from previous sample (JPN-2009-145). From population where molecular marker data shows almost no introgression of genes from P. ussuriensis or P. pyrifolia species likely to have originated in China. This could be a refugia of native Japanese pears that may justify a new taxon accordin to H. Iketani. Fruit green, ripening to yellow, slightly wider than long, about 2 cm long x 2.5 cm wide; stems 3 cm long, slightly swollen at base; calyx mostly persistent but some deciduous; many fruit on tree - see photo of Iketani and Postman under tree.

From 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.

1824057PI 665747
205PI 665748JPN-2009-149Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Iwate, JapanCORNot Available2009COLLECTED09/22/2009Karumatsuzawa (upper stream) near Morioka39.81135000, 141.41896000728Dark humid, temperate forest;Wild materialFruits collected 9/22/2009 from single tree near Karumatsuzawa in Morioka region of Iwate Province. Dark humid, temperate forest; pear tree on edge of woods growing with Aesculus, Ulmus daviana, Viburnum, Acer palmatum, Perasites; Frank Reimer collected Pyrus near here a century ago, but this site is much higher elevation than Reimer visited in 1917-18, and this is a unique population that was not sampled by Reimer. Tree to about 15 m. Fruit green and mature; most fruit had fallen and sample was collected from the ground.

From 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.

1824058PI 665748
206PI 688197RostiezerPyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2009DONATED04/14/2009CultivarAn old pear tree growing in the orchard at the James Cant Ranch, an early 20th century sheep ranch now a museum at the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, Kimberly, Oregon. The orchard's "Pear No. 3" was tentatively identified as the lost cultivar 'Rostiezer' by Shaun Shepherd and Joanie Cooper, fruit identification specialists from the Home Orchard Society of Portland, Oregon in mid-August, 2012.

"Rostiezer. Origin uncertain. It was, however, received from A.N. Baumann, Bollweiler, Alsace, by R. Manning, Salem, Massachusetts in 1834 or 1835. Often called 'Early Seckel' in the west. Fruit medium or below, pyriform, regular in form, grass-green on the shaded side, reddish on the exposed face and sprinkled with small gray dots; flesh greenish-white, fine, melting, rather granular below the core; juice very abundant, vinous, acidulous, very saccharine, with a most delicate flavor; first; last of August." -- U.P. Hedrick, 1921, The Pears of New York

curator note: A cultivar named 'Early Seckel' (PI 541184) was introduced in 1935 by the New York State Agriculture Experiment Station. Neither the John Day Fossil Bed Pear No. 3 or the description of 'Rostiezer' is the same as the New York 'Early Seckel'.

"The Rostiezer is, we believe, a German pear, and was received from the nursery of the brothers Baumann, of Bolwiller, on the Rhine. It is likely to prove a capital variety. It bears abundantly. Fruit of medium size, oblong-pyriform. Skin a dull yellowish-green, with a reddish-brown cheek, and whitish dots, light russet. Stalk very long, nearly two inches, irregular, slender, set with very little depression. Calyx open, but little sunk. Flesh juicy, a little coarse, but very melting, sweet and delicious, with a rich perfume. August and September." -- A.J. Downing, 1846, The Fruits and Fruit Trees of America.

1904832PI 688197
207PI 657932AZB-2008-177Pyrus salicifolia Pall. AzerbaijanCORImageNot Available2008COLLECTED09/26/2008Near Gval village in Djulfa district. Near the foot of Ali Dag (Snake Mountain).39.11778000, 45.744440001280Searingly hot, dry semi-desert hills.Wild materialJoint collection trip by representatives of USDA National Arboretum and National Clonal Germplasm Repository. National Arboretum sample (AZB-2008-177) is identical with the collection made by Malli Aradhya as collection number AZN 91, also assigned PI number 657932 Corvallis number CPYR 2935. National Arboretum accession: NA 78554.1791362PI 657932
208PI 665745Xinjiang Fragrant PearPyrus ×sinkiangensis T. T. Yu Xinjiang Uygur Zizhiqu, ChinaCORNot Available2008COLLECTED04/2008CultivarSeveral Chinese Fragrant Pears (possibly the same as the cultivar Korlu Fragrant) were purchased from an Asian market in Portland, Oregon in October, 2007. The fruit was imported from China. Seeds were saved and germinated following standard cold stratification for about 60 days. The Chinese Fragrant Pear presumably belongs to the species P. sinkiangensis which is from Xinjiang Province in western China and is taxonomically intermediate between the European pear (P. communis) and the Asian pear (P. pyrifolia). At 4 months of age, a population of 7 seedlings was very uniform in vegetative characteristics, having large leaves with serrations not unlike P. pyrifolia. - J. Postman 04/03/20081753276PI 665745
209PI 657931'Horner 51'Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2008DONATED03/27/2008Cultivar1753274PI 657931
210PI 665743'Shenandoah'Pyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2008DEVELOPEDCultivar'Shenandoah' is a new European pear (Pyrus communis L.) cultivar which combines resistance to fire blight with fruit of good quality and long storage life. The original seedling tree was selected in 1985 at the USDA, Appalachian Fruit Research Station in Kearneysville, West Virginia from a cross of 'Max Red Bartlett' x US 56112-146, and was tested under the original seedling number, US 78304-057. The original source of fire blight resistance is 'Seckel'. The fruit of 'Shenandoah' is pyriform to round-pyriform in shape and moderately large in size, averaging 72 mm in diameter and 92 mm in height. Skin color at harvest maturity is light-green, turning yellow-green when ripe. The skin finish is glossy and 10-20% of the fruit surface is blushed red. Under the humid climatic conditions in the eastern U.S. there is light russet at the calyx end of the fruit. Lenticles are slightly conspicuous and are surrounded by small, light brown russet. The stem is medium to long (~25 mm), of medium thickness, upright, and slightly curved. The cavity and basin are obtuse and shallow. The core averages 21 mm in diameter. Harvest maturity occurs about four weeks after 'Bartlett', and the fruit will store in refrigerated (-1 C) air storage for at least 4 months without the development of core breakdown or superficial scald. The flesh texture is moderately fine, juicy, and buttery. Grit cells are moderately small and occur primarily around the core and in a thin layer under the skin. The flavor is aromatic, similar to 'Bartlett', and is moderately acidic during the first 2 months after harvest, becoming to subacid after longer storage. The tree is moderate in vigor on 'Bartlett' seedling and 'Old Home' x 'Farmingdale' 97 rootstocks, and upright spreading in habit. 'Shenandoah' blooms in mid-season, similar to 'Bartlett'. Yield has been moderate to moderately high, and precocious, with first fruit setting 1 to 2 years after planting. Production has been regular with no pronounced biennial pattern. Fruit are borne primarily on spurs but also on terminal blossoms of lateral shoots. Fire blight resistance is similar to 'Seckel' with infections extending no further than 1 year old shoots. Artificial blossom inoculations indicate a moderate degree of blossom resistance to fire blight infection. - Bell, R.L., Miller, D.D., Van Der Zwet, T. 2004. 'Shenandoah' a new fire blight resistant pear cultivar. Hortscience, 39:805. 20041753272PI 665743
211PI 665744'Sunrise'Pyrus communis L. West Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2008DEVELOPEDCultivar'Sunrise' is a new pear (Pyrus communis L.) cultivar released by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service. It combines a high degree of resistance to fire blight with excellent fruit quality. The sources of resistance in the pedigree are the old American cultivar, 'Seckel', and NJ1, a P. communis ? P. pyrifolia hybrid. It matures in early August in the northern hemisphere, approximately two weeks before 'Bartlett' and one week before 'Clapp's Favorite', and is characterized by a storage potential and shelf life greater than the cultivar 'Clapp's Favorite'. Precocity and production were similar to 'Bartlett', as is average fruit weight. The cultivar is moderately resistant but not immune to pear scab, but it is susceptible to powdery mildew and Fabraea leaf spot. Fruit infection with Fabraea is minimal. -- Bell, R.L., Vanderzwet, T. 2010. International Horticultural Congress. p. 519

Aromatic, sweet to subacid flavor

o Very attractive, 20% red blush common

o Medium fruit size, productive tree

o Fire blight resistance equal to Seckel

o Early maturing: Harvest 2 to 3 weeks before Bartlett , just before Clapp s Favorite

o Stores 3 months without core breakdown

-- from R.L. Bell. 2008. Pear Cultivar Fact Sheet

1753273PI 665744
212PI 657930Summer Blood Birne O.P.Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2007DONATED12/07/2007CultivarRipe fruit collected from genebank orchard in August 2007. Additional fruit collected from ground beneath tree in October and extracted in November 2007. Packages kept separate.1745485PI 657930
213PI 665742'Riehl Best'Pyrus communis L. Illinois, United StatesCORNot Available2007DEVELOPED1912CultivarRiehl Best is described among the major varieties because it is as nearly blight-proof as any other European Pear. It might well be tried in localities where standard sorts cannot be raised because of blight, and is worth growing in breeding work as a parent to obtain blight-resistant varieties. The pears are rather unattractive in appearance, but are excellent in quality. The flesh is juicy, tender, vinous, free from grittiness and seldom rots at the core. The trees, besides being nearly free from blight, are hardy to heat and cold, and bear annually. The fruits fall far short of those of standard varieties in New York.

This pear was discovered by Edwin H. Riehl, Godfrey, Illinois, and was introduced by Stark Brothers, Louisiana, Missouri. Mr. Riehl says: 'The farm on which the original tree stood was owned by a pioneer nurseryman who evidently imported from France a number of varieties, some perhaps without name. Riehl Best trees and several hundreds of other varieties represent the remains of three old orchards planted fifty years ago (written in 1912). Trees of other varieties are ruined by blight while Rielh Best is in perfect health and bears every season.' From this history it is probably that Riehl Best is a old European Pear renamed. -- U.P. Hedrick. 1921. The Pears of New York, quoting from Stark Bros. Catalogs from 1912 and 1916.

This 'Riehl Best' tree, as identified by C. Compton, is growing in the Applegate Orchard near the southwest corner of the Francis Writsman donation land claim, north of Corvallis, Oregon. It is by the north edge of McDonald Forest along Tampico Road and is among several fruit trees growing at the edge of an open field east of the forested area and several hundred feet south of Tampico Road on forest road 400. The tree has metal tag number AP-P3 placed in 1990. Tree location is latitude 44.69420 degrees N, longitude 123.25766 degrees W, elevation 108 meters.

Retired OSU horticulture Professor Cecil Compton continued his passion for identifying unknown fruit trees for farmers, homeowners, and natural resource managers well into his 90s. Following his death in August, 2005, at the age of 102 a group of Oregon Master Gardeners sorting through his papers found a list of apple and pear varieties that he had identified in abandoned orchards on what were once Donation Land Claim homesteads and are now the OSU McDonald Research Forest. Dozens of old trees were identified by Compton from fruit samples collected by OSU foresters Bob Zybach and Sanliang Gu in the fall of 1990. Zybach placed metal tags on the trees and mapped their locations. A team of master gardeners working with OSU McDonald Forest cultural resources specialist Debra Johnson and USDA ARS NCGR pear curator Joseph Postman toured McDonald forest in April 2007 and were able to locate a number of the fruit trees that Cecil Compton had identified 17 years earlier including one tree of 'Riehl Best', one of the Lost Pears of New York -- J. Postman, 2007.

1730079PI 665742
214PI 657926'Cabot'Pyrus communis L. New York, United StatesCORNot Available2007DONATED04/11/2007CultivarFruit medium size, sweet, aromatic with melting flesh. Good for fresh eating. Ripe in September. Tree extremely cold hardy, to below -50 F. -- St. Lawrence Nurseries Catalog, 2006.

Cabot. Originated from the seed of the Brown Beurre (Beurre Gris) by J.S. Cabot, Esq., of Salem, Mass. It has a good deal of the flavour of its parent, and is an agreeable, sub-acid fruit. The tree grows upright and very strong, and produces amazing crops, but the fruit, with us, decays very quickly - though we understand that, in older specimens, this is not the case. It merits a general trial. Col. M.P. Wilder of Boston, informs us, that with him, it is of the first quality, nearly as good as Fondante d'Automne. Fruit pretty large, roundish-turbinate, narrowing rather abruptly to the stalk, which is bent obliquely, and inserted on one side, of a tapering summit. Skin roughish, bronze yellow, pretty well covered with cinnamon russet. Calyx small, open, set in a round, smooth basin. Flesh greenish-white, breaking, juicy, with a rich, sub-acid flavour. Middle and last of September. -- A.J. Downing. 1846. Fruits and Fruit Trees of America.

1725673PI 657926
215PI 657927'David'Pyrus hybr.Saskatchewan, CanadaCORNot Available2007DEVELOPED1960CultivarOriginated at University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon, Canada, by C.F. Patterson. Selected in 1958 and introduced in 1960. Pedigree: Pyrus ussuriensis x Bartlett. Tested as Sask. PR-3. Fruit: up to 2.75 in. long and 2.25 in. diameter under nonirrigated field conditions at Saskatoon; skin thin, flesh quality good, holds firmness without breaking down quickly; good for cooking and processing. Ripe in September. Tree is fire blight resistant and extremely cold hardy, to below -50 F.1725674PI 657927
216PI 657928'Parker'Pyrus communis L. New York, United StatesCORNot Available2007DONATED04/11/2007CultivarOriginated in Excelsior, Minnesota. Introduced by the University of Minnesota in 1934. Selected in 1920. Pedigree: Open-pollinated seedling of a Manchurian cultivar. Medium to large fruit, yellow with red blush, fine-grained, tender, juicy. Ripe in mid-September. Tree is susceptible to fire blight and very cold hardy, almost to -50 F.1725675PI 657928
217PI 657929'Sauvignac'Pyrus communis L. New York, United StatesCORNot Available2007DONATED04/11/2007CultivarOriginated near Quebec City, Canada, in a very cold area. Introduced by St. Lawrence Nurseries. Brought to their attention by Henri Bernard. Fruit very sweet, juicy with few grit cells. Tree very hardy, almost to -50 F.1725676PI 657929
218PI 68819196.FI.12Pyrus communis L. ItalyCORNot Available2007DEVELOPED1979Cultivar1723903PI 688191
219PI 69395996.FI.11Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available2007DEVELOPEDCultivar1723902PI 693959
220PI 69396096.FI.15Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2007DONATED03/06/2007Cultivar1723904PI 693960
221PI 66574186-077 CPyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Kyonggi, Korea, SouthCORFRUITNot Available2006COLLECTED10/19/1984Ongjin-Gun, Paekryoung Island, east of Chunghwa-Dong along road north to Yonhwa-Ri. Behind farmhouse, in sun.37.93333000, 124.66667000Wild material1984 Expedition to Korea - NW Collected as P. ussuriensis, but examination of fruit photos provided by Anthony Aiello in August 2018 suggest that this is a wild type P. pyrifolia.1726872PI 665741
222PI 651623 QGE-2006-154Pyrus salicifolia Pall. GeorgiaCORNot Available2006COLLECTED09/30/2006 Near village of Salkuneti, On hillside to the south of the Mtkvari River.41.68206000, 43.106580001082Wild materialNear village of Salkunet, on hillside to the south of the Mtkvari River. Fruit from about 6 trees.1715518PI 651623 Q
223PI 688084P. hybrid AM-2006-186Pyrus hybr. ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2006COLLECTED10/05/2006Ararat Top of Gorge of Eghegis River.39.90177000, 45.495580002023this may have been a landrace orchard in ancient times. this may have been a landrace orchard in ancient times. Other hybrid trees nearby, but no cultivated pears within many kilometersWild materialTop of Gorge of Eghegis River - 'Medieval Garden'. Larger leaves and larger fruit than typical P. salicifolia. Other hybrid trees nearby, but no cultivated pears within many kilometers. Presence of many Malus, Pyrus and Prunus trees suggest that this may have been a landrace orchard in ancient times. 3 overripe fruit, hanging vertically on peduncle picked from one tree. One larger overripe fruit, about 4cm long, was found stuck between branches on another tree.1715526PI 688084
224PI 688103Wild PearPyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2006COLLECTED10/07/2006Syunik Chanachi Forest near Norashenik.39.29424000, 46.322350001215Wild materialChanachi Forest near Norashenik. Clearing in deciduous Forest. Fruit from ground under 6 trees scattered in clearings along 1 km path through forest. Appear to be typical P. caucasica.1715519PI 688103
225PI 688104Wild Willowleaf PearPyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2006COLLECTED10/04/2006Ararat Near Khosrov Preserve.40.05732000, 44.791600001833salicifolia, Crataegus pontica, Rhamnus sp. salicifolia, Crataegus pontica, Rhamnus sp.Wild materialNear Khosrov Preserve. At top of very dry hillside. Associated vegetation: Pyrus salicifolia, Crataegus pontica, Rhamnus sp. Typical foliage, but larger than average fruit. Seed collected from 10+ trees. During seed extraction, larger fruit contained more seeds, suggesting association between pollination and fruit size.1715528PI 688104
226PI 688115GE-2006-114Pyrus sachokiana Kuth. GeorgiaCORLEAFNot Available2006COLLECTED09/25/2006Kakheti Former Institute of Botany Experiment Station near village of Kasris Tskali.41.28349000, 46.46847000563Cultivated materialFormer Institute of Botany Experiment Station near village of Kasris Tskali. Scions from single tree on station grounds.1715517PI 688115
227PI 688116Willow Leaf PearPyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2006COLLECTED10/10/2006Syunik Mountains north of Meghri.39.09481000, 46.170410002066Wild materialMountains north of Meghri, deciduous forest. Leaves wider than typical salicifolia, pubescent underside, glabrous top.1715532PI 688116
228PI 688134Willow Leaf PearPyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORNot Available2006COLLECTED10/08/2006Syunik Edge of Shigahogh Preserve.39.04806000, 46.498850001010Wild materialEdge of Shigahogh Preserve. Seed from 3 trees.1715531PI 688134
229PI 688135AM-2006-185Pyrus hybr. ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2006COLLECTED10/05/2006Ararat Top of Gorge of Eghegis River.39.90177000, 45.495580002023trees. trees.Wild materialTop of Gorge of Eghegis River - 'Medieval Garden'. Associated with many Prunus divaricata and Malus orientalis trees. Fruit collected from several trees that appear to be intermediate between P. salicifolia and other species, probably P. caucasica. Fruit like that of P. salicifolia, oriented in random directions1715533PI 688135
230PI 688178Wild Willowleaf PearPyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORNot Available2006COLLECTED10/05/2006Ararat Gorge of Eghegis River, near AM-2006-177 site.39.90479000, 45.494880002045Wild materialGorge of Eghegis River, dry hillside, near AM-2006-177 site. Typical P. salicifolia.1715530PI 688178
231PI 688190Wild Willowleaf PearPyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORNot Available2006COLLECTED10/05/2006Ararat Gorge of Eghegis River, near AM-2006-177 site.39.87758000, 45.457880001742Wild materialGorge of Eghegis River, dry hillside, near AM-2006-177. Fruit 2.5-3.0 cm long, 2.5 cm diam. Seed collected from single tree.1715529PI 688190
232PI 688201Willow Leaf PearPyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2006COLLECTED10/04/2006Ararat Near Khosrov Preserve.40.05576000, 44.782640001722Wild materialNear Khosrov Preserve. Some trees with larger fruit (pollination?) and with wider leaves than other P. salicifolia. May be what Armenian botanists call P. takhtajani.1715527PI 688201
233PI 688083'Ashnan Tandz'Pyrus communis L. ArmeniaCORNot Available2006COLLECTED10/08/2006Syunik Garden in Nerkin Hand Village.39.05687000, 46.52572000731Garden in Nerkin Hand Village. Short and very broad, medium/large fruit. Shape resembles quince or Sorbopyrus. Ripe in November.1713200PI 688083
234PI 688150AM-2006-186Pyrus salicifolia Pall. Armenia Historic2006COLLECTED10/05/2006Top of Gorge of Eghegis River in "Medieval Garden"39.90177000, 45.495580002023Larger leaves and larger fruit than typical P. salicifolia. Other hybrid trees nearby, but no cultivated pears within many kilometers. Presence of many Malus, Pyrus and Prunus trees suggest that this may have been a landrace orchard in ancient times. 3 overripe fruit, hanging vertically on peduncle picked from one tree. One larger overripe fruit, about 4cm long, was found stuck between branches on another tree.Wild material1713197PI 688150
235PI 688164AM-2006-225Pyrus communis L. Syunik', ArmeniaCORNot Available2006COLLECTED10/08/2006Old hillside orchard near abondoned village of Hand.39.03999000, 46.51708000870LandraceOld hillside orchard near abondoned village of Hand. 100 plus year old grafted tree. No fruit, may be early ripening.1713201PI 688164
236PI 657923GE-2006-115Pyrus sachokiana Kuth. GeorgiaCORImageNot Available2006COLLECTED08/08/2005Kakheti, Former Institute of Botany Experiment Station near village of Kasris Tskali.41.28349000, 46.46847000563Wild materialOpen pollinated seed from GE-2006-114, seeds collected by Merab Khachidze on 8/8/2005. Both P. salicifolia and P. communis are possible pollen parents. This species was described by Mikhail Sachokia from a population growing in mountains to the south, appears to be hybrid between P. salicifolia and P. caucasica.1715507PI 657923
237PI 657924GE-2006-111Pyrus salicifolia Pall. GeorgiaCORImageNot Available2006COLLECTED09/25/2006Kakheti, Collected from top of cliff edge overlooking Vashlovani Preserve.41.21873000, 46.42246000592Wild materialCollected from top of cliff edge overlooking Vashlovani Preserve. Fruit from two trees of about 12 years. Very dry habitat.1715508PI 657924
238PI 657925GE-2006-128Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORImageNot Available2006COLLECTED09/26/2006Kakheti, near Mount Elias, edge of cultivated field.41.42777000, 46.10225000756Wild materialKakheti, near Mount Elias, edge of cultivated field. (Seedlot is either hybrid or mixture - some seedlings are more like P. salicifolia, and others like P. caucasica. jp 2011)1715509PI 657925
239PI 688163'Gulabi - Dedoplis Tskaro'Pyrus communis L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2006COLLECTED09/27/2006Town of Dedoplis Tskaro in Kakheti province.41.46530000, 46.09500000Yard of private home in Dedoplis Tskaro. Friend of Nellie, our guesthouse owner.Cultivar1713169PI 688163
240PI 657922'Blake's Pride'Pyrus communis L. Illinois, United StatesCORNot Available2006DEVELOPED1998CultivarBlake's Pride. --A fire blight resistant, mid-season Pyrus communis cultivar. Origin: Released in 1998 by R.L. Bell and T. van der Zwet , USDA Agricultural Research Service, Kearnysville, WV and R.C. Blake, USDA/ARS, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center (OARDC), Wooster, OH. A cross of US 446 x US 505 made in 1965 by H. J. Brooks. Selected in 1977 at OARDC, Wooster, Ohio by R. C. Blake and T. van der Zwet and evaluated as OHUS 66131-021. Only Pyrus communis background with fire blight resistance from Seckel. Fruit: Moderate size, symmetrical, pyriform to round-pyriform, 66 mm diam., 80 mm height with short upright stem; skin yellow, glossy, approx. 25% covered with smooth, tan russet; matures 3 weeks after Bartlett, about September 11 in Kearneysville, WV; stores 3 months in common storage; flesh moderately fine buttery texture, juicy, with small grit cells at core and beneath skin; flavor subacid, and aromatic, more like Comice than Bartlett. Tree: Upright-spreading moderate vigor on Bartlett seedling rootstock. Moderate to high yield, precocious. Fruit borne on both spurs and terminal blossoms of lateral shoots. Fire blight resistance greater than Seckel; blossoms exhibit moderate resistance following artificial inoculations. Moderate field resistance to pear scab; susceptible to powdery mildew and Fabraea leaf spot. Blooms 1-4 days before Bartlett; self-incompatible, but Bartlett, Beurre Bosc, Harrow Delight and Packham's Triumph are suitable pollinizers. Named in memory of Roland C. Blake. -- Brooks and Olmo Register of New Fruit and Nut Varieties List 39, 1999.1699231PI 657922
241PI 693201'Lutsu Voipirn'Pyrus communis L. EstoniaCORNot Available2005DONATEDCultivar1675241PI 693201
242PI 693964'Lincoln Coreless'Pyrus communis L. Missouri, United StatesCORNot Available2005DONATED03/07/2005CultivarThe product of Lincoln Coreless is worthless for dessert, and but a coarse makeshift for culinary purposes. The variety receives attention only because the pear is a monstrosity and a curiosity. The fruits are enormous in size, outweighing all other pears unless it be those of the Pound. They are unique in having a very small core and few or no seeds. They are further characterized by very late maturity, ripening later than those of any other pear on the grounds of the Station (Geneva, New York and keeping until April. While usually rather dull greenish-yellow in color, the cheek is often enlivened by a bright blush which makes the fruits rather attractive despite their grossness.-- U.P. Hedrick, 1922

Scions received on 7 March, 2005 at the USDA Repository from Leona Heitsch of Bourbon, Missouri. Ms. Heitsch saw the article 'The Lost Pears of New York' (J. Postman. 2005. Journal of the American Pomological Society 59(1):3-6.) and thought that a tree on her property matched the description of Lincoln Coreless pear.

1672290PI 693964
243PI 641292GE-2004-037Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED09/25/2004Tush-Pshav-Kevsureti (Mtskheta-Mtianeti) province, Aregri River (Psavis Aragvi) valley north of T'bilisi.42.43084000, 44.942460001098Wild material1665926PI 641292
244PI 641293GE-2004-039Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORImageNot Available2004COLLECTED09/26/2004Tush-Pshav-Kevsureti (Mtskheta-Mtianeti) province, Kevsureti district, northwest of Shatili near Mutso.42.66392000, 45.170010001415Wild material1665927PI 641293
245PI 641294GE-2004-041Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED09/26/2004Tush-Pshav-Kevsureti (Mtskheta-Mtianeti) province, Kevsureti district, Shatili.42.65673000, 45.154830001450Wild material1665928PI 641294
246PI 641295GE-2004-051Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED09/26/2004Tush-Pshav-Kevsureti (Mtskheta-Mtianeti) province, Aregri River (Psavis Aragvi) valley north of Barisakho.42.51860000, 44.932600001412Wild material1665929PI 641295
247PI 641296GE-2004-068Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED09/30/2004Kartli province, near Bakuriani.41.73729000, 43.511910001719Forest edge, along pasture with Fagus orientalis.Wild material1665930PI 641296
248PI 641297GE-2004-075Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORImageNot Available2004COLLECTED10/01/2004Kvemo Kartli (Samtskhe-Javakheti) province, near Satere.41.73190000, 43.308410001587Wild materialSeed collected from two trees several kilometers apart in Georgia's Samtskhe-Javakheti province, near the village of Satere. Seeds are packaged as separate sub-samples. Package A is from a tree with larger fruit. Package B is from a larger tree having smaller fruit than Tree A. - October 2004

30 November 2006: image made of seeds from package B. These seeds are noticeably smaller than seeds in package A. - J. Postman

1665931PI 641297
249PI 641298GE-2004-081Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED10/02/2004Kartli province, fruit collected beneath row of trees planted along road in front of school in Bakuriani.41.74962000, 43.528900001680Wild material1665932PI 641298
250PI 641299GE-2004-120Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED10/06/2004Racha (Racha-Lechkhumi and Kvemo Svaneti) province, Nikortsminda. In church yard of 11th century church.42.45969000, 43.088680001216Wild material1665933PI 641299
251PI 641300GE-2004-131Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORImageNot Available2004COLLECTED10/07/2004Imereti province, near Vani, south of Kharagauli.41.98253000, 43.22084000832Wild material1665935PI 641300
252PI 641301GE-2004-136Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED10/07/2004Imereti province, Skhliti village, south of Kharagauli.41.97542000, 43.22305000680Wild material1665936PI 641301
253PI 657920'Zebra-Pear'Pyrus communis L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED10/07/2004Kartli (Shida Kartli), fruit purchased at market near Gori.42.01674000, 44.08753000692Wild material1665937PI 657920
254PI 657921GE-2004-141Pyrus salicifolia Pall. GeorgiaCORImageNot Available2004COLLECTED09/19/2004Meskheti (Samtskhe-Javakheti) province, near Akhaltsike.41.65000000, 42.900000001050Steppe vegetation.Wild material1665940PI 657921
255PI 688082GE-2004-140Pyrus salicifolia Pall. GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED09/19/2004Meskheti (Samtskhe-Javakheti) province, near Akhaltsike.41.65000000, 42.900000001050Steppe vegetation.Wild material1665939PI 688082
256PI 688162GE-2004-139Pyrus salicifolia Pall. GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED09/19/2004Meskheti (Samtskhe-Javakheti) province, near Akhaltsike.41.65000000, 42.900000001050Steppe vegetation.Wild material1665938PI 688162
257PI 688199GE-2004-121Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED10/07/2004Racha (Racha-Lechkhumi and Kvemo Svaneti) province, Nikortsminda. Hedgerow by 11th century church.42.45969000, 43.088680001216Wild material1665934PI 688199
258PI 688200GE-2004-142Pyrus salicifolia Pall. GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED09/19/2004Meskheti (Samtskhe-Javakheti) province, near Akhaltsike.41.65000000, 42.900000001050Steppe vegetation.Wild material1665941PI 688200
259PI 688189Quince-PearPyrus communis L. GeorgiaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED09/24/2004Kartli (Shida Kartli) province, from a private orchard near Gori.42.10311000, 44.077910007121664932PI 688189
260PI 638018Du LiPyrus betulifolia Bunge Shaanxi Sheng, ChinaCORImageNot Available2004COLLECTED02/2004From the mountains of northwest Shaanxi in the wild pear forests of Huang Ling.35.58334000, 109.250000000Cultivated materialCollected in the wild pear forests of Huang Ling in Shaanxi Province, China. John Wells traveled to Shaanxi Province in February, 2004 and was given this seed by Mr. Xu Pu Gang at Xia-Ja Gou Village in Yangling County, the grower at Northwest Sci-Tech University of Agriculture and Forestry, Yangling Demonstration Farm. This is a cold-hardy form of P. betulifolia, from the northern limit of the natural range of this species. It is used as a rootstock for Asian pears and European pears in this part of China. Mr. Xu purchases the whole fruit with stem, and cleans and dries the seed in October, November and December. In January, approximately 50-60 days before soil temperatures increase, these dried seeds are placed in sand stratification. In early March the seeds are planted at the density of 15 x 30 cm, at the rate of two kilograms of seed per one Mu (1/6 acre). As many as 20,000 seedling/Mu are produced but only the best, about 10,000/Mu are budded in September. It is said to produce a dwarf tree that is drought and waterlog resistant, and is of much interest to the pear industry of the pacific northwest United States as a potential dwarfing rootstock for cultivated pears. -- information from John Wells, 2 March, 2004.

This seedlot was collected from the same general region as PI 541007, received in 1989.

1656327PI 638018
261PI 638020P. communis subsp. caucasica No.1Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED2003near town of Alaverdi, Tumanian region41.13056000, 44.651940000Wild materialPyrus caucasica seeds collected by Samvel Gasparian in Armenia and sent to J. Postman at NCGR-Corvallis. Wild form discovered in the neighborhood of town Alaverdi of Tumanian region, Lori Marz (Province). The height of tree is approximately 10 meters. Crown is wide and pyramid shaped. Leaves are not cut and are oval. Fruits are small (3 to 4 cm diameter) almost spherical. Fruit stem is long. Fruits become ripe in the first ten days of October. -- from collection notes sent by Gasparian.1656329PI 638020
262PI 638021P. communis subsp. caucasica No.2Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED200339.26750000, 46.390830000Wild materialPyrus caucasica seeds collected by Samvel Gasparian in Armenia and sent to J. Postman at NCGR-Corvallis. Wild form discovered in the territory of village Norashenik of Kapan region, Syunik Marz (Province). Height of tree is approximately 7 meters. Crown is broad and pyramid shaped. Leaves are oval shaped, in some cases roundish. Fruits are round and flat, yellowish, sparkling. Fruits are in bunches. Average length is 2.3 cm, average width is 3.0 cm. Fruits become ripe in the third ten days period of September. -- from collection notes sent by Gasparian.1656330PI 638021
263PI 638022P. communis subsp. caucasica No.3Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORNot Available2004COLLECTED200340.93861000, 45.179720000Wild materialPyrus caucasica seeds collected by Samvel Gasparian in Armenia and sent to J. Postman at NCGR-Corvallis. Wild form discovered in the territory of village Khashtarak of Tavush region, Idjevan Marz (Province). Height of tree is approximately 8 meters. Crown is broad and pyramid shaped. Leaves are of middle size and small, oblong-oval, fruit stems are long (about 7 cm). Fruits are in bunches, small, average length is 2 cm (1.9 to 2.2), average width is 2.4 cm (2.2 to 2.7), round, flat. Ripe fruits are yellow, sweet and with pleasant taste. Fruits become ripe in the second ten days period of September. -- from collection notes sent by Gasparian.1656331PI 638022
264PI 638023'Petre Pear'Pyrus communis L. Pennsylvania, United StatesCORImageNot Available2004DONATED03/15/2004CultivarThe original tree is growing in that interesting place, the old Bartram Botanic Garden, near Philadelphia. Col. Carr, the proprietor, who has disseminated this tree, informs us that in 1735, a seed was received by the elder John Bartram, from Lord Petre of London, as being the seed of a fine butter pear. The tree is not a rapid grower, but produces very regular and abundant crops. Young wood, slender, yellowish-brown. Fruit of medium size, or rather large, obovate. Skin very thin, pale yellow (sometimes marked with greenish-russet, and sprinlked with russet about the eye.) Calyx small, set in a narrow, but smooth basin. Flesh whitish, fine grained, buttery, and very melting; with a perfumed, slightly musky, high flavour. October, and if picked early, will keep a long time. -- A.J. Downing. 1859. Fruits and Fruit Trees of America, revised edition.

Petre. This tree was presented to me by Mr. Carr, of the Bartram Botanic Garden, near Philadelphia, where the fruit originated. The first specimens were produced the last season, 1837. The size is large, the form long, round at the eye, and tapering to an obtuse point at the stem; the skin is a dull yellow, mixed with greenish russet; the flesh melting, juicy, and very delicious Ripe in October and November. It is a pear of the very first rank, and should be extensively cultivated. -- R. Manning, The New England Fruit Book, 1844.

I now have over 160 varieties growing in SE PA many which came from Geneva, a few from you and a number of other mid Atlantic sources. In my searching I got to know the folks at Historic Bartrams Gardens and found out that there was a rapidly disappearing pear named Lady Peter or Lady Petrie. There were two trees left in the world- one in nearby Germantown and one near DC in Chevy Chase. I contacted the owners in Germantown, got some scions and had no luck probably because of the age of the parent tree. The owners told me of someone else's efforts some ~15 years earlier that resulted in the one tree in Chevy Chase. Last spring/early summer my family and I were driving thru DC and stopped, and these owners were nice enough to allow us to take cuttings. I'm happy to report that there are now ~25 nice trees growing in SE PA which will be available for dispersal this fall or next spring. I have contacted my friends at Bartrams and expect that they will want several... -- Mike Tomlinson, Source of NCGR Scions, from June, 2003 email.

In Bartram's Garden, Philadelphia, Penn., a small, gnarled pear tree perpetuates the memory of Lady Petre, of England, who, in 1760, sent it across seas to the famous botanist. It was planted close by the quaint old house on the Schuylkill, that during his life-time was a centre of hospitality, and where noted men were often entertained. Owing to the generosity of Lord Peter, the Duke of Richmond and Peter Collinson, who justly subscribed a fund for the purpose, Bartram was able to continue the expeditions which he had begun in order to collect and classify the plants of the New World, returning to the donors the equivalent in roots and seeds. -- Katherine S. Nicholson,1922, Historic American Trees.

1656332PI 638023
265PI 638019'X-Ceptional'Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORImageNot Available2004DEVELOPED1985CultivarScions received at USDA Repository in March, 2004 from Wayne Huffstetter, Portland, Oregon. X-Ceptional was a seedling pear discovered by Morris X. Smith on the grounds of the Bethel College, Polk County, Oregon, at the base of the Eola Hills. Scions were collected and propagated in 1985 by Mr. Huffstutter. Fruit was displayed at the Home Orchard Society fruit show in 1992 and was well accepted. Mr. Huffstutter named the pear in honor of Mr. Smith in 1995.1656328PI 638019
266PI 638017'Shannon'Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2004DONATED02/27/2004CultivarShannon - This pear was grown for many years by Jake Tann, a farmer in the Albany/Tangent area of Linn County, Oregon. Mr. Tann sold fruit at several local farmer markets. The 'Shannon' pear was very popular and he had no trouble selling all that he could grow. It has been several years since Mr. Tann has offered fruit at the markets, and the Repository has been contacted on several occasions by individuals trying to locate sources of the 'Shannon' pear. Mr. Delbert McCombs obtained scionwood from Mr. Tann a number of years ago, and has been offering trees through his small nursery outside of Monroe, Oregon. He describes the pear as being late ripening, with a velvet smooth texture. -- J. Postman, 2004

The pear cultivar 'Grand Champion' is a russeted sport of 'Gorham.' 'Grand Champion' originated in the W.F. Shannon orchard in Hood River, Oregon, in 1936. Perhaps 'Shannon' is a synonym for 'Grand Champion'? -- J. Postman Feb.2004.

1656326PI 638017
267PI 665813'Jaunette'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available2004DONATEDCultivar1652273PI 665813
268PI 688133'Julienne'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available2004DONATEDCultivarJulienne. A handsome summer pear, which so much resembles the Doyenne or St. Michael, as to be called, by some, the Summer St. Michael. It is a beautiful and most productive fruit, and comes into bearing very early. It is often of excellent flavour, and of the first quality; but, unfortunately, it is variable in these respects, and some seasons, it is comparitively tasteless and insipid. In rich, warm, and dry soils, it is almost always fine. It is a profitable market fruit, and will always command a prominent place in the orchard. The tree is of thrifty upright growth, with light yellowish-brown shoots. Fruit of medium size, but varying in different soils; obovate, regularly formed. Skin very smooth and fair, clear bright yellow, on all sides. Stalk light brown, speckled with yellow, a little more than an inch long, pretty stout, inserted in a very shallow depression. Calyx small, closed, set in a basin slightly sunk, but often a little plaited. Flesh white, rather firm at first, half buttery, sweet and moderately juicy. Ripens all the month of August. Coxe considered this synonymous with Archiduc d'Ete of Duhamel and Lindley - the Ognonet pear, a distinct and inferiour fruit, with a brownish cheek, and we therefore follow Mr. Manning in keeping it distinct. It may yet prove synonymous with the Doyenne d'Ete of the French, which has not yet been fairly proved in this country. -- A.J. Downing, 1846, The Fruits and Fruit Trees of America.

Julienne - An old and formerly popular pear; now generally discarded. Synonyms: Bloodgood Pear of New York, Julianna, Julienne (of Coxe), L'Archiduc d'Ete, Summer Beurre, Summer Doyenne (erroneosly), Summer St. Michael (so called near Boston). -- Ragan, 1908, The Nomenclature of the Pear

A beautiful and productive fruit and profitable for the market. Fruit medium but varying on different soils, obovate, regularly formed, very smooth, skin fair, clear bright yellow all over; flesh white, rather firm at first, semi-buttery, sweet, moderately juicy, rich, sprightly; should be gathered a few days before ripe and kept in the house; Aug. -- U.P. Hedrick, 1921, The Pears of New York

1652274PI 688133
269PI 688149'De Cloche'Pyrus communis L. Hauts-de-France, FranceCORNot Available2004DEVELOPEDCultivarAn old perry pear from the Normandy region of France. The cultivar name 'De Cloche' means 'Bell' in English, and the fruits are very similar to the shape of a bell. Very late ripening, with a long storage life. The fruit is astringent and only used for cooking, juice and perry (poire).1652272PI 688149
270PI 638013'Bloodgood'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available2004DEVELOPED1835CultivarBloodgood (Early Beurre of some). The Bloodgood is the highest flavored of all early pears, and deserves a place even in the smallest garden. It was named from the circumstance of its having been brought into notice about 1835, by the late James Bloodgood, nurseryman, Flushing, L.I. The sort was brought to that nursery as a new variety, without a name however, by some person on Long Island, unknown to Mr. B., who was never able afterward to trace its history further. The tree is rather short jointed, with deep reddish brown wood, grows moderately fast, and bears early and regularly. The fruit, like that of all early pears, is better if ripened in the house. It surpasses every European variety of the same season, and together with the Dearborn's Seedling, another native sort, will supplant in all our gardens the Jargonelle, and all inferiour early pears. Fruit of medium size, turbinate, inclining to obovate, thickening very abruptly into the stalk. Skin yellow, sprinkled with russet dots, and net-work markings, giving it a russetty look on one side. Calyx strong, open, set almost without depression. Stalk obliquely inserted, without depression, short, dark brown, fleshy at its base. Flesh yellowish-white, buttery and melting, with a rich, sugary, highly aromatic flavour. The thin skin has a musky perfume. Core small. Ripe from 25th July to the 10th of August. -- A.J. Downing, The Fruits and Fruit Trees of America, 1846.

Bloodgood has long been a standard summer pear in America. It surpasses any European associate of its season in both fruit- and tree-characters. In particular, the fruits are meritorious for flesh of fine texture, which, though a little granular, is melting and juicy, and ha a rich, sweet, perfumed flavor. Complaints appear in the horticultural press that the quality is always poor if the fruit is not picked as soon as full grown and ripened indoors. The season in New York is August. The trees are resistant to blight, healthy, bear young and regularly, are long-lived, and attain large size, although in some situations they are but medium in size. The variety has little or no value in commercial plantations, but is prized in every collection for home use.

The origin of this pear is unknown, but it is suposed to be a native of New York. It seems to have been brought to notice about 1835 by James Bloodgood of the nursery firm of Bloodgood and Company, Flushing, Long Island. According to Robert Manning, the variet was listed in Prince's Catalogue for 1837 as Early Beurre. After being introduced by Bloodgood and company, it was speedily recognized as one of the most valuable native sorts. The variety was placed upon the fruit catalog-list of the American Pomological Society in 1848. -- U.P. Hedrick, The Pears of New York, 1921.

Scions for NCGR Corvallis were collected on 17 February, 2004, at the Bybee Howell Pioneer Orchard, Howell Territorial Park on Sauvie Island west of Portland, Oregon. This orchard was established by Larry L. McGraw and the Home Orchard Society in 1973 on the grounds of the restored James F. Bybee House to represent and preserve Pacific Northwest heirloom fruit varieties. -- J. Postman, 2005

1651986PI 638013
271PI 638014'Waverly'Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2004DONATED02/17/2004CultivarWaverly was propagated by Larry McGraw from an old pear tree growing on the grounds of the Waverly Country Club near Milwaukie, Oregon. The land that is now the country club was originally the site of the Henderson Luelling Nursery, first nursery in the Pacific Northwest to grow grafted fruit trees. This tree was probably not one of the trees planted when the nursery was established in 1848, but was likely propagated from one of Luelling's original trees. May be one of the European pear cultivars offered by Luelling. (Information from Wayne Hufstutter, Portland, Oregon, February 2004).

Scions for NCGR Corvallis were collected on 17 February, 2004, at the Bybee Howell Pioneer Orchard, Howell Territorial Park on Sauvie Island west of Portland, Oregon. This orchard was established by Larry L. McGraw and the Home Orchard Society in 1973 on the grounds of the restored James F. Bybee House to represent and preserve Pacific Northwest heirloom fruit varieties. -- J. Postman, 2005

1651987PI 638014
272PI 638015'Whitman'Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2004DONATED02/17/2004CultivarWhitman - Originally a very large, old tree located west of the Whitman Mission, Whitman College, Walla Walla, Washington. The tree was removed in the early 1970's to make way for a construction project at the college. The trunk of the tree was said to be about 16 feet in circumference at the time it was removed. Larry McGraw propagated the tree prior to it's destruction and planted it at the Bybee Howell preservation orchard on Sauvie Island west of Portland, Oregon. (Information from Wayne Hufstutter, Portland, Oregon, February 2004).

Scions for NCGR Corvallis were collected on 17 February, 2004, at the Bybee Howell Pioneer Orchard, Howell Territorial Park on Sauvie Island west of Portland, Oregon. This orchard was established by Larry L. McGraw and the Home Orchard Society in 1973 on the grounds of the restored James F. Bybee House to represent and preserve Pacific Northwest heirloom fruit varieties. -- J. Postman, 2005

1651988PI 638015
273PI 638016'Yaquina'Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORImageNot Available2004DONATED02/17/2004CultivarYaquina - Originally collected by Morris X. Smith (1910-1998) in the 1960s from a pear tree growing near the Yaquina River or Yaquina Bay upstream from Newport, Oregon. Adapted to the marine climate of the Oregon coast. Propagated by Larry L. McGraw for the Bybee Howell Pioneer Orchard, Howell Territorial Park on Sauvie Island west of Portland, Oregon. This orchard was established by McGraw and the Home Orchard Society in 1973 on the grounds of the restored James F. Bybee House to represent and preserve Pacific Northwest heirloom fruit varieties. The list of trees at Bybee Howell park has the name 'Payson' following 'Yaquina'. This may be the name of a person who owned the original tree? Scions for NCGR Corvallis were collected on 17 February, 2004, at the Bybee Howell Pioneer Orchard. -- J. Postman, 2005.1651989PI 638016
274PI 638004Gasparian Sample 33Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORNot Available2003COLLECTED2002Collected near village of Khachakap (formerly Saral) about 5 miles east of Spitak, Lori Marz region.40.84250000, 44.362500001517Wild materialSpitaki (tr. - of white) 1 - Wild Caucasian pear; found in a homestead of village Khachakap in Lori Marz (Province). It is a tall tree with wide pyramid shape foliage; branches are gray and prickled. Leaves are slightly shaggy from behind and shiny to the upward; rounded; blade is entire, petiole is thin and long. Flower cluster is a buckler (shield). Fruits are rounded 3 to 4 cm in diameter. Pedicel is of medium size. Pulp is tasteless. It is of industrial use. --collection notes sent by Samvel Gasparian on wild and cultivated fruits of Armenia, Ministry of Agriculture, Republic of Armenia, 2002.1646472PI 638004
275PI 638005Gasparian Sample 34Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORNot Available2003COLLECTED2002Collected near village of Khachakap (formerly Saral) about 5 miles east of Spitak, Lori Marz region.40.84250000, 44.362500001517Wild materialSpitaki 2 - Wild Caucasian pear; found in village of Khachakap in Lori Marz (Province). It is a tall tree (12 meters height) with wide pyramid shape crown; branches are gray and thorny. Leaves are shiny from above, shaggy from below, round; entire blade, petiole is thin and longer than the leaf. I has buckler (shield) cluster of flowers. Fruit is rounded and very small, 1 to 2 cm in diameter. --collection notes sent by Samvel Gasparian on wild and cultivated fruits of Armenia, Ministry of Agriculture, Republic of Armenia, 2002.1646473PI 638005
276PI 638006Gasparian Sample 35Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORNot Available2003COLLECTED2002Collected near village of Khachakap (formerly Saral) about 5 miles east of Spitak, Lori Marz region.40.84250000, 44.362500001517Wild materialSpitaki 3 - Wild Caucasian pear; possibly introduced from Javaghck. Found in one of the homesteads of village Khachakap, in Lori Marz (Province). It is a tall tree (10 meters height), fertile; foliage is wide pyramid shape; branches are gray and thorny. Leaves are round, shiny from above, shaggy from the lower part; entire blade; petiloe is oblong; fruits are of apple shape, 3 to 4 cm diameter. Pulp is firm, sweetish. It has industrial usage. --collection notes sent by Samvel Gasparian on wild and cultivated fruits of Armenia, Ministry of Agriculture, Republic of Armenia, 2002.1646474PI 638006
277PI 638007Gasparian Sample 36Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORNot Available2003COLLECTED2002Collected near village of Khachakap (formerly Saral) about 5 miles east of Spitak, Lori Marz region.40.84250000, 44.362500001517Wild materialSpitaki 4 - Wild Caucasian pear. Plant found in one of the homesteads of village Khachakap, in Lori Marz (Province). It is a tall tree (11 meters height); crown is wide pyramid shape with gray and thorny branches. Leaves are round, shaggy from the lower part, shining from the top; petiole is oblong; entire blade; fruits are comparably larger, 3 to 4 cm in diameter. Pulp is sweet with slight shade of sour taste; it is firm; good for industrial use. --collection notes sent by Samvel Gasparian of wild and cultivated fruits of Armenia, Ministry of Agriculture, Republic of Armenia, 2002.1646475PI 638007
278PI 638008Gasparian Sample 37Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2003COLLECTED2002Collected near village of Khachakap (formerly Saral) about 5 miles east of Spitak, Lori Marz region.40.84250000, 44.362500001517Wild materialUruterev tandz (= willow leaf shape pear) - wild. Tree is in the village of Khachakap in Lori Marz (Province). It is a tall tree (9 meters height); foliage is extended; branches are prickled with gray red color. Leaves are narrow, shaggy from the lower part with bunches (clusters); oblong (5 to 7 cm in length); entire blade; fruits are 1 to 3 cm in diameter with green yellowish color; leaf stalk is short; it has 3 to 5 pip caves. Pulp is firm. Fruit ripens in September - October; hardy to frosts and draughts. Uruterev tandz can easily grow in sandy soils; good for industrial use. --collection notes sent by Samvel Gasparian on wild and cultivated fruits of Armenia, Ministry of Agriculture, Republic of Armenia, 2002.1646476PI 638008
279PI 638009Sample 38Pyrus elaeagrifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2003COLLECTED2002Collected near the village of Tsakhkadzor in the Kotayk Marz region.40.53861000, 44.711390001838Wild materialPhsha(tav) terev tandzeni - Pyrus elaeagrifolia found in a homestead of town Tsaghkadzor in Kotayk Marz (Province). The tree is tall (8 meters height); crown is rounded; branches are gray and thorny. Leaves are counter ovate, looking like skin, shaggy from below. Fruits are 2 to 3 cm in diameter; green yellowish; edible when they pass a long time processing. Pulp is firm and has industrial usage. Fruits ripen in September - October; hardy to frosts and diseases. --collection notes sent by Samvel Gasparian on wild and cultivated fruits of Armenia, Ministry of Agriculture, Republic of Armenia, 2002.1646477PI 638009
280PI 638010Sample 39Pyrus communis L. ArmeniaCORNot Available2003COLLECTEDCollected near the village of Merdzavan in the Armavir Marz region.40.18170000, 44.39920000921Wild materialDzmernuk (winter variety) - bought from the fruit gardens of Merdzavan village, in Armavir Marz (Province). It is a domestic variety cultivated by the local people. The tree grows very well. It can reach 5 to 6 and even more meters. Crown is of medium thickness, with slightly expressed pyramid shape; sometimes rounded; bark is plain and of light brown color. Shoots are dark brown and upright going. In fertile soils, the upper parts of the shoots with lush growth are bent. Buds are large and oblong.

Leaves are large, round with flat surface; of dark green color and slightly serrate ends. Flowers are of medium size, white and fragrant; petals are of medium size. Fruits are of medium size, weighing 80 to 120 grams, round, comprising stony cells. Fruit stalk is long; yellow greenish. Fennel is of average size; plate is not deep. Fruits are getting yellow when they are ripe enough. Seeds are flat, oblong with dark brown color. 100 dry seed weigh 6 to 7 grams. The tree bears late, 5 to 6 years after planting. Fruits ripen in late October. --collection notes sent by Samvel Gasparian on wild and cultivated fruits of Armenia, Ministry of Agriculture, Republic of Armenia, 2002.

Another sample collected from same village and sent to NPGS but not accessed was seed of western European cultivar 'Kjure' (= Cure or Vicar of Winkfield). It is not known if the 'Kjure' trees were growing near the 'Dzmernuk' trees, but this would be a possible pollen source for these open pollinated seeds. -- J. Postman

1646478PI 638010
281PI 641291Burford PearPyrus hybr.Virginia, United StatesCORNot Available2003DONATED04/04/2003CultivarBurford Pear was a selection from my great-grandfather's orchard that undoubtedly, he found outstanding because of it flavor, ripening quality, tree stamina and above all resistance to fireblight and pear psylla. It likely is also a genetic dwarf, but this is currently at test at Vintage Virginia Orchards in North Garden, VA, where it is grafted on both pear stocks and quince. A 75 to 100 year old tree was my childhood backyard favorite pear tree, growing between the row of outhouses and the gas generator house that piped 'light' to the main house. Its companion was a Slappy peach, a huge juicy bomb that I enjoyed hurling into the chicken pens to watch frenetic chicken pecking its delectable flesh. This about seventeen foot tree (I measured it a number of times before cutting the top out) has extraordinarily limber branches. With a full load of from 17 to 20 bushels the unfruited limbs nearly head high would bend to the ground with mature fruit without breakage. In 1954 hurricane Hazel blew the tree to a 45 degree angle, but it was righted by a sling around its trunk with the aid of our faithful Ford 8N tractor and produced it usual full crop of pears. For nearly 60 years I enjoyed the pears canned from this tree. The ripening time for harvest is forgiving and even when fully ripe on the tree or gathered from windfalls the pears are useable for dessert, canning and pickling. A family recipe for pear-pineapple jam is especially memorable with only fresh pineapples, a luxury, used. The most significant use of the Burford pear is fresh canned. They are peeled, cored and packed in quart jars with a light syrup poured over; then processed. The color remains white. In the winter they become a favorite dessert, plain or stuffed with Aboria rice and fruits like canned figs or berries or just cheese with a few dashes of port wine. Hickory or walnuts are also good stuffings. -- Tom Burford, April 2003.1646471PI 641291
282PI 638011'Hamesi'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Oregon, United StatesCORImageNot Available2003DONATED03/11/2003CultivarRipe early August. Yellow skin, reliably productive, bears very sweet, juicy fruit, easily bruised in picking. Fruit tends to be small and needs careful thinning. -- G. Moulton and J. King. 2006. Fruit Handbook for Western Washington: Varieties and Culture.1646479PI 638011
283PI 638012'Choju'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai JapanCORFRUITNot Available2003COLLECTED0CultivarChoju. A very early season medium size Japanese pear. Origin: Kanagawa, Japan. A cross of Asahi x Kitsukawasei made at the Kanagawa Hort. Exp. Sta. in 1954; selected in 1969; named Choju (meaning 'long life') and released in 1973. The area around Ninomiya in Kanagawa Prefecture is a famous area for 'long life'. Fruit: v. early, med. size, russet skin; Flesh v. sweet, Tree: susc. to fireblight and pseudomonas. Resis. to black spot in Japan. One of the earliest ripening Asian pears available in the United States. Japanese people believe that eating early season ripening fruit promotes long life. Marketed as Ichiban Nashi (tm) by Fowler Nurseries. -- description from: I.Kajiura and Y.Sato. 1990. Recent progress in Japanese pear breeding and descriptions of cultivars based on literature review. Bulletin of the Fruit Tree Research Station (translated from Japanese by S. Wada).1646480PI 638012
284PI 657919'Mishirazu'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2003DONATED03/11/2003CultivarMishirasu. - Ripe in late September to early October. Rough brown russet skin, large to enormous fruit, some weighing a pound or more. Unattractive appearance, but good flavor. The crisp, crunchy flesh makes it a good choice for salads as well as fresh eating. -- G. Moulton and J. King. 2006. Fruit Handbook for Western Washington.

Mishirazu. Origin: May trace back to seed from China. Found in Hokkaido about 1887 where it was originally called Iida Nashi. Tested in Aomori testing center beginning in 1933. In 1956 this was the main cultivar grown in Hokkaido and occupied 63% of production. Named 'Mishirazu' by Dr. Hoshino. Fruit ripens in same period as Taihaku. Has been used in breeding and is a parent of Kitahoshi (Misharazu x Nijisseiki), Hokuto (Mijisseiki x Mishirazu), Hatsuhi (Chojuro x Mishirazu) and Amatama (Chojuro x Mishizaru). -- from I.Kajiura and Y.Sato. 1990. Recent progress in Japanese pear breeding and descriptions of cultivars based on literature review. Bulletin of the Fruit Tree Research Station (translated from Japanese by S. Wada, 12/2007).

1646444PI 657919
285PI 688102'Arlingham Squash'Pyrus communis L. England, United KingdomCORNot Available2003DEVELOPEDArlingham Squash (synonyms: Squash Pear, Old Squash, Old Taynton Squash) - This variety makes a medium size tree with rather slender, upright limbs, and a thin open branch system. Very susceptible to attach by canker which causes much die-back of the older branchers and stimulates the growth of numerous young shoots. In spite of this handicap the cropping is good. Common in southwest Gloucestershire, particularly near the Severn, with scattered trees elswhere in the county. Often confused with Taynton Squash. Possibly the Green Squash Pear of Evelyn.

Flowering period: late mid-season. Fruit: broadly turbinate, approaching round, 43-56 mm. long, 45-57 mm. diameter. Stem 10-20 mm. thick, often lumby, usually swollen at union with spur. Stem basin usually small and slight, sometimes absent. Eye basin usually slight, though sometimes well defined, wide and shallow. Calyx upright, rarely reflexed; sepals tubular or joined; stamens attached at base of sepals, sometimes red. Skin light green, sometimes with a slight red, often blotchy flush; russet spreading to cheek; lenticels small, sometimes conspicuous, red on flush; scab slight. Core has a well defined axial sac, rarely filled. Flesh sometimes tinged yellow, with stone cells around core. Harvest 1st to 3rd week of October. Milled up to 5 days after harvest. The fruits rot quidkly from the centre, though remaining sound in external appearance. Juice sp. gr. 1052; acidity 0.40; tannin 0.14. Produces a medium acid, low to medium tannin perry; pleasant and full bodied. -- Luckwill and Pollard, 1963.

1644357PI 688102
286PI 688131'Oldfield'Pyrus communis L. England, United KingdomCORNot Available2003DEVELOPEDOldfield (synonyms: Ollville, Oleville, offield, Awrel, Hawfield) - A medium to small tree with wide-angled crotches, often severely broken down with canker. Once of high repute as a variety of good vintage quality, but should only be planted if it is known to do well in the locality.

Flowering period: early mid-season. Fruit: Oblate or round, rarely turbinate, 33-45 mm. long, 38-48 mm. diameter. Stem 19-26 mm., slender, often attached to the fruit by a fleshy lip. Stem basin absent. Eye basin wide and shallow. Calyx upright; sepals free; stamens attached some distance below the base of the sepals. Skin green to yellow; russet at both ends; lenticels numerous, of variable size, conspicuous; scab often severe. Core has a filled axial sac or none; carpels large; seeds black. Flesh has a few stone cells around the core. Harvest 3rd to 4th week of October. Milled 3-6 weeks after harvest. Juice sp. gr. 1065; acidity 0.73; tannin 0.15. Produces a medium to high acid, medium tannin perry of average to good quality. -- Luckwill and Pollard, 1963.

1644360PI 688131
287PI 691244'Plant de Blanc'Pyrus communis L. Hauts-de-France, FranceCORNot Available2003DEVELOPEDCultivarOne of the most important perry or poire pear varieties from the Normandy region of France. Also known as 'Le Roi du Rois', The King of Kings. It is sometimes used to produce a single-varietal poire.1643564PI 691244
288PI 641287'Acres Home'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORNot Available2003DONATED02/06/2003Breeding materialA seedling found in a field at the Acres Home subdivision in Houston, Texas. It is a beautiful, large pear, with a red blush. Fairly good quality, precocious, total fire blight resistance, heavy bearer, spreading shape. -- Ethan Natelson, Houston, Texas, 2003.

This pear is being sold around Houston, and appears to be well suited for Southeast Texas. It is named after an African American enclave in Houston where for many years country living went on within city limits. Many inhabitants of Acres Homes kept livestock in their yards and gardened on their acre sized lots. The pedigree of this pear is unknown, but was likely grown from seed. Said to be a great pear and excellent for the area and possibly all along the gulf coast. -- Justin Duncan, Prairie View, Texas, 09/2011.

1646467PI 641287
289PI 641288'Louisiana Beauty'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORNot Available2003DONATED02/06/2003CultivarClaimed to be identical to Leona. Natelson (correspondence 2003) disagrees. He indicates that Louisiana Beauty has lower chill requirement than Leona and is more pyriform. Widely grown in southern Louisiana.1646468PI 641288
290PI 641289'Bosarge'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available2003DONATED02/06/2003CultivarThis is a very large, pyriform and totally russetted Asian type. Sort of a Cajun Bosc. Widely grown in southern Louisiana and Mississippi. -- E. Natelson, Houston, Texas, 2003.1646469PI 641289
291PI 641290'Vermilion'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORNot Available2003DONATED02/06/2003CultivarThis came from an ancient tree on the old family estate of an Emile Thibodeaux, in Vermilion Parish in Louisiana. Grafts have produced an excellent pear, according to Tom Becnel, who is propagating the tree in the New Orleans area. -- Ethan Natelson, Houston, Texas, February 2003.

Not the same as European cultivars with similar name. Ragan (1908) notes Vermillion (of Haut) is an old European cultivar, and Vermillion or Vermilion is also a synonym for several other old cultivars including Brussels (Belle de Bruxelles of Downing, 1846), French Jargonelle (Vermilion d'ete), Wurtemburg (Vermillion d'ete), etc.

1646470PI 641290
292PI 638001ARM-02-067BPyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED09/03/2002Arpa Gorge in the province of Vayotz Dzor Marz.39.71861000, 45.581940001398angustifolia, Fraxinus excelsior and Salix sp. angustifolia, Fraxinus excelsior and Salix sp.Wild material1642268PI 638001
293PI 688132ARM-02-165Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED09/12/2002Vanadzor Valley in Lori Marz province.40.75917000, 44.470000001717orientalis and Carpinus betulus. orientalis and Carpinus betulus.Wild material1642267PI 688132
294PI 638000ARM-02-067Pyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2002COLLECTED09/03/2002Arpa Gorge in Vayotz Dzor Marz (province).39.71861000, 45.581940001398angustifolia, Fraxinus excelsior and Salix sp. angustifolia, Fraxinus excelsior and Salix sp.Wild material1642263PI 638000
295PI 641284ARM-02-029Pyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED09/01/2002Shikahogh Reserve in the province of Syunik Marz.39.05278000, 46.493610001086With Pyrus salicifolia, Quercus patraea along roadside.Wild material1642259PI 641284
296PI 641285ARM-02-167Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2002COLLECTED09/12/2002Vanadzor Valley in Lori Marz (province)40.77972000, 44.478890001526and Quercus macranthera. and Quercus macranthera.Wild materialSeeds were germinated and seedlings grown at The Morris Arboretum of the University of Pennsylavaia in Philadelphia with their inventory reference numbers 2002x263 and 2002-250. Two seedlings were provided to the NPGS Woody Landscape Plant genebank in Beltsville, Maryland, and forwarded to NCGR Corvallis in December, 2009 by curator Kevin Conrad. Additional seedling trees were sent to NCGR Corvallis from the Morris Arboretum in March, 2010 by curator Tony Aiello.1642265PI 641285
297PI 641286ARM-02-175Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED09/13/2002Near Pushkin Mountain Road in Lori Marz (province)40.92722000, 44.436940001642Quercus macranthera. Quercus macranthera.Wild material1642266PI 641286
298PI 657918ARM-02-076Pyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2002COLLECTED09/03/2002Arpa Gorge in Vayotz Dzor Marz (province).39.70722000, 45.568890001381Dry, grassy open slope.Wild material1642264PI 657918
299PI 688081ARM-02-028Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED09/01/2002Shikahogh Reserve in the province of Syunik Marz.39.05278000, 46.493610001086With Pyrus salicifolia, Quercus patraea along roadside.Wild material1642258PI 688081
300PI 688100ARM-02-045Pyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED09/02/2002between Vahravan - Lehvaz in the province of Syunik Marz.38.94972000, 46.179170001207Edge of woodlands with Juglans regia.Wild material1642260PI 688100
301PI 688101ARM-02-058Pyrus sp. ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED09/02/2002In the Province of Syunik Marz.39.05917000, 46.303060002734Wild material1642262PI 688101
302PI 688148ARM-02-171Pyrus communis L. subsp. caucasica (Fed.) Browicz ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED09/12/2002Vanadzor Valley in Lori Marz province.40.76417000, 44.480280001500Quercus macrantera and Acer campestre. Quercus macrantera and Acer campestre.Wild material1642269PI 688148
303PI 688188ARM-02-057Pyrus sp. ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED09/02/2002In the Province of Syunik Marz.39.05917000, 46.303060002734Wild material1642261PI 688188
304PI 691243ARM-2002-110 Tavush MarzPyrus communis L. ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2002COLLECTED09/07/2002CultivarCollected 9/7/2002 in Dilijan National Park, Tavush Marz (Province).1641889PI 691243
305PI 657917ARM 361-1Pyrus syriaca Boiss. ArmeniaCORImageNot Available2002COLLECTED08/16/200139.79444000, 45.648330001980Wild materialAbove the shoreline of the reservoir near Jermuk and at the beginning of the river of sites 38-40.1640889PI 657917
306PI 688080ARM-01-221Pyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED08/13/200139.68361000, 45.232780001517Wild materialThis site is near the church of Noravanq (New Church). The site is 8 km off of the main highway 20-30 km SE of Yeghegnadzor. The reading is for the whole site, but the terrain was a very deep canyon and collections were made from the bottom of the canyon to 120 m up the hillside. Temperature was very hot (>110 F). At 10 m above the streambed, the terrain was very rocky, steep, extremely dry. We collected both sides of the canyon.1640886PI 688080
307PI 688160ARM-01-247Pyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED08/14/200139.87361000, 45.411110001680Wild materialTraveled past Vayk and then up the canyon of the Yeghegis River. Collected mostly above the river in the desert/semi-desert steep rocky part of the canyon.1640887PI 688160
308PI 688161ARM-01-269Pyrus salicifolia Pall. ArmeniaCORNot Available2002COLLECTED08/14/200139.67389000, 45.306940002178Wild materialAt the top of the gorge where it opens to a wider canyon. This is the open plateau at the top of the canyon.1640888PI 688161
309PI 637999'Striped Anjou'Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available2002DEVELOPEDCultivarA bud-sport of Columbia Red Anjou with red and green striped fruit. Discovered on 22 August, 2001 by Joseph Postman on a tree of accession CPYR 2377.001 growing in the National Clonal Germplasm Repository pear orchard in Corvallis, Oregon. All the fruit on a single twig exhibited a regular green-striped break in the red chimera. The rest of the tree contained completely red fruit typical of the Columbia Red Anjou cultivar. Bark on the sport exhibited red striations whereas bark on the rest of the tree was evenly pigmented. Several grafts were made from the affected twig. The two trees resulting from these grafts also exhibit pigmented striations in the bark, and will need to be field grown to verify the persistence of the striped fruit characteristic. -- J. Postman, 2002.1640890PI 637999
310PI 637998'Bartlett - Russet'Pyrus communis L. Ontario, CanadaCORImageNot Available2002DEVELOPED1927CultivarRusset Bartlett (CPYR 2737).-Originated in Jordan Harbor (now Vineland Station), Ontario, Canada, by the late N.P. Moyer. Introduced in 1927. Bud mutation of Bartlett; discovered in 1918. Fruit: skin russetted; may be held somewhat longer than Bartlett in ordinary storage; in controlled atmosphere (CA) storage, it does not bruise as much as Bartlett; resembles parent. Tree: blooms I to 2 days later than Bartlett, flowers smaller with more pink; defoliates earlier than Bartlett. - Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties1636900PI 637998
311PI 641283'Philip'Pyrus communis L. Saskatchewan, CanadaCORNot Available2002DEVELOPED1960CultivarPhilip (CPYR 2738).-Originated in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, by C.F. Patterson, University of Saskatchewan. Introduced in 1960 for home gardens. Pyrus ussuriensis x Aspa; selected in 1958; tested as Sask. PR-4. Fruit: 2.75 inches long and 2.5 inches in diameter under non-irrigated field conditions at Saskatoon; skin tender; very fair quality; ripens during the last 2 weeks of September. Tree: hardy.1636901PI 641283
312PI 638002HVSC-123Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Primorye, Russian FederationCORNot Available2001COLLECTEDIn the vicinity of Sad-gorod.0Wild material1644462PI 638002
313PI 638003HVSC-124Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Primorye, Russian FederationCORImageNot Available2001COLLECTEDFrom the Nadezhdinsky district.0Wild materialCollected in the wild by Andrey Sabitov in August, 2001 from the Nadezhdinsky district of the Russian far east province of Primorsky.1644463PI 638003
314PI 637996'Flordahome'Pyrus hybr.Florida, United StatesCORNot Available2001DEVELOPED1981CultivarFlordahome (CPYR 2731).-Originated in Gainesville. Florida, by University of Florida, Dept. of Fruit Crops. Tenn (Tennessee 37-20) x Hood. Cross made in 1954; selected in 1970; introduced in 1981. Tested as Florida 41-116. Fruit: large, round-ovate; skin green, tender; flesh white, melting (buttery texture); early ripening, mid to late July, needs to be harvested at hard green stage for maximum aroma and flavor; stores up to 6 weeks at 40 to 45F without significant loss in quality. Tree: upright, semi-compact; highly productive; shorter and more compact than Hood; resistant to fire blight, moderately resistant to leaf spot; low chilling requirement, adapted to north and central Florida; requires cross-pollination. Hood and Pineapple good pollinizer. - Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties1631360PI 637996
315PI 637997'Le Conte'Pyrus hybr.Georgia, United StatesCORNot Available2001DEVELOPED1850CultivarLe Conte is a hybrid between the Chinese Sand pear and a European sort, therefore of the same parentage as Kieffer which it greatly resembles in both tree and fruit. The fruits are rather poorer in quality than those of Kieffer, if that be possible for an edible fruit, and the tree is in no way superior to that of its better-known rival, but it seems to succeed better in warm climates and light soils. There is, therefore, a place for Le Conte in the South, if a pear is wanted for culinary purposes only. The fruits sometimes rot badly at the core, and should usually be harvested as soon as they attain full size. The trees are more susceptible to blight than those of Kieffer. In the South, the trees are often if not usually propagated from cuttings. Le Conte originated in America, and is probably a hybrid between the Chinese Sand pear and some native. It is supposed to have been carried from Philadelphia to Georgia about 1850 by Major Le Conte, and has since been extensively cultivated in the southern States for northern markets. In 1885 it was recommended by the Georgia Horticultural Society for cultivation in the middle region of that State. The American Pomological Society added Le Conte to its fruit-catalog in 1883. -- U.P. Hedrick, The Pears of New York, 1921.1631361PI 637997
316PI 688079VV105Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Primorye, Russian FederationCORNot Available2001COLLECTED09/08/2001Shkotovsk district, near town of Anisimovka (=Kangauz)43.16500000, 132.70667000300Open field near road.Tree 10 m tall; bark medium grey, longitudinally furrowed; fruit yellow-fgreen with brown speckles. 1636810PI 688079
317PI 637993HVSC-107Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Habarovskij kraj, Russian FederationCORImageNot Available2001COLLECTED08/22/200148.51667000, 136.2438900062Pextail grasses present. Pextail grasses present.Cultivated material1631152PI 637993
318PI 637994'Lukashovka OP'Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Habarovskij kraj, Russian FederationCORNot Available2001COLLECTEDFrom roadside stand, pears grown in town Maly Klyuch Road side stand Latitude 44 27.993, Longitude 132 41.25344.51667000, 132.06667000115Cultivated material1631153PI 637994
319PI 637995'Primorski Sour OP'Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Habarovskij kraj, Russian FederationCORNot Available2001COLLECTEDFrom roadside stand, pears grown in town Maly Klyuch Road side stand Latitude 44 27.993, Longitude 132 41.25344.53306000, 132.06667000115Cultivated material1631154PI 637995
320PI 688114HVSC-060Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Habarovskij kraj, Russian FederationCORNot Available2001COLLECTED48.46583000, 135.0863900075and a medium drainage. and a medium drainage.Wild material1631151PI 688114
321PI 688129HVSC-003Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Habarovskij kraj, Russian FederationCORNot Available2001COLLECTED08/09/2001Public market in Ussurisk, Primorye, Russian Federation.46.55667000, 134.26861000Uncertain improvement status1631149PI 688129
322PI 688147'HVSC 53'Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Habarovskij kraj, Russian FederationCORImageNot Available2001COLLECTED2001Pear1= Camp 1547.42083000, 134.5641700070Uncertain improvement status1635349PI 688147
323PI 641282Comtesse de ParisPyrus communis L. FranceCORImageNot Available2001DEVELOPEDCultivarOriginated at Geest, Saint Renny, Belgium, sfrom seed sown by Van Mons. First reported in 1847. Fruit below medium in size and resembles Bartlett in form. Skin greenish-yellow with some green dots, reasonably smooth. Flesh yellowish in color, juicy, fairly fine. Sweet, aromatic, pleasing flavor. Early midseason. Tree moderately vigorous, with some susceptibility to blight. - H. Hartman, 19571613701PI 641282
324PI 665811'Green Horse'Pyrus communis L. United KingdomCORNot Available2001DONATEDCultivarGreen Horse is a large tree of characteristic stiff appearance. The crotches are narrow-angled and the numerous large, heavy,upright limbs terminate in small stiff branches. Its cropping is regular and fairly good. This variety is found scattered in orchards throughout north and north-west Gloucestershire.

Fruit is usually oblate, sometimes slightly turbinate, 36-61 mm. long, 45-60 mm. diameter. Stem 14-44 mm. Stem basin usually small, narrow, fairly deep, sometimes absent. Eye basin often well defined. Calyx usually upright; sepals jointed, sometimes free, sometimes fleshy at base, often pubescent; stamens attached at base of sepals. Skin green or yellowish gren, sometimes with a slight orange flush; russet around stem, more around eye, spreading to cheek; lenticels usually almost white, often conspicuous on russet; scab often present. Core generally with an axial sac, sometimes well defined, sometimes filled; seeds black. Flesh with a ring of stone cells around the core.

Leaf stalk 25-50 mm. Blade 43-60 mm. long, 35-54 mm. wide; elliptical; tip obtuse, rarely acuminate; base cordate, occasionally rounded inclined to cordate; marginal serrations strongly pronounced.

Harvest 2nd to 4th week of October. Milling up to three weeks after harvest. Juice analysis - specific gravity 1050, acidity 0.75, tannin 0.11. Vintage quality good, high in acid, low in tannin.

-- Luckwill and Pollard, Perry Pears, 1963.

1614195PI 665811
325PI 665812'Moorcroft'Pyrus communis L. United KingdomCORNot Available2001DONATEDCultivarMoorcroft Pear - Synonyms: Choke Pear, Chokers, Malvern Hill Pear, Malvern Hills, Malvern Pear, Stinking Bishop. Believed to have originated at Moorcroft Farm, Colwall where Hogg and Bull found `many trees of a considerable age?. First record 1884. Widely planted throughout the main perry producing districts and beyond. Tree: May be very large with few long upright limbs. Rounded head and has the appearance and proportions of a grand oak when growing on good soil. Its bark has distinctive deep vertical striations.

Jean Nowell and Kevin Minchew (2010) report that this variety makes a fragrant perry. In the late 1800s Percy Bishop lived at Moorcroft Farm and due to his riotous living earned himself the nickname 'Stinking Bishop'. Hence this name became synonymous with this variety. Andy Shayle of Ashleworth distinguishes between Moorcroft and Malvern Hills Pears, the latter is a later version and has the same characteristic deeply striated bark. Similarly Bill Gooch differentiated between the Moorcroft and Malvern Hills Pears.

Many people have remarked that fine quality Moorcroft perry can be deceptively strong. The symptoms seem to be of feeling quite normal until trying to stand when the legs just won?t work, necessitating a journey home by wheelbarrow. The perry got nicknamed 'Wheelbarrow perry'. -- C. Martell. 2010. Pears of Gloucestershire.

1614196PI 665812
326PI 688158 Q'Beth'Pyrus communis L. England, United KingdomCORNot Available2001DEVELOPED1974CultivarRaised in 1938 by H.M. Tydeman at East Malling Research Statein (H.R.I. East Malling) from Beurre Superfin x Williams Bon Chretien. Recommended for relaease in 1969 and named in 1974. Compact, reliable and heavy cropping. Fruit small to medium, pale green becoming yellow with faint blush. -- Arbury 1997.

Beth (EM-18) - Orig. at East Malling Research Station, Kent, England; Bred by H.M. Tydeman in 1938 and released by F.H. Alston and M.S. Parry in 1978. Plant Variety Rights Grant Number 993, jointly owned with the National Seed Development Organization. Cross of Beurre Superfin x Bartlett. Fruit: small (50-55 mm), variable, round-ovate, yellow, with smooth tan russet at stem-end and lenticels; Thick, short, oblique stem; excellent flavor, white juicy flesh, no grit; harvest maturity one week before Bartlett, but with extended harvest period of 2 weeks, little shriveling or core breakdown. Tree: moderately vigorous, upright, and precocious; yields similar to Bartlett; blooms with Bartlett; pollen compatible with Conference and Comice. Graft-compatible with quince rootstocks. Susceptible to fireblight, but does not produce secondary bloom. Recommended for home orchards, pick-your-own or direct marketing enterprises, or as a supplemental pollinator for commercial orchards.

1614197PI 688158 Q
327PI 688130HLJ 33Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. & Rupr. Heilongjiang Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available2001COLLECTED09/02/1993Ping Shan45.33306000, 127.400000003707 meters in heightWild material1636897PI 688130
328PI 637992'A20'Pyrus communis L. United KingdomCORNot Available2001DEVELOPEDNEAR 1965CultivarIndicator clone for pear bark disorders. Originated in the 1960's at Long Ashton, England. It is a Perry Pear seedling selelcted for producing good symptoms to Pear Vein Yellows and Ring Pattern Mosaic Virus. In 1969, in France, it was found to be a good indicator for Pear blister canker viroid.1612429PI 637992
329PI 665810'Jarve Seemik'Pyrus communis L. EstoniaCORImageNot Available2001DONATEDCultivar1614120PI 665810
330PI 704956 Q'INA - ESTIVAL'Pyrus sp. RomaniaCORNot Available2001DONATEDCultivarOriginally received 1/16/2001 but not assigned PI or Local. New scion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.1614106PI 704956 Q
331PI 704960 Q'Monica'Pyrus sp. RomaniaCORNot Available2001DONATEDCultivarOriginally received 01/16/2001 but not assigned PI or Local. New scion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.1614108PI 704960 Q
332PI 665809India IC-20814Pyrus pashia Buch.-Ham. ex D. Don IndiaCORNot Available2001DONATEDBreeding material1614096PI 665809
333PI 688113India NIC-20813Pyrus communis L. IndiaCORNot Available2001DONATEDBreeding material1614103PI 688113
334PI 688128India IC-22040Pyrus sp. IndiaCORNot Available2001DONATEDBreeding material1614094PI 688128
335PI 688146India IC-20821Pyrus communis L. IndiaCORFRUITNot Available2001DONATEDBreeding material1614100PI 688146
336PI 691239IC 20818Pyrus hybr. IndiaCORNot Available2001DONATEDBreeding material1614104PI 691239
337PI 691240India IC-20804APyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai IndiaCORNot Available2001DONATEDBreeding material1614105PI 691240
338PI 693211India IC-19392BPyrus communis L. IndiaCORNot Available2001DONATEDBreeding material1614101PI 693211
339PI 64128161-920Pyrus syriaca Boiss. IsraelCORImageNot Available2000COLLECTEDZur Hadassa31.71500000, 35.096000000Wild materialCollected in the wild as seed in Zur Hadassa, Israel on 10 June,1998, as part of an emergency seed collection project in the face of rapid urban development, and stored at the Israeli Gene Bank for Agricultural Crops, Bet Dagen, Israel. Seed samples were requested for the National Plant Germplasm System in June, 2000 and were sent to the USDA Plant Exchange Office in July 2000 to be forwarded to appropriate repositories. We received 3 seeds. All seeds were planted in September, 2000 and provided with 40 days of cold stratification. One seed germinated and is established as a tree at the Corvallis, Oregon Repository.1612428PI 641281
340PI 617686DearbornPyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORImageNot Available2000COLLECTED1980Located to the northeast of the intersection of Interstate 5 and U. S. Highway 22, Salem, Oregon44.91509000, -122.98605000100Cultivated materialTraffic whirls past the historic Hager Grove pear tree in Salem without a clue to the stories buried in the rings of its 150-plus-year-old trunk. The fact that it even stands is a miracle, at least in the mind of Maynard C. Drawson, tree lover, history buff and member of the Oregon Heritage Tree Committee. 'It had no right to remain any more than the others.' he says of the tree that flourished in the fertile valley before freeways, Home Depots and traffic lights took over. The orchard, planted by Benjamin Franklin Munkre in the mid-1800s, bordered a park and campground, where earlier in this century Salem families congregated for all sorts of social events. 'It used to be a big deal to have Sunday school gatherings, baptisms and picnics here,' recalls Drawson. 'There used to be a covered bridge right upstream,' he adds a bit wistfully. The Hager Grove pear 'is the biggest pear tree in the state of Oregon' says Drawson, who also lists it as the oldest. 'It's so healthy and so big, people think it's an oak.' --The Oregonian Newspaper, Homes and Gardens section, 14 October 1999.

Of the pear cultivars available in the mid 1800's when the Hager Grove pear was planted, the early ripening season, small fruit size and shape suggest that this may be 'Dearborn' (also known as Dearborn's Seedling). Other small and early ripening pears available at the time include 'Bloodgood', 'Tyson', and 'Rostiezer', however only 'Dearborn' has a shape that matches that of the Hager Grove Pear. All 4 of these summer pears were offered by local Oregon nurseries in the mid 1800s (jp 05-2015).

Once a favorite, Dearborn is now nearly lost to cultivation, and few or no nurserymen grow the trees. It is too good a variety to be lost, however, because of splendid fruit- and tree-characters. The fruits ripen early and are of good quality, though hardly as richly flavored as those of Elizabeth which ripen at the same time. Unfortunately the pears run small, but they are attractive in shape and color. In season, the crop succeeds that of Bloodgood and precedes that of Bartlett. The trees are almost flawless, and therefore are well adapted to home orchards where fruits cannot receive the care of skilled hands. Besides being almost free from blight, the trees are hardy, vigorous, and very productive. The variety has many valuable qualities for a summer pear in home orchards.
This pear was found growing in a border of shrubs in 1818 at Brinley Place, Roxbury, Massachusetts, the home of General H. A. S. Dearborn, first president of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society. In 1831, General Dearborn first exhibited fruit of the variety at the Massachusetts Horticultural Society where it was named Dearborn's Seedling in honor of the originator. This variety should not be confused with a pear raised by Van Mons of Belgium and named by him Dearborn. The Dearborn of Van Mons is larger and ripens later than the American Dearborn, and was long since taken from lists of pears recommended for cultivation in America. Dearborn was included in the American Pomological Society's first fruit catalog in 1848, where it was called Dearborn's Seedling. In 1883, the Society shortened the name to Dearborn. Since 1891, the name has failed to appear in the catalogs of this Society. -- U.P. Hedrick, 1921, The Pears of New York.

1600709PI 617686
341PI 688159'Onondaga'Pyrus communis L. Connecticut, United StatesCORImageNot Available2000DEVELOPEDNEAR 1790CultivarSome seventy or eighty years ago this pear was widely introduced under the names Onondaga and Swan's Orange, and for a generation and more was much grown in eastern pear regions. It has now practically passed from cultivation in commercial orchards, but is still to be found in collections and home plantings. The fruits are large, handsome, and of very good quality, resembling those of Bartlett in flavor and with even better flesh-characters. The trees are vigorous, hardy, fruitful almost ideal in every character but one. The tree is so susceptible to blight that the variety can never have commercial value in American orchards. Whether or not it is worth planting in home orchards depends upon the planter's willingness to suffer loss from blight.

It seems impossible to trace this variety to its ultimate source. We know, however, that Henry Case, Liverpool, New York, cut a graft during the winter of 1806 from a tree growing on land of a Mr. Curtiss at Farmington, Connecticut. In the spring of the same year, Mr. Case grafted this cion into a tree about three miles west of Onondaga Hill, New York, and in 1808 moved the tree to Liverpool where it grew and bore fruit. Many grafts were taken from this tree before it died in 1823. Up to this time, the variety appears to have received no name nor had it been generally disseminated. We hear nothing further of it until about 1840 when it was brought to notice by a Mr. Swan of Onondaga Hollow, who exhibited specimens of the variety in Rochester. Ellwanger and Barry were so impressed with the fruit that they secured cions and propagated it under the name Swan's Orange which they changed later to Onondaga. Onondaga was given a place in the American Pomological Society's fruit-catalog in 1858.

Tree medium in size, vigorous, spreading, open-topped, very productive; branches zigzag, reddish-brown, overspread with thin gray scarf-skin, marked with many large lenticels; branchlets slender, short, light brown, tinged with green and lightly streaked with ash-gray scarf-skin, dull, smooth, the new growth slightly pubescent, with small, raised, pinkish lenticels. Leaf-buds small, short, sharply pointed, plump, free. Leaves 3-1/16 in. long, 1-1/4 in. wide, narrow, oval, stiff, leathery; apex taper-pointed; margin coarsely but shallowly serrate, tipped with many reddish glands; petiole 1-7/8 in. long, light green mingled with red; stipules often lacking but when present very small, pale green. Flower-buds small, short, conical, plump, free, arranged singly on very short spurs; blossoms 1-1/8 in. across, in dense clusters, 7 to 8 buds in a cluster; pedicels pubescent, greenish. Fruit ripe in early October; above medium to large, 3-3/4 in. long, 2-1/2 in. wide, ovate or obovate-obtuse-pyriform, symmetrical, with unequal sides; stem 5/8 in. long, thick, curved; cavity a slight depression, with a fleshy enlargement at one side of the stem; calyx closed; lobes narrow, acute; basin narrow, obtuse, furrowed, uneven; skin granular, tender, smooth, dull; color pale yellow, with few lines of russet and with many russet spots; dots numerous, small, russet, conspicuous; flesh yellowish, granular both near the skin and at the center, melting, buttery, very juicy, aromatic, with a sweet, rich, vinous flavor; quality very good. Core large, closed, with clasping core-lines; calyx-tube long, conical; seeds narrow, long, acute. -- U.P.Hedrick. 1921.The Pears of New York.

1631359PI 688159
342PI 617683Mission San Juan Bautista PearPyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORImageNot Available2000DONATED03/16/2000Cultivated materialAre they Spanish? Hard to say, but I suspect the times militate against it being so. Safer to say they are Mexican, for California was Mexican after 1820, and I am being conservative in assigning times to these trees. They may have been chance hybrids from Baja, or even brought up from Sinaloa or Chihuahua. There are still two very large old trees from about 1820 at Fort Ross on the coast. The Russians almost certainly obtained them from Monterey or San Francisco, and possibly as seeds rather than scions. Someone I questioned about them had tried to identify them 20 or so years ago, but with no success. Those I just sent are all from single trunks, not multiples or basal shoots. I think the usual European practice was to graft the onto Quince stock (Cydonia) and there is no sign of any quinces around, although there is one at the Indians resort, 15 miles from Mission San Antonio where I got some mission grape cuttings and mission fig cuttings. We just call them Mission Figs if they are smallish and black. The quince at the Indians is atypical in that the trunks exhibit none of the verrucose usually found on Cydonia. I do hope it will be possible to ran some genetic tests on these after they have fruited and you have a better handle on identifying the varieties. Thanks for your good work. There are still 4 trees at Monterey left from the mission orchard, and as the property has changed hands, I may be able to get cuttings next year. Tom Brown 03/18/2000.1600203PI 617683
343PI 617684Dunn Adobe PearPyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORNot Available2000DONATED03/16/2000Cultivated materialDunn Adobe is between King City and Jolon, on the Jolon Road, a couple of miles below the Jolon Grade. Are they Spanish? Hard to say, but I suspect the times militate against it being so. Safer to say they are Mexican, for California was Mexican after 1820, and I am being conservative in assigning times to these trees. They may have been chance hybrids from Baja, or even brought up from Sinaloa or Chihuahua. There are still two very large old trees from about 1820 at Fort Ross on the coast. The Russians almost certainly obtained them from Monterey or San Francisco, and possibly as seeds rather than scions. Someone I questioned about them had tried to identify them 20 or so years ago, but with no success. Those I just sent are all from single trunks, not multiples or basal shoots. There are still 4 trees at Monterey left from the mission orchard. -- Tom Brown, 03/18/2000.1600204PI 617684
344PI 617685Pyrus communis 'Albany 238'Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available2000COLLECTEDThe tree is directly west of the sign for exit 230 (the first Jefferson exit, just north of Albany) on Interstate 5. Near mile post 238.44.65806000, -123.05917000100Roadside with grass.Breeding materialLon Rombough describes it as a very sweet, honey flavored pear with almost the shape of a Bartlett. This pear would be excellent for juice. The texture needs to be improved to compete with present cultivars but this pear would be good for breeding material.1600597PI 617685
345PI 637991Jilin Market 99015Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Jilin Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available1999COLLECTED1999Seed collected from fruit purchased at market in Antu, Jilin, China.43.11667000, 128.91667000Cultivated material1585953PI 637991
346PI 617681'Fox 11'Pyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. Emilia-Romagna, ItalyCORNot Available1999DEVELOPED1998CultivarPyrus communis rootstock developed in Bologna, Italy, by Professor Marangoni. Medium-high vigour and good anchorage. Suitable for alkaline soils.1584971PI 617681
347PI 617682'Fox 16'Pyrus communis L. Emilia-Romagna, ItalyCORNot Available1999DEVELOPEDCultivarPyrus communis rootstock developed in Bologna, Italy, by Professor Marangoni. Medium-high vigour and good anchorage. Suitable for alkaline soils.1584972PI 617682
348PI 617679'Pyrodwarf 2'Pyrus communis L. GermanyCORNot Available1999DEVELOPED1980CultivarRootstock selection1579743PI 617679
349PI 617680QR 708-2Pyrus communis L. England, United KingdomCORFRUITNot Available1999DEVELOPED1998Cultivar1579747PI 617680
350PI 688093'Pyriam'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORFRUITNot Available1999DEVELOPEDCultivar1579744PI 688093
351PI 688099QR 708-36Pyrus communis L. England, United KingdomCORNot Available1999DEVELOPED1998Cultivar1579749PI 688099
352PI 688112Lee NJ4Pyrus communis L. FranceCORFRUITNot Available1999DEVELOPEDCultivar1579745PI 688112
353PI 688125QR 708-12Pyrus communis L. England, United KingdomCORNot Available1999DEVELOPED1998Cultivar1579748PI 688125
354PI 68818796.F1.14Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available1999DEVELOPEDCultivar1579746PI 688187
355PI 654956Domestic pear hybrid from OrelPyrus hybr.Orel, Russian FederationCORFIELDNot Available1999DEVELOPED52.97000000, 36.08000000Cultivar1580597PI 654956
356PI 693205India pear selectionPyrus communis L. IndiaCORNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580570PI 693205
357PI 665804'Hyrs-Dere 84-1'Pyrus sp. TurkmenistanCORImageNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580506PI 665804
358PI 691242 Q'Utrennaya Svezheste'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Russian FederationCORImageNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580790PI 691242 Q
359PI 704955 Q'Bronzovaya'Pyrus sp. Russian FederationCORNot Available1999DONATEDCultivarOriginally received 3/26/1999 but not assigned PI or Local. New scion received 3/31/2023 and grafted on OHxF 87 rootstock.1580789PI 704955 Q
360PI 617673'Bou Tsu Li'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai ChinaCORFRUITNot Available1999DEVELOPEDCultivated material1574249PI 617673
361PI 617674'Ooharabeni'Pyrus sp.Ibaraki, JapanCORFRUITNot Available1999DEVELOPEDCultivated materialOriginated at the National Institute of Fruit Tree Science, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan. Thought to be derived from 'Okusankichi' x 'Max Red Bartlett' but DNA microsatelite analysis in Japan suggests that 'Okusankichi' is not a parent. -- T. Saito, 2004.1574250PI 617674
362PI 617675'Buerre Six'Pyrus communis L. BelgiumCORImageNot Available1999DEVELOPED1845Cultivated materialRather curious that this fine pear, raised 60 years ago, is yet so little appreciated in this country. As a December fruit to follow Comice there is nothing better and it has advantage over Glou Morceau, ripening at the same season, in doing excellently in the open. On cordons here on a sandy loam fruits are annually produced of the very finest quality. Shape distinct, quite pyriform but tapering very sharply to the stem and eye making the shape resemble an ace of diamonds. Colour quite green even when ripe, the usual yellow change being hardly perceptible. The flesh is most deliciously melting, quite as much as Doyenne du Comice and the flavour very good indeed. Raised in 1845 by M. Six, a gardener at Courtrai and first described by Bivort in Annales de Pomologie Vol. III, fig. 53, and also by Decaisne, in Jardin Fruitier, Vol VI, plate 23 under name Six.Growth rather slow in first few years but it makes a good pyramid when established and can be very confidently recommended to all lovers of good pears. -- Edward A. Bunyard, Fruit Notes. Journal Pomol. I:2:140-143, 1919.

Beurre Six was raised from seed about 1845 by a gardener named Six at Courtrai in Belgium. Fruit large, pyriform, smooth, pea-green changing to yellow; flesh greenish-white, fine, melting, firm, buttery, very juicy; first; Oct. to Dec. -- U.P. Hedrick, The Pears of New York, 1921

Scionwood of Beurre Six was received at USDA Bureau of Plant Industry from Lepage et Cie., Angers, France on 13 March, 1939 and assigned PI 131842. This may be the same clone. -- USDA Plant Inventory Number 138.

1574251PI 617675
363PI 617676'Osenniaja Jakovleva'Pyrus communis L. Russian FederationCORNot Available1999DEVELOPEDCultivated material1574252PI 617676
364PI 617678'Dan Bae'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Korea, SouthCORFRUITNot Available1999DEVELOPED1969CultivarDanbae ( Arirang (Trade Mark - Moon), Korean Giant, Olympic (Fowler) (PI 541962). --A large, late season, russet skin pear from Korea. Origin: Chojuro x Cheongsilri, released in 1969 by Nationl Institute of Horticultural and Herbal Science, South Korea. Fruit: large; skin completely brown russeted; flesh crisp, juicy, sweet, insipid; ripe late, about 2 weeks after Ya Li; may show internal problems when stored immediately at 0 C. Tree: Medium cold hardiness, suffers occasional winter injury in Hood River, Oregon. The Korean name Danbae means 'sweet pear' (bae = pear); 'Arirang' is a trademark name used by nurseryman H.S. Moon of Oroville, Washington. Marketed by Fowler Nurseries, Necastle, California as 'Olympic'.1575470PI 617678
365PI 617677'Yungen'Pyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1999DEVELOPEDCultivar1574253PI 617677
366PI 657915'Elliot'Pyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1999DEVELOPED1978CultivarElliot (CPYR 2624).-Originated at University of California, Davis, by Kay Ryugo; released in 1988. Elliot #4 x Vermont Beauty; cross made in 1964. Plant patent 6452; 6 Dec. 1988. Fruit: 50 to 60 mm in diam.; shape pyriform to conical, similar to Comice; skin yellow-green, 50% russeted. Buttery texture; flavor similar to Bosc; soluble solids to 18%. Ripens 2 to 4 weeks after Bartlett; stores 16 weeks at 0 C. Tree: upright habit; no fire blight during 20 years of observation, apparently resistant. -- Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties.

Elliot is resistant, but not immune, to fire blight. Fruit has the shape and coloration similar to 'Doyenne du Comice' and 'Tyson' . Origin: 'Elliot' is a hybrid between 'Vermont Beauty' and 'Elliot #4'. 'Elliot #4' was discovered in the 1930s by H.E. Thomas, Plant Pathologist, Dept. of Plant Pathology, Univ. of California at Berkeley on the Elliot Ranch, located in the Sacramento River Delta district. It arose as a sucker from a rootstock of an old 'Bartlett' tree. Because rootstocks of such old trees were derived from seeds imported from France before World War 1, the stock was probably a seedling of Pyrus communis. Thomas inoculated branches of 'Elliot #4' with bacterial suspensions of E. amylovora, but the bacteria did not spread. Crosses of 'Elliot #4' x 'Vermont Beauty' and 'Bartlett' x 'Elliot #4' were made in 1964 on the Univ. of California, Davis campus. No effort was made to control fire blight. Evaluations made in 1977 and 1978 revealed that several offspring from the 'Elliot #4' x 'Vermont Beauty' did not become infected, although they had not been sprayed with an antibiotic during the 20 years of observation. Other seedlings from the same cross became diseased to varying degrees (Ryugo, 1982). All offspring of 'Bartlett' x 'Elliot #4' exhibited light to severe symptoms of fire blight in 1977 or 1978 and were discarded. 'Elliot' fruit matures 2 to 4 weeks after 'Bartlett' and stores well up to 4 months at 0 C and 80% RH. Fruit has a buttery texture and a flavor like 'Beurre Bosc'. The rich-bodied juice will attain a soluble solids content of 18%. Harvest size ranges from 50 to 60 mm in diameter; shape varies from pyriform to conical. Skin is yellowish green; surface color is brownish yellow, with 50% russet, similar to 'Beurre Bosc'. Fruits exposed to the sun develop a red blush that tends to fade as the fruit matures. Untested for winter hardiness, but, because 'Vermont Beauty' is cold-hardy, 'Elliot' is expected to be equally cold-tolerant. Blooms with Bartlett. Will cross-pollinate with 'Winter Nelis'. The pedicels are thin, so that in windy areas, the weight of the fruit may cause them to break, resulting in a preharvest drop. Leaf shapes vary from ovate to elliptical. No evidence of biennial bearing. -- Acta Hort. 124:33-36.

1578791PI 657915
367PI 657916'Daisui Li'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai California, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1999DEVELOPED08/07/1987CultivarDaisui Li (12-44) - A large, smooth skinned, pyriform shaped Asian pear developed in California. Orig. at UC Davis, by Ben Iwakiri and evaluated as selection '12-44' near Winters, California. Plant Patent 6075 issued in 1988 to the University of California. A cross between the Japanese cultivar Kikusui and the Chinese cultivar Tse Li (Tsu Li). Fruit: large to very large, obovate to globular, more pear-shaped than most Asian cultivars, including sister cultivar Shin Li. Smooth thick skin is light green at maturity. Flesh: white, firm, coarse, crisp, juicy, sweet and subacid. Ripe early September in Davis, California. Distinct aroma similar to Tse Li. Fruit stores 5-6 months at 0 C. Tree: large, upright to slightly spreading, open, hardy, more vigorous than other Asian cultivars. Leaves: large, wide and leathery. Blooms with Chojuro and Kikusui, slightly later than Ya Li and Tse Li, earlier than Bartlett. Resistant to fire blight.1578792PI 657916
368PI 654957'Severyanka Kzasroshokaya'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available1999Cultivar1580602PI 654957
369PI 665808'Pamyati Yakoleva'Pyrus sp.CORImageNot Available1999Cultivar1580599PI 665808
370PI 691241'Osenniaja Jakovleva'Pyrus communis L. CORNot Available1999Cultivar1580601PI 691241
371PI 665806P. communis - IndiaPyrus communis L. IndiaCORNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580569PI 665806
372PI 665807India NIC-20814Pyrus communis L. IndiaCORNot Available1999DONATEDBreeding material1580577PI 665807
373PI 691238India NIC-20813Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai IndiaCORBARKNot Available1999DONATEDBreeding material1580581PI 691238
374PI 693206 QIndia NIC-19390Pyrus communis L. IndiaCORNot Available1999DONATEDBreeding materialSecond acquisition 03.20251580573PI 693206 Q
375PI 693207 QIndia NIC-20808Pyrus communis L. IndiaCORNot Available1999DONATEDBreeding material1580576PI 693207 Q
376PI 693212India NIC-19388Pyrus communis L. IndiaCORNot Available1999DONATEDBreeding material1580571PI 693212
377PI 696619 QIndia NIC-20822Pyrus communis L. IndiaCORNot Available1999DONATEDBreeding materialduplicate of Bartlett based on SNP data (Montanari et al. 2020)1580580PI 696619 Q
378PI 654952'P. communis from Gorelde'Pyrus communis L. TurkmenistanCORImageNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580501PI 654952
379PI 654953'P. communis sample No.27'Pyrus sp. TurkmenistanCORImageNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580503PI 654953
380PI 654954'Karadede 86-3'Pyrus sp. TurkmenistanCORNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580510PI 654954
381PI 654955Karadede 86-3Pyrus communis L. TurkmenistanCORFRUITNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580511PI 654955
382PI 654961'Tara Mrut'Pyrus sp. TurkmenistanCORNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580496PI 654961
383PI 665802'Shakarok'Pyrus communis L. TurkmenistanCORNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580498PI 665802
384PI 665803Vanovskaya 84-2Pyrus hybr. TurkmenistanCORNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580505PI 665803
385PI 665805Birleshik 84-2Pyrus sp. TurkmenistanCORImageNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580509PI 665805
386PI 68812619645Pyrus communis L. TurkmenistanCORNot Available1999DONATEDBreeding material1580502PI 688126
387PI 688145'Sholve'Pyrus sp. TurkmenistanCORNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580499PI 688145
388PI 691237'Marut'Pyrus sp. TurkmenistanCORNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580500PI 691237
389PI 693204'Birleshik 84-1'Pyrus communis L. TurkmenistanCORNot Available1999DONATEDCultivar1580508PI 693204
390PI 617657'Higdon'Pyrus sp.Texas, United StatesCORNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999Cultivar'Higdon' and 'Quave' are pears supplied by Mr.Lee Sharp of Ocean Springs, Mississippi. They were obtained from Mrs. Jake Quave (now long deceased, and the tree bulldozed) and Mr. Paul Higdon (still living and with his tree). They were propagated many years ago by a now defunct nursery in the local area. Mr. Sharp likes the size and quality; mine have set pears already this season with a very low chill winter. They appear to be fireblight-resistant. Ethan Natelson, March 14,1999.1574233PI 617657
391PI 617658'Fan-Stil'Pyrus sp.Texas, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1999DEVELOPEDCultivar Cuttings of a fireblight resistant tree in Mexico were collected by a Dr.Stills in the early 1960's. Eddie Fanick developed clones on various rootstock and selected one that was named 'Fanstill'. As told by M. Fanick, grandson of E. Fanick, March 8, 1999. Another source claims that Fan-Stil came from Mexico about 1900 and was named and marketed by the Fannick's nursery, but not developed by them. - Ethan Natelson, March 23,1999.1574234PI 617658
392PI 617659'Broussard'Pyrus hybr.Louisiana, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1999DEVELOPEDPRE 1980Cultivar'Broussard' was found in Mr. Olton Broussard's yard in Delacambre, LA. It is a round Asian, very productive. The original tree is 20-30 years old. It is not as low chill as Ya Li, for example, but does work here. -- Ethan Natelson, March 23,1999.

Mr. Olton Broussard grew this pear south of the town of Delcambre, Louisiana. He had owned a fruit tree sales outlet locall, and received this pear in a shipment from a fruit nursery in Mineral Wells, Texas. The tag on the tree he received only had the words "Oriental Pear". Fruit of the 'Broussard' pear has a distinctly deep calyx end, a long shelf-life in storage, and has more flavor than other Asian pears. -- from information posted by T. Callahan at http://tandeecal.com/page10.htm

1574235PI 617659
393PI 617660'Honey Dew'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999CultivarVaughn and Honey Dew came from Mr. Alfred Harper, from trees in Ocilla, Georgia. Some insist Vaughn is identical with a pear called Savannah. Vaughn is small and pyriform, only fair quality. Honey Dew is larger than Vaughn and of slightly better quality. Both are somewhat susceptible to fireblight. -- Ethan Natelson, March 14,1999.

Honey Dew originated by Mr. Raabe of Illinois and introduced by Stark Brothers in 1921. Fruit large, roundish, golden-yellow, almost covered with rich russet; flesh tender, crisp, very juicy, sweet; early fall. -- U.P. Hedrick, 1921.

1574236PI 617660
394PI 617661'Thanksgiving'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999CultivarThanksgiving is a very hard small to medium pear with a very unusual exterior red blush. It almost looks artificial, or painted. I think the pear is really inedible, except by deer. It was described in Pomona, I believe it is from Columbus, Georgia. -- Ethan Natelson, March 14, 1999.1574237PI 617661
395PI 617662'Oakhill'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999CultivarOakhill was a chance seedling find collected by Bill Adams, our Harris County Extension Agent in Houston. It came from Oakhill, Texas. It is pyriform, of medium size and is very low chill and of good quality. Bill believes it is a LeConte seedling. It does get fireblight, like its parent. Ethan Natelson, March 14, 1999.1574238PI 617662
396PI 617663'Shin Li'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Texas, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999CultivarShin Li (12-43) (PI 617663). A fine textured, slightly pear-shaped Asian pear developed in California. Orig. at UC Davis, by Ben Iwakiri and evaluated as selection 12-43 near Winters, California. Plant Patent 6076 issued in 1988 to the University of California. A cross between the Japanese cultivar Kikusui and the Chinese cultivar Tse Li (Tsu Li). Fruit: medium to large, round-oblate, slightly flatter than Daisui Li. Skin is thick, smooth, light green to yellow-green at maturity. Flesh is firm, tender, crisp, juicy and sweet with finer texture than Daisui Li. Ripe early September in Davis, California. Stores 5-6 months at 0 C. Tree: vigorous, large to medium, upright to slightly spreading, open, and hardy. Leaves: large, wide and leathery. Blooms early, with Chojuro and slightly later than Ya Li and Tse Li. Fruit must be thinned. Resistant to fire blight. -- Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties.1574239PI 617663
397PI 617664'Henderson'Pyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Texas, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999Cultivar'Henderson' is a contribution of Mr. Hartwell Cook of Hattiesburg, Mississippi. He found it in his area. It very closely resembles Housi but is larger and seems to have a thicker skin. It is of good quality. Ethan Natelson, March 14, 1999. Could this be the same as 'Henderson Special' an open pollinated seedling of Bartlett which was introduced by E.M. Henderson, Henderson's Nursery, Athens Texas, in 1927? See Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties.1574240PI 617664
398PI 617665'Rising Star'Pyrus communis L. Texas, United StatesCORImageNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999Cultivar'Rising Star' was found as a chance seedling by the late John Lipe, the Extension Agent for Fredricksburg, Texas. It was found in a town called Rising Star (population, 859). It is a large pear, rather ugly, but of good quality. Ethan Natelson, March 14, 1999.1574241PI 617665
399PI 617666'Florida 58-45'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999Cultivar'Florida 58-25' came from the breeding program of Wayne Sherman, in Gainesville, Florida. He never released it. It is a large pear of very good quality. Almost totally russeted, like Bosc and pyriform. Seems fairly blight-resistant here (Houston, TX). Ethan Natelson, March 14, 1999.1574242PI 617666
400PI 617667'Vaughn'Pyrus communis L. Texas, United StatesCORNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999Cultivar'Vaughn' and 'Honey Dew' came from Mr. Alfred Harper, from trees in Ocilla, Georgia. Some insist Vaughn is identical with a pear called Savannah. Vaughn is small and pyriform, only fair quality. 'Honey Dew' is larger than 'Vaughn' and of slightly better quality. Both are somewhat susceptible to fireblight. -- Ethan Natelson, March 14, 1999.1574243PI 617667
401PI 617668'Emancipation'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999Cultivar'Emancipation' is a chance seedling found adjacent to Emancipation Park, a run-down, tire strewn area in a very poor neighborhood in Houston. It is a large pear, and the tree must be at least 30-40 years old. Seems blight-resistant. Has a vigorous growth pattern. Ethan Natelson, March 14, 1999.1574244PI 617668
402PI 617669'Baldwin'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORImageNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999CultivarBaldwin. Its origin is unknown. The variety has medium to large (220-240g) oblong fruit. Fruit are attractive, having a light-green skin color overlaid with a light russet. Baldwin is buttery textured with few stone cells and a mild pear flavor when eaten fresh or processed. Fruit ripens in late August and into September. Trees are moderatly resistant to fire blight but are not recommended because of high susceptibility to leaf spot. -- Low Chilling Pears by W.B. Sherman and T.E. Crocker, Fruit Crops Dept.,Univ. of Flordia.

Tom Van Der Zwet mentions Baldwin in his book on fire blight as being known before 1920. It and Hood have been widely grown in Texas as low-chill pears for many years. Baldwin is said to have as little as a 150 chill hours requirement. It is a large pear, very productive and not bad if it is fully ripened to soften it a bit. It also has been called the 'Yankee Pear' in the South. -- Ethan Natelson, March 23,1999.

Baldwin. Origin unknown, presumed to have originated in Baldwin County, Alabama. Fruit size medium, oval to obovate, pyriform, occasionally diamond shaped, obscure neck. Skin greenish-yellow, dull, roughened skin, somewhat similar to Kieffer. Flesh yellow, soft, juicy, tender, subacid; stone cells at core, not objectionable. Flavor fair to good. Harvest first week in October. Keeping quality relatively short for an Oriental type. Appears to be an Oriental hybrid with flavor somewhat superior to most varieties of similar inheritance. Reported outstandingly blight resistant and very productive in Georgia. -- F.S. Howlett, Ohio Ag. Experiment Station, 1957.

1574245PI 617669
403PI 617670'Pope'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999Cultivar'Pope' has taken a long journey. My scions came from Mr. Nick Botner of Yoncalla, OR. He claims his material came from George Washington's home at Mt. Vernon and that this is an heirloom pear. Perhaps you have it under a French or Italian name, but Mr. Botner claims it has always been know as 'Pope'. -- Ethan Natelson, March 23,1999.

Ragan (Nomenclature of the Pear, 1908) lists 'Pope' as a synonym for 'Bonners'. He also distinguishes it from 'Pope's Quaker', 'Pope's Russet' and 'Pope's Scarlet Major' which are distinct cultivars. Hedrick (Pears of New York) does not list 'Pope' in the index, but in his description of 'Bonners' that follows he lists 'Pope' as a synonym: 'Originated in Hancock County, Ga., and was known in 1869 in Washington County of that state, as the Pope pear. Fruit has a peculiar almond flavor; very good; Sept.' Hedrick cites the American Pomological Society Reports from 1869 and 1873 and he uses an accent mark over the 'e' in 'Pope'. -- J. Postman, April 16,1999.

1574246PI 617670
404PI 617671'Bartlett - Brown's'Pyrus communis L. Texas, United StatesCORNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999CultivarFrom Mr. Hartwell Cook of Hattiesburg, Miss., a local seedling which I think is only of fair quality, but it is low chill. Ethan Natelson, March 14, 1999.1574247PI 617671
405PI 617672'Quave'Pyrus hybr.Texas, United StatesCORNot Available1999DONATED01/06/1999Cultivar'Higdon' and 'Quave' are pears supplied by Mr.Lee Sharp of Ocean Springs, Mississippi. They were obtained from Mrs. Jake Quave, who lived on the north edge of Biloxi Bay (now long deceased, and the tree bulldozed) and Mr. Paul Higdon of Biloxi, Mississippi (still living and with his tree). They were propagated many years ago by a now defunct nursery in the local area. Mr. Sharp likes the size and quality; mine have set pears already this season with a very low chill winter. They appear to be fireblight-resistant. Ethan Natelson, March 14,1999.1574248PI 617672
406PI 657914P. communis var. pyrasterPyrus communis L. subsp. pyraster (L.) Ehrh. Baranya, HungaryCORNot Available1998COLLECTED10/03/1998Tenkes mountains, northwest of Mariagyud village.46.25000000, 18.31667000300South facing slopeWild material1574232PI 657914
407PI 617654'Pyrodwarf'Pyrus communis L. GermanyCORNot Available1998DEVELOPED1980CultivarRhenus 1 (Pyrodwarf ) (PI 617654) --A precocious, dwarfing rootstock from Germany. Origin: Cross of Old Home x Bonne Louise made by Helmut Jacob at Geisenheim, Germany in 1980. North American propagation rights assigned to Tree Connection, Dundee, Oregon. US Plant Patent 11,041 issued 24 August, 1999 to Helmut B. Jacob, Geisenheim, Germany. . Tree: Non-suckering, good compatibility, produces a tree intermediate to Quince A and Quince C, about 40% the size of a tree on pear seedling rootstock; moderate resistance to fire blight. Found to induce high yield efficiency with Bartlett scions, and to have good anchorage and winter cold hardiness in German trials. - Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties1556089PI 617654
408PI 641280'Ledbetter Pear'Pyrus sp.Alabama, United StatesCORNot Available1998DONATED02/17/1998CloneNorth American Pomona Vol. XXIII Winter 1990. Exploring The LEDBETTER PEAR, Finding a Genetic Goldmine. by D.N. Griffith, Dadeville, AL 36853. The Ledbetter pear first came to my attention about 1970 when I started showing my interest in pear varieties that would thrive in the southeastern U.S. and also produce an acceptable quality fruit. I had talked with Dr. Alexander Nunn of Loachapoka, AL about it. He had a bearing tree in his home orchard which he had purchased from a local nurseryman named Barringer. Dr. Nunn was very enthusiastic about it, for the tree is almost immune to fireblight and leaf spot, is a strong-growing, globe-shaped tree, is self-pruning, blooms rather late, and is a fairly regular producer. The fruit is medium to large size, round, with an even russett skin. Lopsided fruit is uncommon. In my opinion the flavor is good but not outstanding. The texture is too coarse for most markets, having stone cells that are large but soft, so that they crunch when chewed... The fruit ripens in mid-August in mid-Alabama, ready to be eaten fresh from the tree or to be cooked, canned, or made into Southern-style crunchy-chewy preserves. (A) Ledbetter sons had told me that 'Papa was sawmilling down at Crossroads, between 1900 and 1905 when he saw a thrifty little pear seedling where one of the workers had tossed a core the year before. He dug it up and brought it home in his lunch bucket and set it out in the edge of the garden, beside the road. 'It was about forty feet high, about sixty feet spread and more than 21/2 feet across the single trunk, with only a few dead limbs... I also noticed a smaller tree up the hill, closer to the house-site with a good crop of similar fruit. Since I was on my way to visit Dr. Nunn... (kepping) the two batches separate. After careful scrutiny, he decided that they were from different clones, and comparing them to fruit from his own tree, decided that Mr. Barringer had taken scions from the younger tree. From the viewpoint of the plant breeder, it seems highly important that we have the parent of a good variety,... for more good breeding work. My graft from the older tree has had some minor damage from fire-blight... Then in the early 1980's a... timber company (had) harvested all marketable timber and bulldozed off... both pear trees,... But that wasn't the end of it... the real Ledbetter tree was a half mile away on the Arthur Ledbetter place, still producing well in spite of losing nearly half of its limbs in a storm. Arthur's daughter, Willie Ruth, told me that she remembered that their tree had been dug up and brought there from under the big tree on the Reynolds place, and that it is, now approximately 65 years old. This establishes the relationship of the Ledbetter tree to the big one, but what about the smaller one nearer the house site? And since Arthur had no sons, who was the man who told me that 'Papa was sawmilling down at...'? These questions led me to visit Uncle Benny Ledbetter who is 84... I learned... that there had been a John Ledbetter who had owned and lived on the property, about the turn of the century, which was later sold to Virgil Reynolds. John had a son named Homer... With the great similarity between the real Ledbetter pear that Mr. Barringer propagated and the younger tree at the Virgil Reynolds/John Ledbetter place... In conclusion, it appears that the chance seedling that John Ledbetter brought home in his lunch bucket, near the turn of the century, has produced two offspring, and possibly more, that are locally esteemed and have great resistance to disease. These same genes are still available for breeding more pear varieties for the Southeast. early 1980's a...1556088PI 641280
409PI 688087Tianjin pearPyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai Yunnan Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available1997COLLECTED06/07/1990Collected 5/22/90 and 6/7/90 in Beijing and Guangzhou, Guangdong ProvinceCultivated materialSeeds from several fruits (0.25-1.0kg), yellow skin, pear-shaped, Flesh white, juicy and crunchy1028649PI 688087
410PI 688124Pear Virus CollectionPyrus sp.Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneUnpublished flow-cytometry results from October, 1997 confirm that tree PYR 1081.002 is triploid. -- J. Postman1548789PI 688124
411PI 692088Stony pit virusPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneStony pit PK-572098340PI 692088
412PI 692089Stony pit virus + Pear blister canker viroidPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneStony pit PH-59 + Pear blister canker viroid2098341PI 692089
413PI 692090Apple stem grooving in 20th CenturyPyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai var. pyrifolia Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneApple stem groving (Prosser 111-3) on 20th Century2098342PI 692090
414PI 692091Apple stem grooving (Prosser 111-2) on PackhamsPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneApple stem groving (Prosser 111-3) on Packhams2098343PI 692091
415PI 692092Stony pit virus (Prosser R400-3)Pyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneStony Pit+ CQ882098344PI 692092
416PI 692093Virus complex 9008Pyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997Clone2098345PI 692093
417PI 692094Stony pit virus PK63 on BoscPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneStony pit PK63 on Bosc2098346PI 692094
418PI 692097Fridlund 12/86 virusPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997Clone2098349PI 692097
419PI 692101R123 T13 from Fridlund virusPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997Clone 2098353PI 692101
420PI 692102Stony pit virus on Antoniades Pear from Fulton, MarylandPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneStony Pit in Antoniades pear Fulton, MD2098354PI 692102
421PI 692106Smith ringspot virus (from Richard Bell) Pyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneSmith ringspot? from Richard Bell 8/892098358PI 692106
422PI 692107Bark disorder on US 62590-002Pyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneBark disorder US 62590-0022098359PI 692107
423PI 692108VY+ pear rootstock from SOR 83 graftPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997ClonePear rootstock from SOR 83 graft VY+ 4/902098360PI 692108
424PI 692109Apple chlorotic leafspot (from U. MD Spitzenburg) on Nouveau PoiteauPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneApple chlorotic leafspot from U. MD. Spitzenburg in Nouveau Poiteau2098361PI 692109
425PI 692110Ring pattern + only on Nouveau PoiteauPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneRingpattern only on Nouveau Poiteau Previously in CPYR 16372098362PI 692110
426PI 692112Bark problem (Medford Oregon) on Bestever pearPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneBark problem (Medford, OR) Bestever pear2098364PI 692112
427PI 692115unknown virusPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997Clone2098367PI 692115
428PI 692116Ring pattern from Glenn DalePyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneRing pattern mosaic Glenn Dale2098368PI 692116
429PI 692117Ring pattern mosaic from CPYR 212 on Winter Nelis x P. betulifoliaPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneRingpattern mosaic in CPYR 212 Winter Nelis x P. betulifolia 2098369PI 692117
430PI 692118Virus from Medford, Oregon WestwoodPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneMedford Oregon collected with Mel Westwood2098370PI 692118
431PI 692119Pear blister canker viroid severe (Wenatchee PY 6) on BartlettPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997ClonePear blister canker severe (Wenatchee PY-6) in Bartlett2098371PI 692119
432PI 692120Bark disorder Wenatchee, WA origin from Columbia ViewPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneBark problem Wenatchee,WA. originally from Columbia View 2098372PI 692120
433PI 692161Virus from Wenatchee, WA from Columbia ViewPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneWenatchee WA origin from Columbia View Orchard2098554PI 692161
434PI 692162Bark disorder open pollinated seedling of CPYR 596Pyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneBark Disorder on open pollinated seedling of PYR 5962098555PI 692162
435PI 692163Bark disorder open pollinated seedling of CPYR 596Pyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneBark Disorder on open pollinated seedling of PYR 5962098556PI 692163
436PI 692165Bark disorder open pollinated seedling of CPYR 596Pyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneBark Disorder on open pollinated seedling of PYR 5962098558PI 692165
437PI 692168IRA 123-8 received from Bill HowellPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneIRA 123-8 received from Bill Howell2098561PI 692168
438PI 692170Unknown virus on commercial rootstockPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997Clonesymptoms on commercial seedling rootstock2098565PI 692170
439PI 692171Unknown virus on commercial rootstockPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997Clonesymptoms on commercial seedling rootstock2098566PI 692171
440PI 692172Unknown virus on commercial rootstockPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997Clonesymptoms on commercial seedling rootstock2098567PI 692172
441PI 692173Rough bark (Wenatchee PY 36) on BartlettPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneRough bark (Wenatchee PY-36 in Bartlett2098568PI 692173
442PI 692174Unknown virus from Ed Valdex, Wenatche, WAPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneFrom Ed Valdez of Wenatchee, Washington2098569PI 692174
443PI 692176Pear blister canker virus mild (Wenatchee PY-20) on Max Red BartlettPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997ClonePear blister canker virus mild (Wenatchee PY-20 in Max Red Bartlett2098571PI 692176
444PI 692177Stony pit virus and Hardy fruit ring (Wenatchee PY-12) on pearPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneStony pit virus and Hardy fruit ring virus (Wenatchee PY-12) in pear2098572PI 692177
445PI 692178Pear blister canker (Wenatchee PY-28) on AnjouPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997ClonePear blister canker virus (Wenatchee PY 28 in Anjou2098573PI 692178
446PI 692182Unknown virus from Garretson Orchard, WenatcheePyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneWenatchee (from Garretson Orchard)2098577PI 692182
447PI 692183Unknown virus from Ed Valdez WenatcheePyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneReceived 9/94 from Ed Valdez, Wenatchee2098578PI 692183
448PI 692184Unknown virusPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997Clone2098579PI 692184
449PI 692185Unknown virusPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997Clone2098580PI 692185
450PI 692189Unknown virus from Luigi/ Bill Proebsting rootstockPyrus communis L. subsp. communis Oregon, United StatesCORNot Available1997DONATED10/16/1997CloneFrom Luigi M/ Bill Proebsting rootstock TC program - virus?2098584PI 692189
451PI 617652'Untoasa de Geoagiu'Pyrus communis L. RomaniaCORNot Available1997DEVELOPED1973Cultivated materialUntoasa de Geoagiu was developed in Geoagiu, Romania as a cross of Josephine de Malines x Olivier de Serres, evaluated as selection 84-5-60 and released as a cultivar in 1973.1548357PI 617652
452PI 617653'Zao Su Li'Pyrus ×bretschneideri Rehder ChinaCORFRUITNot Available1997DEVELOPEDCultivated materialZao Su Li - A new (in 1977) cultivar bred by the cross of Pingguo Li x Shenbu Zhi at the Research Institute of Pomology, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences. Fruit: large, average 250 g., obovate. Skin yellow-green. Flesh white, tender, crisp, thin, stone cells scarce, very juicy, sweet. Harvested in mid August. Keeping quality 15-20 days at house temperature; good for canning. Widely adapted, high yield, early bearing, drought resistant, resistant to pear scab and leaf spot. -- Pear Main Cultivars by Research Institute of Pomology, Shaanxi Province, 1977. Translated by Yuexiu Feng 1996.

C. Fang, F. Pu and X. Chen (1994. Acta Horticulture 367) give Pingguo Li x Mishiruzu as the pedigree.

1548358PI 617653
453PI 654951NartPyrus hybr. Russian FederationCORImageNot Available1997DONATED"Very large"1547327PI 654951
454PI 637990Endicott PearPyrus communis L. Massachusetts, United StatesCORPLANTNot Available1997DEVELOPEDNEAR 1632Cultivated materialThe USDA Agriculture Yearbook, 1925 reports on 'the remarkable fruit tree' in Danversport, Massachusetts. According to the memoir of Governor Endicott's descendant, Samuel Endicott, the tree may have been planted in its present location in 1632, or it may have been transplanted from 'Governor Endecott's garden in Salem.' (The spelling of the family name 'Endecott' was changed to 'Endicott' in the 1700s.) There is a good possibility that the tree came to Massachusetts from England on the ship Arbella in 1630. U.P. Hedrick (The Pears of New York, 1921) wrote that the Endicott Pear Tree was very old and decayed as early as 1763, and that it was injured during a hurricane in 1804, again in 1815, and yet again in 1843. It had been protected by a fence for about 50 years when Hedrick wrote this account, and he estimated its height to be about 80 feet in the late 1800s. Root suckers bore fruit identical to the original tree, which proved to Hedrick that the Endicott Pear was a seedling and not a grafted tree. In 1934 the tree was nearly demolished by another hurricane but again it re-grew from the twisted trunk. It had a run-in with vandals in 1964, who chopped off all the branches and cut the trunk off 6 feet above the ground. Again it re-sprouted. Scions were collected by J. Postman in July, 1997, to propagate for the Corvallis Repository. The fruit is 'of no particular consequence', according to Hedrick. It is medium in size, unattractive, and coarse textured. But the cultivar has an impressive history and may have useful genetic value in whatever traits have contributed to its great longevity. Today (2002) the tree is secured by a chain-link fence behind the Osram Sylvania Company building on Endicott Street in Danvers, Massachusetts. -- J. Postman 20021549970PI 637990
455PI 617651Erwin's DelightPyrus communis L. Maryland, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1997DEVELOPED1997Cultivated materialErwin's Delight - Information from donor Arnold Tschanz:

Erwin Tschanz is my father. The tree is located in Rochester, NY and was probably 30-40 years when we moved into the house back in the early 1950s. My brother Ernest had found a few trees in an orchard in Webster, NY that had fruit that was very similar. The fruit looks similar to the one type of Asian pear that has a roundish shape with russet skin and a bright green under layer. A winter ripening pear.

1544516PI 617651
456PI 617650QLG 227Pyrus ×xerophila T. T. Yu Gansu Sheng, ChinaCORImageNot Available1997COLLECTED10/04/1996Tian Shui City District, Xiao Long Shan Forest Bureau, Dang Chuan Forest Station, Mia Chao Gou34.30417000, 106.207500001630hupehensis, Fraxinus sp., Fragaria sp., ferns and numerous hupehensis, Fraxinus sp., Fragaria sp., ferns and numerous herbaceous species. Level clay-loam soil.Wild material1540288PI 617650
457PI 654935'Zimska Kajuska'Pyrus communis L. North MacedoniaCORFIELDNot Available1997DONATEDCultivar1536658PI 654935
458PI 688144'Carigradsko Avce'Pyrus communis L. North MacedoniaCORNot Available1997DONATEDCultivarDuplicate of Akca (PI 324124) on SNP data (Montanari et al. 2020)1536656PI 688144
459PI 641279P. regelii Boraldy River ForestPyrus regelii Rehder KazakhstanCORImageNot Available1996COLLECTED09/12/1996Kazakhstan, Karataw, Boraldy River Forest area, about 35 km SE of Boraldy Forest camp which is 80 km N. of Chimkent. Site 8, Collection no. 4.42.66889000, 70.27139000810Aspect variable; open environment; xerophytic site, <300 mm rain. Associated vegetation: Crataegus, Malus, Vitis, Morus, rain. Associated vegetation: Crataegus, Malus, Vitis, Morus, Rosa.Wild materialShould be very cold hardy, down to minus 40 deg celcius in mountains.1536639PI 641279
460PI 617647Vietnam Asian PearPyrus pyrifolia (Burm. f.) Nakai VietnamCORImageNot Available1996DEVELOPED1994Cultivated materialAn unidentified woman from Eugene, Oregon area brough scions to a community scion exchange in Albany, OR in March 1994. Apparently either seeds or scions had been brought from Vietname several years earlier and have been growing at a private residence. Trees were propagated from scions obtained at scion exchange and subjected to heat threapy and meristem tip culure to eliminate Pear vein yellows virus.1536638PI 617647
461PI 61764896107Pyrus ×calleryana Decne. Liaoning Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available1996COLLECTED1995Wild material1536640PI 617648
462PI 617649P. betulifolia 96123Pyrus betulifolia Bunge Heilongjiang Sheng, ChinaCORNot Available1996COLLECTED199526 km NW of Dailing in nature preserve, Xiao Xingan Ling hills.47.18333000, 128.86667000330Wild material1536641PI 617649
463PI 641275AL 045Pyrus spinosa Forssk. AlbaniaCORNot Available1996COLLECTED08/26/1996Pastures of Cajup.40.19833000, 20.176390001290Cajup. Heavily grazed by sheep and goats. Cajup. Heavily grazed by sheep and goats.Wild materialTree 5-6m tall. Bark thick corky, black-grey on trunk. Leaves linear, 3.8-5cm long x 1.3cm wide, growing from spurs. Fruit round, diameter 1-2cm, green mottled brown, calyx persistent.1533584PI 641275
464PI 641276Dardhe-e-kugePyrus communis L. AlbaniaCORImageNot Available1996COLLECTED08/28/1996Korce, market.40.61972000, 20.78222000320Cultivated materialPear shaped, green with red blush, 2.5cm long x 2.5cm at widest point.1533754PI 641276
465PI 641277AL 087Pyrus sp. AlbaniaCORNot Available1996COLLECTED08/28/1996Korce, market.40.61972000, 20.78222000320Cultivated materialRound, 2cm diameter, green with brown russeting.1533596PI 641277
466PI 641278AL 123Pyrus sp. AlbaniaCORNot Available1996COLLECTED09/01/1996Along road between Rreshen and Puke.41.86222000, 19.98528000630Juniperus, Rosa, Punica, Ficus, Prunus spinosa, Lathyrus. Juniperus, Rosa, Punica, Ficus, Prunus spinosa, Lathyrus.Wild materialUpright, small, 4-5m tall, 2-3m wide. Trunk 15cm dbh. Bark grey, trunk fissured. Leaves lanceolate, 3.5cm long x 1 cm wide, grey-green. Fruit 1.25cm long x 2cm wide, flattened, green with brown russet.1533610PI 641278
467PI 688098GjalbjePyrus sp. AlbaniaCORNot Available1996COLLECTED08/25/1996Vlore. Open market.40.54556000, 19.4183300020Produced in village of Uznova close to Berati District.Cultivated materialSmooth texture (like butter), mild flavor, small, yellow.1533662PI 688098
468PI 688111SherbetlusPyrus communis L. AlbaniaCORNot Available1996COLLECTED08/28/1996Korce, market.40.61972000, 20.78222000320Produced in village of Senihtel.Cultivated materialPear shaped, yellow green fruit color. Fruit taste very sweet.1533753PI 688111
469PI 688123PollozhanPyrus communis L. AlbaniaCORNot Available1996COLLECTED08/31/1996Peshkopi, market.41.66667000, 20.50000000Produced in village of Pollozhan.Wild materialLocal variety. Trees large, open tree shape. Fruits large, skin yellow, 8-10cm long, 6-8cm wide. Grafted to wild pear understock.1533606PI 688123
470PI 637989'Kieffer - Scott West Clone'Pyrus hybr.Mississippi, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1996DONATED08/29/1996CultivarThese are the pear tree cuttings from a pear that is located on Sec. 16 Township 9 Range 7 in Wayne county Mississippi. This pear tree, age 140 years plus, is beleived to be a Bartlett or a Kieffer. It has survived under the most adverse conditons. It is a most delicious and finely textured table pear, according to the donor.1536630PI 637989
471PI 654934'Tosca'Pyrus communis L. ItalyCORNot Available1996DONATEDCultivarHarvested second-third week of July, fruit of 180 g. with crispy flesh but juicy and good conservation, stores longer than Coscia.1519933PI 654934
472PI 654940'Sarteau Rouge'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available1996DEVELOPEDCultivarSarteau or Essarteau or Rocket autumn pear of Hautes-Alpes and Alpes de Haute - Provence, small pear elongated yellow skin may become pink sun side , white flesh cream grainy, very juicy , but firm when cooked, maturity November-December. -- Translated from French by Google from: http://www.pommiers.com/poirier/poire.htm (10/2014).

From Slow Food Foundation: The Sarteau is very old variety, having originated in the 16th century.Tthe skin is mostly yellow with a red blush on the side exposed to the sun. This variety is primarily used in cooking, and the flesh turns reddish as it cooks. The Sarteau is used to make preserves, fruit syrups, and sweets (the popularity of the variety for these purposes has grown in Alpes-de-Haut-Provence since the 19th century). -- https://www.fondazioneslowfood.com/en/ark-of-taste-slow-food/sarteau-pear/ (05/2019).

1517142PI 654940
473PI 617656P. betulaefolia China 1996Pyrus betulifolia Bunge ChinaCORNot Available1996COLLECTEDCultivated materialPretreatment of seeds of rootstock before sowing. The seeds of the rootstock will germinate only after the treatment of cold stratification. The stratification method is as following: 1) Stratification time: in late January. 2)Treatment: seeds are soaked in water for twelve hours. After seeds are saturated with water, seeds are mixed with fine sand in the proportion of 1:4-6. The moisture content of sand shall be appropriate when sand can be held together in the hand but with no free water flowing out. The container used for storage can be a wooden box or a chinaware. Cover the sides and bottom inside the container with a layer (approximately two centimeters thick) of moist sand; then place the mixture of seeds and sand inside the container; fill the top of the container with a five centimeter depth of moist sand; at last, seal the top with a layer of white plastic film (0.05 to 0.10 mm thick). The container should be placed at an open and cool place (such as outside the northern sideof the house). The optimum storage temperature is between two to six degrees Celsius. Be sure to check the moisture inside the container occasionally. In spring when temperature rises, the seeds are ready to be sown.1568830PI 617656
474PI 617636'Pertusati'Pyrus communis L. FranceCORNot Available1996DEVELOPED1867CultivarRaised in the nurseries of M. Andre Leroy, Angers, France, in 1867. Fruit medium, globular-ovate, irregular, having one side larger than the other; skin rough, golden-yellow, finely dotted with gray, marbled with clear brown around the calyx and the stem; flesh white, fine, melting; juice abundant, very saccharine, with an acidulous flavor, very pleasant and delicately perfumed; first; Nov. -- Hedrick, 1921, The Pears of New York

Fruit, medium sized; roundish, and rather uneven in its outline. Skin, bright yellow, mottled and dotted with clear rough brown russet. Eye, closed, set in a wide rather deep basin. Stalk, very short. Flesh, fine, melting and very juicy, sweet and acidulous, and with an agreeable perfume. Ripe during October and November, and said by M. Leroy, by whom, it was raised, to be of the first quality. It was named in honour of Count Pertusati, of Milan. -- Hogg, 1884, The Fruit Manual.

1522014PI 617636
475PI 617637'Souvenir du Congress'Pyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORImageNot Available1996DONATED03/06/1996CultivarRaised in 1852 by M. Morel at Lyon-Vaise, France and first fruited in 1863. Similar to Williams Bon Chretien, but generally not as good quality. Tree compact, crops heavily, better resistance to scab than Williams. -- J. Arbury 19971522015PI 617637
476PI 617638'La France'Pyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORImageNot Available1996DONATED03/06/1996Cultivar1522017PI 617638
477PI 617639'Mirandino Rosso'Pyrus communis L. Lombardia, ItalyCORFRUITNot Available1996DEVELOPEDPRE 1700CultivarOrigin about 1700 in Moglia, Italy. Fruit small-medium, pyriform to subconic; Skin yellow with wide red spots and dots; Flesh white, firm, sweet anf perfumed. Moderate resistance to core breakdown. Bloom mid-season; Ripens early, late June in Florence and about 44 days before Bartlett. Earliest pear sufficiently resistant to core breakdown to have commercial potential. Self unfruitful. Good pollinators include Passe Crassane, Conference, Grand Champion. -- Catalog of the Pear Pomological Exhibition, 2nd International Symposium on Pear Growing, Firenze, Italy, October, 1976, Volume 1.1522018PI 617639
478PI 617640'Soldat Laboureur'Pyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORImageNot Available1996DONATED03/06/1996Cultivar1522019PI 617640
479PI 617641'Brignoles'Pyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1996DONATED03/06/1996CultivarBrignoles. December to March. Turbinate, skin thick, dull and rough, Indian or olive yellow in the shade, and tinted with bright brownish red in the sun, strewn with dots of fawn, and intermixed with patches of the same colour, with a brownish shade about the stalk; stalk long, and obliquely in continuation of the fruit; eye set level, and surrounded with slight knobs; flesh whitish and somewhat spotted, dry, sugary, and with but little perfume. This rough-looking Pear is much grown in the south of France, near Brignoles, where it has become an article of commerce with Paris, in the shape of what is called Poires Tapees, that is, something like Norfolk Beaufin Apples, dried and flattened in an oven. From the thickness of its skin it can be roasted in the ashes, like a potato, when its flesh becomes soft, sugary, and very agreeable. -- John Scott, Scott's Orchardist (ca.1875).1522020PI 617641
480PI 617642'Turnball Giant'Pyrus hybr.Oklahoma, United StatesCORImageNot Available1996DEVELOPED1981CultivarThe pear tree, a chance seedling of unknown parentage, was discovered in a cultivated area at a farm orchard in the county of Creek, Okla. in the vicinity of Depew, Oklahoma.

United States Patent 4,616 issued January 6, 1981: A new variety of pear tree primarily distinguished by bearing extremely large fruit of globular-to-ovate form, weighing over two pounds in normal years and having a distinctive taste...

Inventors: Turnbull; Kenneth L. (Depew, OK); Hybskmann; Daniel K. (Shenandoah, IA), Assignee: Henry Field Seed and Nursery Company (Shenandoah, IA).

1522021PI 617642
481PI 617643'Tarusa Crimson'Pyrus hybr.California, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1996DONATED03/06/1996Cultivar1522022PI 617643
482PI 617644'Poire d'Anis'Pyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1996DONATED03/06/1996Cultivar1522023PI 617644
483PI 617645'Martin Sec'Pyrus communis L. California, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1996DONATED03/06/1996CultivarMartin Sec. Hogg (1884) tells us that this and the Martin Sire are among the earliest varieties known to have been grown in England, for they are mentioned among the fruits delivered into the Treasury by the fruiterer of Edward I in 1292. In 1530, Charles Estienne of Paris wrote of it as being cultivated in France and affirmed the Pears of Saint Martin were so named because their time of ripening coincided with the Festival of that Saint. Again in 1675 Merlet in his Abrege des bons fruits spoke of the Martin-Sec of Provins or of Champagne. Fruit medium or above, long-pyriform-obtuse, regular in form, yellowish and russeted, dotted with gray points and extensively washed with carmine on the fae exposed to the sun; flesh whitish, semi-fine, very breaking, rather dry, but sweet and perfumed, very gritty when grafted on quince; third; mid-Nov to Feb. -- Hedrick, The Pears of New York, 1921

Sec. Synonyms: Dry Martin, Martin Sec, Martin Sec de Champagne, Martin Sec d'Hiver, Martin Sec de Provence, Rousselet d'Hyber, Rousselette d'Hiver, Troken Martin, Winter Rousselet, Winter Rousselette. -- W.H. Ragan, Nomenclature of the Pear, 1908.

Martin Sec. This is a pear of moderate size, of a long pyramidal form, the colour brown, with a clear red next the Sun, dotted with small white points, the flesh breaking, sometimes a little stony, surary, slightly perfumed, and of a pleasant taste - the stalk is long and bent, the eye small,but little sunk; it ripens in November and December. -- W. Coxe, A view of the cultivation of fruit trees, 1817.

1522024PI 617645
484PI 617627'Andrew'Pyrus hybr.Saskatchewan, CanadaCORImageNot Available1996DEVELOPED1960CultivarAndrew (PI 617627).-Originated in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, by C.F. Patterson, University of Saskatchewan. Introduced in 1960 for home gardens. Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. x Bartlett; selected in 1958; tested as Sask. PR 1. Fruit: 2 inches long by 2 inches in dam. under non-irrigated field conditions at Saskatoon; skin thin; flesh quality fair to good, but breaks down quickly; ripens in early September. Tree: hardy. -- Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties.1516496PI 617627
485PI 617628'Fedorovski'Pyrus sp. UncertainCORNot Available1996DEVELOPEDCultivar1516497PI 617628
486PI 617629'John'Pyrus hybr.Saskatchewan, CanadaCORNot Available1996DEVELOPED1960CultivarJohn (PI 617629).-Originated in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, by C.F. Patterson, University of Saskatchewan, Introduced in 1960 for home gardens. Pyrus ussuriensis x Aspa; selected in 1958; tested as Sask. PR-15. Fruit: up to 3 inches long and 2 1/2 inches in diam. under non-irrigated field conditions at Saskatoon; skin thin, yellowing well before flesh becomes soft; quality good; ripens in late September. Tree: hardy. - Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties1516498PI 617629
487PI 617630Ottawa-291Pyrus communis L. Ontario, CanadaCORFRUITNot Available1996DEVELOPEDCloneO-291 - The parentage is Winter Nelis x Bartlett. The fruit is medium sized, heavily russeted, of fine texture with no large stone cells, and of very good quality. It keeps well in cold storage until nearly Christmas. Although the tree has shown slight winter injury here, it has borne a heavy crop each year. -- Research Station, Ottawa, Ontario, Research Report for 1967.

The most promising of the recent (written in 1940s) Ottawa seedlings. This pear is very late in maturing and lacks a bit in size, but it has excellent texture and good quality. It will keep at 32F for several weeks. The tree is not fully hardy at Ottawa. -- Spangello, Phillips and Blair (in old Canadian bulletin, possibly from the 1940s)

Duplicate of PI 541546

1516500PI 617630
488PI 617631'Peter'Pyrus hybr.Saskatchewan, CanadaCORFRUITNot Available1996DEVELOPEDCultivarPeter (PI 617631).-Originated in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, by C.F. Patterson, University of Saskatchewan. Introduced in 1960 for home gardens. Pyrus ussuriensis x Aspa; selected in 1958; tested as Sask. PR-6. Fruit: 2 1 / 8 inches long and 2 inches in diam. under non-irrigated field conditions at Saskatoon; skin moderately thin; quality very fair; ripens the last 2 weeks in September. Tree: hardy. - Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties1516501PI 617631
489PI 617632'Petrovski'Pyrus sp. UncertainCORBARKNot Available1996DEVELOPEDCultivar1516502PI 617632
490PI 617633'Simon'Pyrus hybr.Saskatchewan, CanadaCORFRUITNot Available1996DEVELOPED1960CultivarOrig. in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, canada, by C.F. Patterson, Univ. of Saskatchewan. Introd. in 1960 for home gardens. Pyrus ussuriensis x Aspa; selected in 1958; tested as Sask. PR 9. Fruit: 2 1/2 inches long and 1 7/8 inches in diam. under non-irrigated field conditions at Saskatoon; skin moderately thin; quality fair; ripe during the last 2 weeks of September. Tree: hardy. - Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties1516503PI 617633
491PI 617634'Tait Dropmore'Pyrus communis L. Ontario, CanadaCORNot Available1996DEVELOPED1928CultivarTait-Dropmore (PI 617634)-Originated in Cartertown, Ontario, Canada, by David Tait. Introduced in 1928 by Skinner's Nursery, Dropmore, Manitoba, Canada. Open-pollinated seedling of Patten; discovered about 1935. Fruit: small, up to 2 inches in diameter; pyriform; irregular; skin greenish-yellow, blushed dull carmine, thick; flesh dull yellow, coarse, gritty; flavor sweet, pleasant as dessert fruit, fair as sauce; season early to mid-September. Tree: upright-spreading; vigorous; very hardy; partiall resistant to fire blight; productive. -- Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties.1516504PI 617634
492PI 617635'Thomas'Pyrus hybr.Saskatchewan, CanadaCORFRUITNot Available1996DEVELOPED1960CultivarThomas (PI 617635).-Originated in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, by C.F. Patterson, University of Saskatchewan. Introduced in 1960 for home gardens, Pyrus ussuriensis Maxim. x Bartlett; selected in 1959; tested as Sask. PR-17. Fruit: 2.25 inches long and 2.25 inches in diam. under nonirrigated field conditions at Saskatoon; flesh very firm, quality fair; keeps well in cold storage; ripens during late September to early October. Tree: hardy. -- Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties.1516505PI 617635
493PI 617646'Bradford'Pyrus ×calleryana Decne. Maryland, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1996DEVELOPEDCultivarClone from IR-2, Prosser, Washington. Prosser obtained from USDA, Glenn Dale, Maryland in 1980.

Attractive in early spring when it blooms, easily trained, good autumn foliage color, very adaptible to range of conds. This virus free accession replaces virus infected CPYR 2184.

1522025PI 617646
494PI 617655453Pyrus spinosa Forssk. IsraelCORNot Available1996COLLECTED31.06000000, 34.85000000Wild material1568829PI 617655
495PI 617623P. hybrid KAZ95 05-04Pyrus hybr. KazakhstanCORImageNot Available1995COLLECTED08/29/1995Kazakhstan, Semipalitansk Region, Tarbagatai Mt. Range, 4 km NE of Alekseyevka, 20 km N of Urdzhar, collected in S end of west valley. Site 05, Collection no. 04.47.24417000, 81.57056000870near stream. Associated w/ Populus, Crataegus, Rosa, near stream. Associated w/ Populus, Crataegus, Rosa, Viburnum.Wild material1507890PI 617623
496PI 617624P. hybrid KAZ95 10-08LPyrus hybr. KazakhstanCORImageNot Available1995COLLECTED09/01/1995Kazakhstan, Semipalitansk Region, Tarbagatai Mt. Range, 20 km NE of Alekseyevka, 20 km N of Urdzhar, collected in middle and south valleys. Site 10, Collection no. 08L.47.26444000, 81.584720001000wetland; full light. wetland; full light.Wild materialCollected in Kazahkstan as P. regelii hybrid, but seedlings grown at NCGR-Corvallis appear to be almost pure P. communis. -- jp, 6/8/20091507891PI 617624
497PI 617625P. hybrid KAZ95 10-11FPyrus hybr. KazakhstanCORImageNot Available1995COLLECTED09/01/1995Kazakhstan, Semipalitansk Region, Tarbagatai Mt. Range, 20 km NE of Alekseyevka, 20 km N of Urdzhar, collected in middle and south valleys. Site 10, Collection no. 11F.47.26444000, 81.5847200010003 deg slope to the S; open environment.Wild material1507892PI 617625
498PI 617626P. regelii KAZ95 18-16Pyrus regelii Rehder KazakhstanCORImageNot Available1995COLLECTED09/10/1995Kazakhstan, Karataw, Boraldy River Forest area, 5 km N of Boraldy Forest camp which is 80 km N of Chimkent. Site 18, Collection no. 16.42.88833000, 69.88111000900site. site.Wild materialShould be very cold hardy, down to minus 40 deg celcius in mountains.1507893PI 617626
499PI 617622Anjou - Pine Grove MutantPyrus communis L. Oregon, United StatesCORFRUITNot Available1995COLLECTEDCultivarMay be mutant selection of Anjou or pathogen infected. Trees have deformed 'fluted' fruit with longitudinal ridges. Foliage different than Anjous in orchard. Fruit seems to be seedless - may be parthenocarpic fruit on steril tree.1507889PI 617622