USPP22815P2 - Bur oak tree named ‘JFS-KW3’ - Google Patents
Bur oak tree named ‘JFS-KW3’ Download PDFInfo
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- USPP22815P2 USPP22815P2 US12/657,697 US65769710V USPP22815P2 US PP22815 P2 USPP22815 P2 US PP22815P2 US 65769710 V US65769710 V US 65769710V US PP22815 P2 USPP22815 P2 US PP22815P2
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- 244000084520 Quercus macrocarpa Species 0.000 title claims abstract description 15
- 235000017578 Quercus macrocarpa var. depressa Nutrition 0.000 title claims abstract description 5
- 235000013415 Quercus macrocarpa var. macrocarpa Nutrition 0.000 title claims abstract description 5
- 241000221785 Erysiphales Species 0.000 abstract description 4
- 241000894007 species Species 0.000 description 7
- 235000001395 Quercus macrocarpa Nutrition 0.000 description 6
- 235000013399 edible fruits Nutrition 0.000 description 5
- 238000011156 evaluation Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000000644 propagated effect Effects 0.000 description 3
- 241001164374 Calyx Species 0.000 description 2
- 241001344123 Discula quercina Species 0.000 description 2
- 208000035240 Disease Resistance Diseases 0.000 description 2
- 241000029125 Erysiphe alphitoides Species 0.000 description 2
- 238000012360 testing method Methods 0.000 description 2
- 238000012935 Averaging Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000005299 abrasion Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000001154 acute effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000034303 cell budding Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000003086 colorant Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000035613 defoliation Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000011161 development Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000018109 developmental process Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000003205 fragrance Substances 0.000 description 1
- 210000004209 hair Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- 230000007774 longterm Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000004519 manufacturing process Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000005259 measurement Methods 0.000 description 1
- 210000001672 ovary Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- 230000002688 persistence Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000005070 sampling Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000017260 vegetative to reproductive phase transition of meristem Effects 0.000 description 1
- 210000003462 vein Anatomy 0.000 description 1
Images
Classifications
-
- 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
- A01H5/04—Stems
-
- 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
Definitions
- This new cultivar possesses a unique combination of characteristics in that it combines a straight upright trunk, a narrowly oval to narrowly pyramidal upright growth habit, glossy dark green foliage, and resistance to powdery mildew and anthracnose.
- FIG. 1 Shows the original tree, illustrating the upright growth habit, straight trunk, and the narrow pyramidal to narrow oval form.
- FIG. 2 Shows two year old nursery grown trees, illustrating the straight trunk and central leader, the upright habit, and the short side branches.
- FIG. 3 Shows the upper surface of typical summer leaves with dark green color and a glossy surface.
- FIG. 4 Shows the lower surface of typical summer leaves.
- FIG. 5 Shows the top surface of typical leaves displaying fall color.
- FIG. 6 Shows typical acorns and nuts from the original tree of my variety.
- the two upper fruits in this figure are complete acorns, with caps and each with a second small undeveloped aborted acorn attached to the top of the cap.
- the cap's marginal fringe On the complete acorn at center-right, the cap's marginal fringe has been worn away by abrasion in the tree canopy.
- the lowermost (outer) two fruits are typical nuts which have been removed from their caps.
- FIG. 7 Shows two typical acorns of ‘JFS-KW3’ from the original tree of my variety on the left in comparison to two typical and much larger acorns of the species Quercus macrocarpa on the right. This figure illustrates the relatively smaller acorn size of the acorns from the original tree of my new variety.
- FIG. 8 Shows a new growth branch tip of ‘JFS-KW3’ on the left and a new growth branch tip of a typical Quercus macrocarpa seedling tree on the right, and illustrates the upward orientation of the leaves and petioles of my new variety compared to the much more horizontal orientation of the seedling tree.
- FIG. 9 Shows a close up of a portion of a first year branch from a tree of my new variety during the winter season, illustrating the development of corky ridges on the branch surface.
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- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Physiology (AREA)
- Botany (AREA)
- Developmental Biology & Embryology (AREA)
- Environmental Sciences (AREA)
- Breeding Of Plants And Reproduction By Means Of Culturing (AREA)
- Cultivation Of Plants (AREA)
Abstract
A variety of bur oak which combines a straight, upright trunk, a narrowly oval to narrowly pyramidal upright growth habit, glossy dark green foliage, and resistance to powdery mildew and anthracnose.
Description
Latin name of the genus and species: Quercus macrocarpa.
Variety denomination: ‘JFS-KW3’.
During the summer and fall of 1998, I began a search for improved varieties of bur oak, Quercus macrocarpa. I examined a few thousand two year old nursery grown trees of Quercus macrocarpa growing in rows at a nursery in Boring, Oreg. These trees had been planted from seed. At various times during the summer and fall, I tagged the most promising looking trees in these nursery rows. I was selecting for disease resistance, straightness, growth rate, foliage appearance, fall color, and defoliation. By the time the trees had gone dormant, I had selected what I believed to be the 21 most promising individual trees in the block.
In the spring of 1999, I transplanted these trees into testing rows in the nursery. I labeled each tree, and over the next two summers I evaluated the appearance and performance of these trees and recorded notes. After two years of evaluation, I selected the best seven trees and transplanted them in 2001 into a long term evaluation block with wider spacing. I rejected and destroyed the remaining 14 trees as being of lesser quality.
Over the next several years, I examined my seven selected bur oak trees, photographed them, and took detailed notes regarding their features. In this evaluation, my new variety ‘JFS-KW3’ emerged as the best selection in terms of the superior characteristics that I was seeking. The parent trees to ‘JFS-KW3’ were unnamed, unpatented trees of the species Quercus macrocarpa. In 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008, I propagated small plots test plots of my new variety at the nursery in Boring, Oreg., by chip budding onto seedling Quercus macrocarpa rootstock. From this propagation, I established that the characteristics of a straight upright trunk, a narrowly oval to narrowly pyramidal upright growth habit, dark green foliage and resistance to powdery mildew (Erysiphe alphitoides) and anthracnose (Apiognomonia quercina) of my new variety are unique and firmly fixed in each successive generation.
In the fall of 2006, the original tree of my new variety began producing acorns. These acorns were unusual in that they were extremely small acorns for the species, a desirable characteristic for landscape use. The acorns have yet to be observed in the asexually propagated progeny because the progeny are too young to have acorns, but the acorn characteristic is expected in this progeny.
This new cultivar possesses a unique combination of characteristics in that it combines a straight upright trunk, a narrowly oval to narrowly pyramidal upright growth habit, glossy dark green foliage, and resistance to powdery mildew and anthracnose.
The colors of an illustration of this type may vary with lighting conditions and, therefore, color characteristics of this new variety should be determined with reference to the observations described herein, rather than from these illustrations alone.
The following detailed description of the ‘JFS-KW3’ variety, with color terminology in accordance with The Royal Horticultural Society (R.H.S.) Colour Chart, 1986 Edition, published by The Royal Horticultural Society in London, and is based on observations of the original tree and one, two, and three year old progeny. The observed progeny were trees which were growing in Boring, Oreg.
- Scientific name: Quercus macrocarpa ‘JFS-KW3’.
- Parentage:
-
- Seed parent.—Unnamed, unpatented tree of the species Quercus macrocarpa.
- Pollen parent.—Unnamed, unpatented tree of the species Quercus macrocarpa.
-
- Tree:
-
- Overall shape.—Tall, straight, upright, narrowly pyramidal to narrowly oval.
- Height.—Original tree, 9.3 meters at 13 years of age.
- Width.—Original tree, 2.1 meters at 13 years of age.
- Caliper.—Original tree, 16.3 cm at 10 cm from ground; 13.0 cm at 1 meter, at 13 years of age.
- Trunk.—Original tree, sturdy, straight, deeply furrowed, with a straight leader.
- Trunk bark texture.—Original tree, deeply furrowed with rough corky bark ridges.
- Trunk bark color.—Immature bark color: Grey-brown 199A, with corky ridges that are Greyed-orange 165B to Brown 200C. Mature bark color: Greyed-brown 197B to Grey 201A. Lenticels: None visible on trunk.
- Primary branches.—Short, sturdy, with wide branch angles.
- Branch angle.—Varies from 40 degrees to 90 degrees, but typically 60 to 90 degrees.
- Branch lenticels.—Small, round, 0.5 mm by 0.5 mm, Greyed-orange 165D to Orange-white 159A. As branches grow, the lenticels become engulfed in the developing corky bark.
- Branch bark.—Smooth at first, becoming irregularly roughened with corky ridges during the first season. Branch bark color: Grey-Green 197A to Grey-Brown 199B. Corky ridges are 1 mm to 4 mm high during the first season. Branch corkiness is patchy during the first two seasons, then branches generally become completely corky by the end of the third season.
- Dormant buds.—Generally triangular in shape with a bluntly acute tip, 2 mm to 5 mm long by 2 mm to 3.5 mm wide. Overlapping scales, mostly two ranked, cover the buds. Short pubescence covers scales. Dormant bud color: Grey-Brown 199C to 199D.
- Internodes.—1.9 cm to 4.0 cm.
- Hardiness.—Has tolerated temperatures to 10 degrees F. without damage in Boring, Oreg. It has not been tested at lower temperatures, but it is believed to have
Zone 3 cold hardiness similar to the species. - Disease resistance.—Highly resistant to powdery mildew (Erysiphe alphitoides) and anthracnose (Apiognomonia quercina).
-
- Leaves:
-
- Except as otherwise noted, observations are from twenty typical vigorous growth leaves.
- Arrangement.—Alternate.
- Texture.—Thick, smooth.
- Sheen.—Very glossy upper surface, dull under surface.
- Length.—13 cm to 21 cm.
- Width.—7 cm to 12 cm.
- Petioles.—1 cm to 1.5 cm long×2 mm wide (diameter). The color of the petioles vary through the growing season and with the degree of exposure to sunlight. In Spring, the petioles are Green 140C; in early Summer, they change to Yellow-Green 145A; in late Summer, portions of the petioles exposed to sunlight change to Greyed-Red 181C, and in the Fall, the petiole color changes to Yellow-Orange 22A to Greyed-Orange 163B.
- Overall shape and orientation.—Obovate, with rounded lobes.
- Leaf orientation.—Leaf angled upward at petiole attachment.
- Margin.—Lobed with 4 to 7 variably shaped lobes. The basal lobes are generally cut more than halfway to the mid-rib and the upper lobes are generally shallowly cut. The lobes become reduced to an irregularly undulate margin at the tip.
- Tip.—Obtuse to rounded.
- Base.—Cuneate.
- Stipules.—None.
- Spring leaf color, first emerging leaves.—Top surface Green 140B. Lower surface Green 140D.
- Summer leaf color.—Upper leaf surface: Green 139A. Lower leaf surface: Yellow-Green 148C to Yellow-Green 149D. Vein: Yellow-Green 145C on underside, Yellow-Green 153C on top.
- Fall leaf color.—Top surface Yellow-Orange 19A to Yellow-Orange 21B.
- Pubescence.—White 157D in color; Underside — tomentulose with dense short tomentum. Top — sparse, scattered stellate hairs.
- Persistence.—Tree is deciduous.
-
- Flowers:
-
- Overall.—Monoecious, with male flowers held in pendulous catkins and female flowers held generally in pairs on short stalks in the axils of leaves.
- Catkin and flowers (observed in original tree).—Male — Long pendulous, cylindrical, many flowered catkins averaging 3 cm to 8 cm long by 3 mm to 5 cm wide. Yellow-green 151A to 151C. Stalk slightly pubescent, pubescence White 157D in color. Individual flowers consist of a highly reduced calyx with generally five protruding stamens. Anthers Yellow 13A. Female — Generally held in pairs or occasionally threes on a 2 mm to 5 mm long stalk in leaf axils. Flowers are typically 3 mm by 3 mm overall, Yellow-green 145A. The calyx is reduced to bracts surrounding a globose ovary with a three lobed pistil. Stigma color is Yellow-green 154B.
- Fragrance.—None.
- Flowering date.—In Boring, Oreg., original tree had a peak bloom May 20, during the 2009 growing season.
-
- Fruit: Observations are from a sampling of typical fruit from the original tree as the progeny are too young to have produced any acorns.
-
- Type.—Acorn, consisting of a nut and a cap that surrounds the top one-third to one-half of the nut.
- Size.—Overall, acorn averages 18 mm long by 15 mm in diameter at widest location. Nut is 17 mm long×13 mm in diameter at the widest location. Cap is 15 mm in diameter at the widest location×9 mm high. Stalk varies from 2 mm to 12 mm long×1 mm to 2 mm in diameter.
- Shape.—Ovoid, smooth nut with rounded, scaled cap. Cap margin with long, wavy scales giving a fringed appearance.
- Color.—Nut — Greyed-Orange 165B to Greyed-Orange 165C. Cap — Greyed-Green 197A to Greyed-Green 197C.
- Seeds.—Fleshy to firm, ovoid, 14 mm×9 mm, Greyed-Orange 165A when mature. Surface is finely rugose.
- Fruit production.—Moderate.
- Usage.—Food source for wild life.
-
- Comparison to the species: My new variety is taller and more narrow in form than the species. The 13 year old original tree is best described as narrowly pyramidal to narrowly oval in shape, while typical trees of the species are broadly oval at the same age. Measurement of propagated one and two year old trees of my new variety and seedlings of the species confirm this form difference. This, and other differences are detailed in Table 1 below.
| TABLE 1 | ||
| Feature: | ‘JFS-KW3’ | Seedling |
| Height, 1 year tree | 1.75 meter | 1.09 meter |
| Height, 2 year tree | 2.59 meter | 2.44 meter |
| Longest branch, 2 year | 38 cm | 66 cm |
| Ratio of Height to | 6.8 to 1 | 3.7 to 1 |
| Longest branch | ||
| Leaf upper surface | Glossy | Dull |
| Leaf color, upper | Green 139A | Yellow-green 144A to |
| surface | Green 139A | |
| Leaf orientation | Upward along branch | Outward from branch |
| Petiole angle from | 20° to 50° | 80° to 110° |
| branch | ||
| Acorns | Observed in original tree | Large, typically 20 mm |
| only, small, 18 mm long | to 40 mm long by 18 to | |
| by 15 mm in diameter at | 35 mm in diameter at | |
| the widest location | the widest location | |
Claims (1)
1. A new and distinct variety of bur oak tree, substantially as herein shown and described.
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US12/657,697 USPP22815P2 (en) | 2010-01-25 | 2010-01-25 | Bur oak tree named ‘JFS-KW3’ |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US12/657,697 USPP22815P2 (en) | 2010-01-25 | 2010-01-25 | Bur oak tree named ‘JFS-KW3’ |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| USPP22815P2 true USPP22815P2 (en) | 2012-06-26 |
Family
ID=46273039
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US12/657,697 Active 2030-08-08 USPP22815P2 (en) | 2010-01-25 | 2010-01-25 | Bur oak tree named ‘JFS-KW3’ |
Country Status (1)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | USPP22815P2 (en) |
Citations (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USPP11431P (en) * | 1998-04-28 | 2000-06-27 | Heritage Trees, Inc. | Oak tree named `Clemons` |
| USPP21359P2 (en) * | 2008-10-28 | 2010-10-05 | Earl Cully | Hybrid oak tree named ‘Taylor’ |
-
2010
- 2010-01-25 US US12/657,697 patent/USPP22815P2/en active Active
Patent Citations (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USPP11431P (en) * | 1998-04-28 | 2000-06-27 | Heritage Trees, Inc. | Oak tree named `Clemons` |
| USPP21359P2 (en) * | 2008-10-28 | 2010-10-05 | Earl Cully | Hybrid oak tree named ‘Taylor’ |
Non-Patent Citations (2)
| Title |
|---|
| Anonymous. "JFS Introductions Quercus macrocarpa 'JFRS-KW3' P.A.F" Available at: http://www.jfschmidt.com/introductions/urbanpinnacle/index.html accessed Sep. 28, 2011. * |
| Anonymous. "Urban Pinnacle Oak". Available at: http://www.jfschmidt.com/pdfs/urbanpinnacleoak.pdf accessed Sep. 28, 2011. * |
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Legal Events
| Date | Code | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| AS | Assignment |
Owner name: J. FRANK SCHMIDT & SON CO., OREGON Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:WARREN, KEITH S.;REEL/FRAME:024040/0326 Effective date: 20100125 |