USPP20588P3 - Chestnut plant named ‘Au Buck I’ - Google Patents
Chestnut plant named ‘Au Buck I’ Download PDFInfo
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- USPP20588P3 USPP20588P3 US12/012,091 US1209108V USPP20588P3 US PP20588 P3 USPP20588 P3 US PP20588P3 US 1209108 V US1209108 V US 1209108V US PP20588 P3 USPP20588 P3 US PP20588P3
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A01—AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
- A01H—NEW PLANTS OR NON-TRANSGENIC PROCESSES FOR OBTAINING THEM; PLANT REPRODUCTION BY TISSUE CULTURE TECHNIQUES
- A01H6/00—Angiosperms, i.e. flowering plants, characterised by their botanic taxonomy
- A01H6/54—Leguminosae or Fabaceae, e.g. soybean, alfalfa or peanut
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A01—AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
- A01H—NEW PLANTS OR NON-TRANSGENIC PROCESSES FOR OBTAINING THEM; PLANT REPRODUCTION BY TISSUE CULTURE TECHNIQUES
- A01H5/00—Angiosperms, i.e. flowering plants, characterised by their plant parts; Angiosperms characterised otherwise than by their botanic taxonomy
- A01H5/08—Fruits
Definitions
- a Chinese chestnut planting was established at Auburn University, Auburn, Ala., from nuts collected in China. The planting was established on the United States Department of Agriculture Horticulture Farm which in later years became the Mainstation Horticulture Farm. Precocious and prolific-bearing, blight resistant seedlings were selected for nut appearance, size and quality. Each generation of seedlings were the product of controlled mass pollination from the most promising seedlings selected from the previous generation. ‘AU Cropper’, ‘AU Leader’ and ‘AU Homestead’ were released from a second generation of approximately 2000 seedlings. A planting of third generation seedlings from controlled mass pollination of ‘AU Leader’, ‘AU Homestead’ and ‘AU Cropper’ was established at the Auburn University Piedmont Substation at Camp Hill, Ala.
- ‘AU Buck I’ is an open pollinated seedling of ‘AU Cropper’.
- the present invention relates to a new and distinct Chinese chestnut cultivar that is blight resistant, precocious, produces a heavy crop annually, produces small to medium sized nuts (9.3 g) and begins nut drop about August 28 and continues for a 4-5 week period. The nuts mature and start dropping 3-4 weeks earlier than most chestnut cultivars.
- the large crop of small to medium sized nuts is an excellent food source for wildlife such as deer, turkey and squirrel.
- the 15-year old ‘AU Buck I’ tree is a medium-sized tree that is 8.53 meters tall with a canopy width of 8.94 meters and a canopy area of 62.74 square meters.
- ‘AU Buck I’ is the first cultivar to mature and drop nuts in a series of four Chinese chestnut cultivars that will provide a continuous nut drop of a high energy wildlife food source from late August through mid-to-late November.
- ‘AU Buck II’, ‘AU Buck III’ and ‘AU Buck IV’ are the other three cultivars, which are disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/012,025, filed on Jan. 30, 2008, and entitled “CHESTNUT PLANT NAMED ‘AU BUCK II’”, U.S. patent application Ser.
- the new cultivar is able to be asexually reproduced by budding or grafting onto a seedling Chinese chestnut rootstock.
- the unique characteristics come true to form and are established and transmitted through asexual propagation.
- FIG. 1 is a photograph of nuts of the ‘AU Buck I’ cultivar.
- FIG. 2 is a photograph of nuts of the ‘AU Buck I’ cultivar.
- FIG. 3 is a photograph of a tree of the ‘AU Buck I’ cultivar.
- the Chinese chestnut, Castanea mollissima Blume is a cold, hardy, temperate zone species native to China. It can be grown between 30° and 50° latitudes.
- the Chinese chestnut is resistant to chestnut blight fungus Cryphonectria parasitica.
- Chinese chestnuts are grown on a wide range of soils, but well-drained, deep and fertile soils are considered the best. Soils should be slightly acidic with pH 5.6-6.5.
- the name mollissima means soft hair and this species is recognized by dense hair on young leaves and downy yellow terminal parts of the shoots in winter.
- the leaf blade is thicker and, in general, mature leaves are broader than those of other species.
- the nuts have a small scar or hilum.
- the pellicle or thin membranous skin on the nuts is thin and peels readily from the kernel.
- the trees are a spreading type and long-lived with a round top.
- the trees have bark with furrows and buds with 3-4 scales and leaves are 2 ranked, serrated with numerous parallel veins.
- Chestnuts are monoecious and staminate flowers appear on erect cylindrical catkins with 10-20 stamens and 6-parted calyx. Pistillate flowers are borne on lower part of the upper staminate catkins and rarely on separate catkins, usually 3 in a prickly symmetrical involucre with 7-9 styles and a 6-celled ovary. Nuts are small, brown with a pale scar at the base. Generally, 1-3 nuts per involucre or bur are present.
- ‘AU Buck I’ is a medium tall tree that has a broadly oval shape and low, dense, and spreading branches.
- the original 15-year old tree of ‘AU Buck I’ is 8.53 meters (28 feet) tall with a trunk diameter at breast height of 25.4 cm (10.0 inches).
- the canopy is 8.94 meters (29.31 feet) wide and covers an area of 62.74 square meters (638 square feet).
- the average nut length is 26.1 mm (1.03 inches) and the average nut width is 30.4 mm (1.20 inches).
- the nuts start dropping about August 28 and continue to drop for 4-5 weeks.
- the tree is very prolific, fruits annually, and starts dropping nuts about 3-4 weeks before most cultivars.
- Vigor - very vigorous Trunk Form - upright, spreading with branches low and dense Texture - relatively smooth Color of bark - grey-brown
- RHS N199A Chroma C* 15.89, hue angle 91.08
- Branches Form - spreading Texture - relatively smooth Lenticels - few, small Branching habit - dense, low and spreading
- Color - new wood grey-brown, RHS N199B, Chroma C* 14.72, hue angle 79.23, mature wood: grey-brown, RHS N199B Chroma C* 14.02, hue angle 93.86
- Foliage Quantity - abundant Density - dense Leaves: Size - large.
- Hull Description - spiny round bur Size - 1.99-2.32′′ in diameter Number of nuts - 2-3 per bur Dehiscence - splits easily when still on tree Color - yellow-green at dehiscence, RHS N144C Nut: Size - medium; average size - 1.03′′ ⁇ 1.22′′ ⁇ 0.67′′. Average weight - 9.3 grams - 49 (46-54) nuts per pound.
- ‘AU Buck I’ is different from ‘AU Gobbler I’ in several ways.
- the size of the trees, the trunk forms and colors, the branches, the leaves and the nuts have differences.
- the ‘AU Buck I’ tree is shorter with a canopy width and canopy area much smaller than the ‘AU Gobbler I’ tree.
- the ‘AU Buck I’ branches are spreading, dense, low and grey-brown; whereas, the ‘AU Gobbler I’ branches are upright, high, diffuse and brown (new) or greyed-green (mature).
- the leaves differ in size, shape, texture, margin, petiole and color.
- the average weight of the nuts of ‘AU Buck I’ is 9.3 grams versus 7.7 grams for ‘AU Gobbler I’.
- ‘AU Buck I’ has roughly 49 nuts per pound
- ‘AU Gobbler I’ has roughly 59 nuts per pound.
- ‘AU Buck I’ is different from ‘AU Gobbler II’ in several ways.
- the trees, the trunk colors, the branch colors, the leaves, the crop and the nuts have differences.
- the ‘AU Buck I’ tree is taller with a canopy width and canopy area smaller than the ‘AU Gobbler II’ tree.
- the ‘AU Buck I’ branches are grey-brown; whereas the ‘AU Gobbler II’ branches are brown (new) or greyed-green (mature).
- the leaves differ in size, shape, texture, margin and color.
- the ripening period for the ‘AU Buck I’ is around August 28 and continues for a 4-5 week period, but the ‘AU Gobbler II’ ripening period is around September 5 and continues for 4-5 weeks.
- the average weight of the nuts of ‘AU Buck I’ is 9.3 grams versus 5.7 grams for ‘AU Gobbler II’.
- ‘AU Buck I’ has roughly 49 nuts per pound
- ‘AU Gobbler II’ has roughly 65-101 nuts per pound.
- ‘AU Buck I’ is different from ‘AU Premier’ in several ways.
- the trees, the trunk colors, the branch colors, the leaves, the crop and the nuts have differences.
- the ‘AU Buck I’ tree is taller with a canopy width and canopy area larger than the ‘AU Premier’ tree.
- the ‘AU Buck I’ has a grey-brown trunk, and the ‘AU Premier’ has a greyed-green trunk.
- the ‘AU Buck I’ branches are grey-brown; whereas, the ‘AU Premier’ branches are brown (new) or greyed-green (mature).
- the leaves differ in size, shape, thickness, texture, margin, petiole and color.
- the ripening period for the ‘AU Buck I’ is around August 28, but the ‘AU Premier’ ripening period is early September through mid-November.
- the average weight of the nuts of ‘AU Buck I’ is 9.3 grams versus 1.26 grams for ‘AU Premier’.
- ‘AU Buck I’ has roughly 49 nuts per pound
- ‘AU Premier’ has roughly 360.3 nuts per pound.
- ‘AU Buck I’ is different from ‘AU Encore’ in several ways.
- the trees, the trunk colors, the branch colors, the leaves, the crop and the nuts have differences.
- the ‘AU Buck I’ tree is taller with a canopy width and canopy area larger than the ‘AU Encore’ tree.
- the ‘AU Buck I’ has a grey-brown trunk, and the ‘AU Encore’ has a greyed-green trunk.
- the ‘AU Buck I’ branches are grey-brown; whereas, the ‘AU Encore’ branches are brown (new) or greyed-green (mature).
- the leaves differ in size, shape, thickness, texture, margin, petiole and color.
- the ripening period for the ‘AU Buck I’ is around August 28, but the ‘AU Encore’ ripening period is late September through late November.
- the average weight of the nuts of ‘AU Buck I’ is 9.3 grams versus 2.4 grams for ‘AU Encore’.
- ‘AU Buck I’ has roughly 49 nuts per pound
- ‘AU Encore’ has roughly 189.2 nuts per pound.
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- Developmental Biology & Embryology (AREA)
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- Natural Medicines & Medicinal Plants (AREA)
- Cultivation Of Plants (AREA)
- Breeding Of Plants And Reproduction By Means Of Culturing (AREA)
Abstract
‘AU Buck I’ is a new and distinct Chinese chestnut cultivar that is precocious, produces a large crop annually of small to medium sized nuts that mature early and the nuts start dropping about August 28. Nut drop continues for a 4-5 week period. The nuts mature and start dropping 3-4 weeks before most cultivars. The early nut drop and small to medium nut size of ‘AU Buck I’ make it ideal for use as a food source for wildlife. ‘AU Buck I’ is a medium to tall tree with a height of 8.53 meters and a smaller canopy area (62.74 square feet) than most Chinese chestnut trees. ‘AU Buck I’ is the first cultivar to mature and drop nuts in a series of four Chinese chestnut cultivars that will provide for a continuous nut drop of a high energy wildlife food source from late August through mid-to-late November.
Description
Latin name of the genus and species of the plant claimed: Castanea mollissima Blume.
Variety denomination: ‘AU Buck I’.
A Chinese chestnut planting was established at Auburn University, Auburn, Ala., from nuts collected in China. The planting was established on the United States Department of Agriculture Horticulture Farm which in later years became the Mainstation Horticulture Farm. Precocious and prolific-bearing, blight resistant seedlings were selected for nut appearance, size and quality. Each generation of seedlings were the product of controlled mass pollination from the most promising seedlings selected from the previous generation. ‘AU Cropper’, ‘AU Leader’ and ‘AU Homestead’ were released from a second generation of approximately 2000 seedlings. A planting of third generation seedlings from controlled mass pollination of ‘AU Leader’, ‘AU Homestead’ and ‘AU Cropper’ was established at the Auburn University Piedmont Substation at Camp Hill, Ala.
‘AU Buck I’ is an open pollinated seedling of ‘AU Cropper’.
The present invention relates to a new and distinct Chinese chestnut cultivar that is blight resistant, precocious, produces a heavy crop annually, produces small to medium sized nuts (9.3 g) and begins nut drop about August 28 and continues for a 4-5 week period. The nuts mature and start dropping 3-4 weeks earlier than most chestnut cultivars. The large crop of small to medium sized nuts is an excellent food source for wildlife such as deer, turkey and squirrel. The 15-year old ‘AU Buck I’ tree is a medium-sized tree that is 8.53 meters tall with a canopy width of 8.94 meters and a canopy area of 62.74 square meters. The ‘AU Buck I’ tree produced nuts the third year after transplanting, has produced a heavy crop annually, and produced 66.5 kg (146.5 lbs) of nuts in 2006. There has been no evidence of insect or disease damage to the tree, foliage, or nuts. ‘AU Buck I’ is the first cultivar to mature and drop nuts in a series of four Chinese chestnut cultivars that will provide a continuous nut drop of a high energy wildlife food source from late August through mid-to-late November. ‘AU Buck II’, ‘AU Buck III’ and ‘AU Buck IV’ are the other three cultivars, which are disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/012,025, filed on Jan. 30, 2008, and entitled “CHESTNUT PLANT NAMED ‘AU BUCK II’”, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/012,110, filed on Jan. 30, 2008, and entitled “CHESTNUT PLANT NAMED ‘AU BUCK III’” and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/012,112, filed on Jan. 30, 2008, and entitled “CHESTNUT PLANT NAMED ‘AU BUCK IV’”, which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The new cultivar is able to be asexually reproduced by budding or grafting onto a seedling Chinese chestnut rootstock. The unique characteristics come true to form and are established and transmitted through asexual propagation.
The Chinese chestnut, Castanea mollissima Blume, is a cold, hardy, temperate zone species native to China. It can be grown between 30° and 50° latitudes. The Chinese chestnut is resistant to chestnut blight fungus Cryphonectria parasitica. Generally, Chinese chestnuts are grown on a wide range of soils, but well-drained, deep and fertile soils are considered the best. Soils should be slightly acidic with pH 5.6-6.5. The name mollissima means soft hair and this species is recognized by dense hair on young leaves and downy yellow terminal parts of the shoots in winter. The leaf blade is thicker and, in general, mature leaves are broader than those of other species. The nuts have a small scar or hilum. The pellicle or thin membranous skin on the nuts is thin and peels readily from the kernel. The trees are a spreading type and long-lived with a round top. The trees have bark with furrows and buds with 3-4 scales and leaves are 2 ranked, serrated with numerous parallel veins.
Chestnuts are monoecious and staminate flowers appear on erect cylindrical catkins with 10-20 stamens and 6-parted calyx. Pistillate flowers are borne on lower part of the upper staminate catkins and rarely on separate catkins, usually 3 in a prickly symmetrical involucre with 7-9 styles and a 6-celled ovary. Nuts are small, brown with a pale scar at the base. Generally, 1-3 nuts per involucre or bur are present.
‘AU Buck I’ is a medium tall tree that has a broadly oval shape and low, dense, and spreading branches. The original 15-year old tree of ‘AU Buck I’ is 8.53 meters (28 feet) tall with a trunk diameter at breast height of 25.4 cm (10.0 inches). The canopy is 8.94 meters (29.31 feet) wide and covers an area of 62.74 square meters (638 square feet). The average nut length is 26.1 mm (1.03 inches) and the average nut width is 30.4 mm (1.20 inches). The nuts start dropping about August 28 and continue to drop for 4-5 weeks. The tree is very prolific, fruits annually, and starts dropping nuts about 3-4 weeks before most cultivars.
In the planting at the Piedmont Substation, Camp Hill, Ala., accurate yields could not be obtained due to extremely heavy wildlife (deer and turkey) feeding. Therefore, the trees were rated for crop load each year. ‘AU Buck I’ has been rated with a large crop load each season. In the fall of 2006, individual trees were caged with 6 foot (1.83 meters) tall chicken wire prior to nut drop to exclude wildlife, and nuts were picked up daily during nut drop. The original 15-year old tree of ‘AU Buck I’ produced 66.5 kg (146.5 pounds) of nuts in 2006. This yield is above the reported yields for similar-aged trees.
The table below illustrates the specific differences between the ‘AU Buck I’ cultivar and the ‘Revival’ cultivar.
| The botanical details of this new and distinctive variety of |
| chestnut tree - with color definitions (except those in |
| common color terms) referenced to Royal Horticultural |
| Society's Colour Chart (RHS) and color was also determined |
| using an electronic spectrophotometer to determine hue angle |
| and Chroma (spectrophotometer model CM-2002; |
| Minolta Camera Co., Japan). |
| ‘AU BUCK I’ CHESTNUT |
| Tree: |
| Size (at maturity) - small - fifteen year old original tree is 8.53 meters tall |
| with a canopy width of 8.94 meters and a canopy area of 62.74 sq. meters |
| Tree shape is broadly oval with dense, low and spreading branches. |
| Vigor - very vigorous |
| Trunk: |
| Form - upright, spreading with branches low and dense |
| Texture - relatively smooth |
| Color of bark - grey-brown RHS N199A, Chroma C* 15.89, hue angle |
| 91.08 |
| Branches: |
| Form - spreading |
| Texture - relatively smooth |
| Lenticels - few, small |
| Branching habit - dense, low and spreading |
| Color - new wood: grey-brown, RHS N199B, Chroma C* 14.72, |
| hue angle 79.23, mature wood: grey-brown, RHS N199B |
| Chroma C* 14.02, hue angle 93.86 |
| Foliage: |
| Quantity - abundant |
| Density - dense |
| Leaves: |
| Size - large. Length (cm) 17.1 (14.1-23.1) [20] |
| width (cm) 7.5 (5.8-9.2) [20] |
| leaf ratio 2.3 (1.9-2.7) [20] |
| Shape - elliptic to ovate |
| leaf tip - acute to acuminate |
| leaf base - rounded; oblique |
| Thickness - thick. Leaf venation 1° pinnate: 2° ± parallel, prominent |
| abaxially |
| Texture - coriaceous (thick) |
| Margin - serrate; with small to medium teeth, spreading |
| Petiole - length 1.0 cm (0.7-1.3) [20] |
| Petiole pubescence - glabrous to sparsely hairy |
| Color- adaxial surface, glabrous blade; glabrous veins, rarely with |
| sparse simple hairs, dark green; shiny, RHS 147A, |
| Chroma C* 12.32, hue angle 122.62 |
| abaxial surface, moderately hairy, stellate hairs on blade, glabrous veins, |
| RHS 148B, Chroma C* 19.97, hue angle 109.24 |
| Bloom: |
| Amount of bloom - heavy |
| Color - at anthesis, 161D greyed-yellow group, 157D green-white group, |
| 155C white group |
| Blooming period - mid-May. After foliation in April. |
| Age at which tree starts flowering - early, 2-3 years after graft |
| replacement. |
| Male flower - Catkin length (cm) - 14.8 (11.4-17.5) [3] |
| Male flower - stamen number per catkin - 11.1 (10-12) [10] |
| Female flower - flower number per bur - 3 |
| Female flower - style number per flower 8 (7-9) [3] |
| Crop: |
| Bearing - regular annual bearer |
| Productivity - prolific |
| Ripening period - long, nuts begins dropping August 28 and continues for |
| a 4-5 week period. |
| Distribution of nuts on tree - well distributed, fruits on terminals with |
| 2-4 burs per terminal. |
| Tenacity - burs crack while on tree and nuts release and drop from bur. |
| Hull: |
| Description - spiny round bur |
| Size - 1.99-2.32″ in diameter |
| Number of nuts - 2-3 per bur |
| Dehiscence - splits easily when still on tree |
| Color - yellow-green at dehiscence, RHS N144C |
| Nut: |
| Size - medium; average size - 1.03″ × 1.22″ × 0.67″. Average weight - |
| 9.3 grams - 49 (46-54) nuts per pound. |
| Form - flattened on 1 side, hemispheric on other side; basal end nearly flat |
| to broadly rounded; apex broadly rounded with a small tip |
| Blossom end - small pointed tip |
| Basal end - flattened |
| Color - dark brown, lustrous; RHS 200B, Chroma C* 12.34, hue angle |
| 42.90 |
| Pubescence- long and short hairs, simple, fine and white restricted to the |
| distal ⅛ end of the nut, sparse, glabrate to glabrous elsewhere |
| Shell - thin |
| Hardness of shell - relatively hard, yet not rigid |
| Texture of shell - smooth |
| Percentage of kernel to nut - very high-90-95% |
| Kernel: |
| Size - almost as large as nut size |
| Form - same as nut shape |
| Pellicle - thin |
| Flavor - excellent, very sweet |
| Color - light straw color, RHS 162A, Chroma C* 48.81, hue angle 82.35 |
| Resistance to insects: no unusual susceptibilities noted |
| Resistance to disease: no susceptibilities to disease noted |
| The chestnut tree and its nuts herein described may |
| vary in slight detail due to climatic and soil conditions |
| under which the variety may be grown; the present |
| description being of the variety as grown in Camp Hill, |
| Ala. |
| The botanical details of this variety of |
| chestnut tree - with color definitions (except those in |
| common color terms) referenced to Maerz and Paul |
| Dictionary of Color - are as follows: |
| ‘REVIVAL’ |
| Tree: |
| Size (at maturity) - large |
| Vigor - very vigorous |
| Trunk: |
| Form - upright with branches spreading in upper |
| reaches of tree |
| Texture - relatively smooth |
| Color of bark - Silvergray (13-A-1) |
| Branches: |
| Form - strong |
| Texture - relatively smooth |
| Lenticels - few, small |
| Branching habit - spreading in upper region of tree |
| Color - new wood: reddish brown and glossy, mature |
| wood: silver gray |
| Foliage: |
| Quantity - abundant |
| Density - dense |
| Leaves: |
| Size - large. Average length - 5-7″ (including petiole). |
| Average width - 2″ |
| Shape - oblong with acute tip and rounded base |
| Thickness - thick |
| Texture - smooth |
| Margin - dentate |
| Petiole - length: medium. Thickness: medium. |
| Color - Top tide - glossy dark green (22-L-12). |
| Under side - lighter green (21-D-7). |
| Bloom: |
| Amount of bloom - heavy |
| Color- cream white (17-B-1) |
| Blooming period - late. After leaf out in April |
| Age at which tree starts flowering - early; 2-3 years |
| years after graft replacement. |
| Crop: |
| Bearing - regular (yearly) bearer |
| Productivity - prolific |
| Ripening period - short. September 15-October 1. |
| Distribution of nuts on tree - well distributed |
| Tenacity - burrs crack while on tree and nuts easily |
| release, many falling by themselves |
| Hull: |
| Description - spiny, round burr |
| Size - 3-4″ in diameter |
| Number of nuts - 2-3 per burr |
| Dehiscence - splits easily when still on tree. Some |
| entire burrs split and fall to ground |
| Color - brown (15-A-8) |
| Nut: |
| Size - large. Average size - 1⅛″ × 1⅛″ × 1″ thick. |
| Average weight - 24-32 nuts per pound |
| Form - broad and ovoid on one side, flat on other side |
| Blossom end - pointed tip |
| Basal end - flattened |
| Color - India Red (7-1.-6). |
| Shell - thin |
| Hardness of shell - relatively hard, yet not rigid |
| Texture of shell - smooth |
| Percentage of kernel to nut - very high (95%) |
| Kernel: |
| Size - almost as large as nut size |
| Form - same as nut shape |
| Pellicle - thin |
| Flavor - excellent, very sweet. |
| Color - Oyster white (10-B-1) |
| Resistance to insects: no unusual susceptibilities noted |
| Resistance to disease: very high inherent resistance to |
| chestnut bark fungus (Endothia parasitica), no |
| other susceptibilities to any other disease |
| The chestnut tree and its nuts herein described may |
| vary in slight detail due to climatic and soil conditions |
| under which the variety may be grown; the present |
| description being of the variety as grown in Alachua, |
| Fla. |
‘AU Buck I’ is different from ‘AU Gobbler I’ in several ways. For example, the size of the trees, the trunk forms and colors, the branches, the leaves and the nuts have differences. Specifically, the ‘AU Buck I’ tree is shorter with a canopy width and canopy area much smaller than the ‘AU Gobbler I’ tree. The ‘AU Buck I’ branches are spreading, dense, low and grey-brown; whereas, the ‘AU Gobbler I’ branches are upright, high, diffuse and brown (new) or greyed-green (mature). The leaves differ in size, shape, texture, margin, petiole and color. The average weight of the nuts of ‘AU Buck I’ is 9.3 grams versus 7.7 grams for ‘AU Gobbler I’. Furthermore, ‘AU Buck I’ has roughly 49 nuts per pound, and ‘AU Gobbler I’ has roughly 59 nuts per pound.
‘AU Buck I’ is different from ‘AU Gobbler II’ in several ways. For example, the trees, the trunk colors, the branch colors, the leaves, the crop and the nuts have differences. Specifically, the ‘AU Buck I’ tree is taller with a canopy width and canopy area smaller than the ‘AU Gobbler II’ tree. The ‘AU Buck I’ branches are grey-brown; whereas the ‘AU Gobbler II’ branches are brown (new) or greyed-green (mature). The leaves differ in size, shape, texture, margin and color. The ripening period for the ‘AU Buck I’ is around August 28 and continues for a 4-5 week period, but the ‘AU Gobbler II’ ripening period is around September 5 and continues for 4-5 weeks. The average weight of the nuts of ‘AU Buck I’ is 9.3 grams versus 5.7 grams for ‘AU Gobbler II’. Furthermore, ‘AU Buck I’ has roughly 49 nuts per pound, and ‘AU Gobbler II’ has roughly 65-101 nuts per pound.
‘AU Buck I’ is different from ‘AU Premier’ in several ways. For example, the trees, the trunk colors, the branch colors, the leaves, the crop and the nuts have differences. Specifically, the ‘AU Buck I’ tree is taller with a canopy width and canopy area larger than the ‘AU Premier’ tree. The ‘AU Buck I’ has a grey-brown trunk, and the ‘AU Premier’ has a greyed-green trunk. The ‘AU Buck I’ branches are grey-brown; whereas, the ‘AU Premier’ branches are brown (new) or greyed-green (mature). The leaves differ in size, shape, thickness, texture, margin, petiole and color. The ripening period for the ‘AU Buck I’ is around August 28, but the ‘AU Premier’ ripening period is early September through mid-November. The average weight of the nuts of ‘AU Buck I’ is 9.3 grams versus 1.26 grams for ‘AU Premier’. Furthermore, ‘AU Buck I’ has roughly 49 nuts per pound, and ‘AU Premier’ has roughly 360.3 nuts per pound.
‘AU Buck I’ is different from ‘AU Encore’ in several ways. For example, the trees, the trunk colors, the branch colors, the leaves, the crop and the nuts have differences. Specifically, the ‘AU Buck I’ tree is taller with a canopy width and canopy area larger than the ‘AU Encore’ tree. The ‘AU Buck I’ has a grey-brown trunk, and the ‘AU Encore’ has a greyed-green trunk. The ‘AU Buck I’ branches are grey-brown; whereas, the ‘AU Encore’ branches are brown (new) or greyed-green (mature). The leaves differ in size, shape, thickness, texture, margin, petiole and color. The ripening period for the ‘AU Buck I’ is around August 28, but the ‘AU Encore’ ripening period is late September through late November. The average weight of the nuts of ‘AU Buck I’ is 9.3 grams versus 2.4 grams for ‘AU Encore’. Furthermore, ‘AU Buck I’ has roughly 49 nuts per pound, and ‘AU Encore’ has roughly 189.2 nuts per pound.
Claims (1)
1. A new and distinct cultivar of the species Castanea mollissima Blume named ‘AU Buck I’ as described and illustrated herein.
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US12/012,091 USPP20588P3 (en) | 2008-01-30 | 2008-01-30 | Chestnut plant named ‘Au Buck I’ |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US12/012,091 USPP20588P3 (en) | 2008-01-30 | 2008-01-30 | Chestnut plant named ‘Au Buck I’ |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US20090193550P1 US20090193550P1 (en) | 2009-07-30 |
| USPP20588P3 true USPP20588P3 (en) | 2009-12-22 |
Family
ID=40900624
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US12/012,091 Active USPP20588P3 (en) | 2008-01-30 | 2008-01-30 | Chestnut plant named ‘Au Buck I’ |
Country Status (1)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | USPP20588P3 (en) |
-
2008
- 2008-01-30 US US12/012,091 patent/USPP20588P3/en active Active
Non-Patent Citations (7)
| Title |
|---|
| Crane, H.L. et al., Nut Breeding', U.S. Dept. of Agriculture Yearbook, Jan. 1937, pp. 827-837. |
| Harris, Hubert et al., Three Chinese Chestnuts: Au-Cropper, Au-Leadder, And Au-Homestead-Their History And Production, Mar. 1980, pp. 3-8, Agricultural Experiment Station Auburn University Circular 247. |
| Hemming, E. Sam, "Chinese Chestnut in Maryland", Jan. 1944, pp. 32-34, A.R. Northern Growers Assoc. |
| Jaynes, Richard A. et al., "Handbook of North American Nut Trees", pp. 264-286, The W.F. Humphrey Press, Inc. New York. |
| Kim, Kap Duk et al., Studies on the Farmers Cultivating Chestnut Orchards in Korea and Its Financial Analysis,Jan. 1971, pp. 51-74, Bull. Seol. Nut. Univ. Fores., No. 8. |
| Lin ye ji et al., "Forest Science & Technology", Jan. 1989, pp. 16-18, Baker Auxiliary Stacks SD1 SDI, L56, No. 2-1990. |
| Snare Lester, Chestnuts Production', Jan. 1996, pp. 422-427, NSW Agriculture, Agfact H3.1.50., hhtp://www.rirdc.gov.au/pub/handbook/chestnuts.pdf. |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| US20090193550P1 (en) | 2009-07-30 |
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