USPP9982P - Rhaphiolepis×delacourii Andre `Georgia Charm` - Google Patents
Rhaphiolepis×delacourii Andre `Georgia Charm` Download PDFInfo
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- USPP9982P USPP9982P US08/542,632 US54263295V US9982P US PP9982 P USPP9982 P US PP9982P US 54263295 V US54263295 V US 54263295V US 9982 P US9982 P US 9982P
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- georgia
- rhaphiolepis
- delacourii
- plant
- charm
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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
- A01H6/74—Rosaceae, e.g. strawberry, apple, almonds, pear, rose, blackberries or raspberries
Definitions
- the plant of this invention is an ornamental evergreen semi-dwarf flowering shrub which is resistant to Entomosporium leafspot and is fairly cold hardy in comparison with other plants within the botanical and market classes.
- Rhaphiolepis is a genus of the Rosaceae family containing several species of evergreen shrubs that originated in China and Japan. They are considered well adapted for garden and landscape use in mild climate regions, and they are particularly well-suited to coastal areas, due to their tolerance to salt spray, drought and sandy soils.
- the hybrid Rhaphiolepis taxa, R. ⁇ delacourii was first reported and grown in the late nineteenth century by Delacour, a gardener in 1991. This hybrid shows moderate resistance to leaf spot and cold damage, while plant characters are intermediate between the parent species, R. indica and R. umbellata.
- Rhaphiolepis umbellata (sometimes referred to as Rhaphiolepis japonica or Rhaphiolepis ovata), commonly known as Yeddo Hawthorn, is native to Japan and the Ryukyu islands. It is typically a rounded shrub that can reach a maximum height of about 12 feet (The New York Botanical Garden Illustrated Encyclopedia of Horticulture, Thomas H. Everett, Garland Publishing, Inc. 1992, pp. 2885-2886). Rhaphiolepis umbellata is used in the landscapes as an intermediate sized shrub. It is attractive because it blooms profusely in the springtime with white to pink flowers and because dark-blue to black fruits form in the summer and persist throughout the fall and winter.
- ⁇ Georgia Charm ⁇ was developed from an organized, scientifically designed breeding program conducted at the University of Georgia Experiment Station at Griffin, Ga.
- ⁇ Georgia Charm ⁇ originated from a seedling population of a cross of Plant Introduction selection Rhaphiolepis umbellata PI277653 and Rhaphiolepis umbellata ⁇ Ovata. ⁇
- the PI parent (currently available in the trade as ⁇ Eskimo ⁇ ) has plant characters atypical of R. umbellata, being an apparent hybrid of R. umbellata and R. indica, consequently this accession more appropriately fits the description of Rhaphiolepis ⁇ delacourii.
- the two parents were chosen following a six-year study of twenty cultivars which were evaluated for cold tolerance and resistance to Entomosporium maculatum leafspot. These two parents were ranked the best in these two catagories. Approximately 2,000 seedlings from the cross were grown in simulated nursery and landscape conditions and then evaluated for superiority in the desired characteristics of compact growth habit, cold tolerance, and leaf spot resistance. The first act of asexual reproduction of ⁇ Georgia Charm ⁇ occurred in 1983 using semi-hardwood cuttings. Propagation has been successful (75 to 90 percent) using semi-hardwood cuttings taken during June to August. Cuttings were stuck in a well-drained medium under intermittent mist after a quick dip of 10,000 ppm indole butyric acid. Seeds are viable, but vegetative propagation is essential to maintain the characteristics true to the cultivar. Plants are presently being propagated by four Georgia nursery propagators who were selected and licensed by the Georgia Seed Development Commission, Georgia Department of Agriculture.
- the present invention comprises a new and distinct plant cultivar of Rhaphiolepis ⁇ delacourii Andre, which has been given the cultivar name ⁇ Georgia Charm. ⁇ The following are the most pronounced characteristics of this new cultivar when grown in the Georgia pasmont under low maintenance landscape conditions:
- Mature leaves are lustrous dark green with light green undersides, elliptic-obovate shape, distally serrate margins, and rounded apex.
- the single flowers are white with deep maroon stamens.
- FIG. 1 illustrates the low stature of the plant relative to a yardstick.
- FIG. 2 illustrates the color and shape of the flowers and leaves of the plant in greater detail.
- ⁇ Georgia Charm ⁇ is a new and distinct plant cultivar of Rhaphiolepis ⁇ delacourii Andre. Distinctive characteristics of cultivars similar to ⁇ Georgia Charm ⁇ are presented in the following table:
- the cultivar ⁇ Georgia Charm ⁇ is an evergreen shrub which typically matures at approximately 4 feet in height with a rounded canopy, spreading to approximately 5 feet in width. Branching is compact, leading to the low stature of the plant, and flowering is precocious. Growth is vigorous prior to maturity and moderately slow thereafter. When grown in partial shade locations, plant measurements increase by 8 to 10 inches, but plant canopy remains very desirable and flowering remains precocious. Its flowers are white with deep maroon stamens and appear for two to three weeks during middle to late April in northern Georgia, although the exact flowering period is dependent on weather conditions. Flowering occurs in the first year. The leaves are lustrous dark green with light green underside and distally serrate margins.
- the leaf shape is elliptic-obovate and rounded at the apex, measuring approximately 2.0 inches ⁇ 0.8 inches. Branching is irregular with one to three new breaks per stem with 1.0 to 1.5 centimeters internode length. Four to five leaves originate just below each terminal stem bud. The terminal stem buds are dark green in color. Bark on current season's growth is greenish-grey and changes to medium grey during the second year. Clusters of bluish-black fruits (R.H.S. Color 103A) are approximately one centimeter in diameter and are quite showy, persisting from summer into winter. However, the fruits are not significantly different from those of either parent.
- ⁇ Georgia Charm ⁇ showed no symptoms of leafspot during replicated field tests when interplanted with infected susceptible species (redtipped photinia and cleyera) for inoculation, which makes it significantly distinct from most other commercially available cultivars of this species.
- the cold tolerance is significantly improved, thus extending the adaptability range of this species northward to the pasmont areas of the southeastern United States (USDA Hardiness Zone 7b).
- the traits of the semi-dwarf habit, the cold tolerance, and the strong resistance to leafspot disease make this a unique selection in the species and a good companion plant for the landscape designer's plant palettes in developing environmental plantings located in USDA climactic zones 7b to 10.
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- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Natural Medicines & Medicinal Plants (AREA)
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- Botany (AREA)
- Developmental Biology & Embryology (AREA)
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- Cultivation Of Plants (AREA)
Abstract
This new plant is a distinct variety of Rhaphiolepis×delacourii Andre that is characterized by its semi-dwarf habit, its cold tolerance and its resistance to Entomosporium leafspot.
Description
The plant of this invention is an ornamental evergreen semi-dwarf flowering shrub which is resistant to Entomosporium leafspot and is fairly cold hardy in comparison with other plants within the botanical and market classes.
Rhaphiolepis is a genus of the Rosaceae family containing several species of evergreen shrubs that originated in China and Japan. They are considered well adapted for garden and landscape use in mild climate regions, and they are particularly well-suited to coastal areas, due to their tolerance to salt spray, drought and sandy soils. The hybrid Rhaphiolepis taxa, R.×delacourii, was first reported and grown in the late nineteenth century by Delacour, a gardener in Cannes, France. This hybrid shows moderate resistance to leaf spot and cold damage, while plant characters are intermediate between the parent species, R. indica and R. umbellata. Rhaphiolepis umbellata (sometimes referred to as Rhaphiolepis japonica or Rhaphiolepis ovata), commonly known as Yeddo Hawthorn, is native to Japan and the Ryukyu islands. It is typically a rounded shrub that can reach a maximum height of about 12 feet (The New York Botanical Garden Illustrated Encyclopedia of Horticulture, Thomas H. Everett, Garland Publishing, Inc. 1992, pp. 2885-2886). Rhaphiolepis umbellata is used in the landscapes as an intermediate sized shrub. It is attractive because it blooms profusely in the springtime with white to pink flowers and because dark-blue to black fruits form in the summer and persist throughout the fall and winter. Regarding its size, it is typically reported as "unpredictable," with reports ranging from the 12 feet as reported above, to "4-6 feet, spread 6 feet" (in "Landscape Plants of the Southeast," R. Gordon Halfacre and Anne R. Shawcroft, Sparks Press 1979, p. 128), to "1-4 m" (in "The New Royal Horticultural Society Dictionary of Gardening, Anthony Huxley, Editor-in-Chief, The MacMillan Press Limited, 1992; p. 24) to "1.2 m" (in "The Hillier Manual of Trees & Shrubs, Sixth Edition," David & Charles, 1992, p. 356). Due to this documented variability in size, there has been a need to develop a new cultivar with a more compact habit for use in certain landscape settings. Additionally, there is a need to develop a landscape plant well-adapted to United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Hardiness Zone 7b and which demonstrates resistance to leaf spot disease that has become a serious problem on this species.
`Georgia Charm` was developed from an organized, scientifically designed breeding program conducted at the University of Georgia Experiment Station at Griffin, Ga. `Georgia Charm` originated from a seedling population of a cross of Plant Introduction selection Rhaphiolepis umbellata PI277653 and Rhaphiolepis umbellata `Ovata.` The PI parent (currently available in the trade as `Eskimo`) has plant characters atypical of R. umbellata, being an apparent hybrid of R. umbellata and R. indica, consequently this accession more appropriately fits the description of Rhaphiolepis×delacourii. The two parents were chosen following a six-year study of twenty cultivars which were evaluated for cold tolerance and resistance to Entomosporium maculatum leafspot. These two parents were ranked the best in these two catagories. Approximately 2,000 seedlings from the cross were grown in simulated nursery and landscape conditions and then evaluated for superiority in the desired characteristics of compact growth habit, cold tolerance, and leaf spot resistance. The first act of asexual reproduction of `Georgia Charm` occurred in 1983 using semi-hardwood cuttings. Propagation has been successful (75 to 90 percent) using semi-hardwood cuttings taken during June to August. Cuttings were stuck in a well-drained medium under intermittent mist after a quick dip of 10,000 ppm indole butyric acid. Seeds are viable, but vegetative propagation is essential to maintain the characteristics true to the cultivar. Plants are presently being propagated by four Georgia nursery propagators who were selected and licensed by the Georgia Seed Development Commission, Georgia Department of Agriculture.
The present invention comprises a new and distinct plant cultivar of Rhaphiolepis×delacourii Andre, which has been given the cultivar name `Georgia Charm.` The following are the most pronounced characteristics of this new cultivar when grown in the Georgia piedmont under low maintenance landscape conditions:
1. Compact and mounding in nature. The plant is slightly wider than tall (4 feet×5 feet).
2. Moderately slow growth rate, requiring little pruning.
3. Cold hardy through USDA Zone 7b.
4. High resistance to leaf spot.
5. Relatively pest resistant.
6. Adapted to a wide range of soil types.
7. Mature leaves are lustrous dark green with light green undersides, elliptic-obovate shape, distally serrate margins, and rounded apex.
8. The single flowers are white with deep maroon stamens.
9. Clusters of bluish-black fruits, one centimeter in diameter, persist from summer into winter.
10. Good plant for foundation plantings, informal beds, low hedges, and wildlife habitat.
The file of this patent contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Patent and Trademark Office upon request and payment of the proper fee. The accompanying photographic prints illustrate this new cultivar of Rhaphiolepis×delacourii:
FIG. 1 illustrates the low stature of the plant relative to a yardstick.
FIG. 2 illustrates the color and shape of the flowers and leaves of the plant in greater detail.
Colors shown are reasonably accurate by conventional photographic procedures. Colors of various plant parts are defined using The Royal Horticultural Society (R.H.S.) Colour Chart for standardization. Description of some colors in less exacting terms are used where appropriate for clarity in meaning.
`Georgia Charm` is a new and distinct plant cultivar of Rhaphiolepis×delacourii Andre. Distinctive characteristics of cultivars similar to `Georgia Charm` are presented in the following table:
______________________________________
Win- Leaf-
ter spot
Species/
Leaf Leaf Flower
Hardi-
Resis-
Plant Size
Cultivar
Shape Size Color ness* tance**
Ht. × Spd.
______________________________________
R. indica
Un- Vari- Pink 8b Poor Variable
Indian dulating able (15° F.)
Hawthorn
R. Smooth Vari- White 8 Good Variable
umbellata able (10° F.)
Yedda
Hawthorn
R. ×
Variable Vari- Lt.- 8 Poor- 4 × 6
delacourii able Pink (10° F.)
Good [feet]
Hybrid White
R. ×
Elliptic-
2.2 ×
Lt. 7b Excel-
6 × 8
delacourii
obovate 0.8 Pink (5° F.)
lent [feet]
`Eskimo`
Smooth [inches]
R. ×
Lightly 2.3 ×
Lt. 7b Excel-
2.5 × 3
delacourii
serrated 1.6 Pink (5° F.)
lent [feet]
`Georgia
Obovate [inches]
Petite`
R. ×
Distally 2.0 ×
White 7b Excel-
4 × 5
delacourii
serrated 0.8 (5° F.)
lent [feet]
`Georgia
Elliptic-
[inches]
Charm` obovate
______________________________________
*Excerpted from landscape plantings and laboratory freeze tests; USDA
Plant Hardiness Zones.
**Excerpted from replicated field tests interplanted with infected
susceptible species for inoculation.
The cultivar `Georgia Charm` is an evergreen shrub which typically matures at approximately 4 feet in height with a rounded canopy, spreading to approximately 5 feet in width. Branching is compact, leading to the low stature of the plant, and flowering is precocious. Growth is vigorous prior to maturity and moderately slow thereafter. When grown in partial shade locations, plant measurements increase by 8 to 10 inches, but plant canopy remains very desirable and flowering remains precocious. Its flowers are white with deep maroon stamens and appear for two to three weeks during middle to late April in northern Georgia, although the exact flowering period is dependent on weather conditions. Flowering occurs in the first year. The leaves are lustrous dark green with light green underside and distally serrate margins. The leaf shape is elliptic-obovate and rounded at the apex, measuring approximately 2.0 inches×0.8 inches. Branching is irregular with one to three new breaks per stem with 1.0 to 1.5 centimeters internode length. Four to five leaves originate just below each terminal stem bud. The terminal stem buds are dark green in color. Bark on current season's growth is greenish-grey and changes to medium grey during the second year. Clusters of bluish-black fruits (R.H.S. Color 103A) are approximately one centimeter in diameter and are quite showy, persisting from summer into winter. However, the fruits are not significantly different from those of either parent.
`Georgia Charm` showed no symptoms of leafspot during replicated field tests when interplanted with infected susceptible species (redtipped photinia and cleyera) for inoculation, which makes it significantly distinct from most other commercially available cultivars of this species. The cold tolerance is significantly improved, thus extending the adaptability range of this species northward to the piedmont areas of the southeastern United States (USDA Hardiness Zone 7b). The traits of the semi-dwarf habit, the cold tolerance, and the strong resistance to leafspot disease make this a unique selection in the species and a good companion plant for the landscape designer's plant palettes in developing environmental plantings located in USDA climactic zones 7b to 10.
Claims (1)
1. The new distinct plant cultivar of Rhaphiolepis×delacourii Andre, substantially as herein shown and described.
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US08/542,632 USPP9982P (en) | 1995-10-13 | 1995-10-13 | Rhaphiolepis×delacourii Andre `Georgia Charm` |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US08/542,632 USPP9982P (en) | 1995-10-13 | 1995-10-13 | Rhaphiolepis×delacourii Andre `Georgia Charm` |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| USPP9982P true USPP9982P (en) | 1997-07-29 |
Family
ID=24164664
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US08/542,632 Expired - Lifetime USPP9982P (en) | 1995-10-13 | 1995-10-13 | Rhaphiolepis×delacourii Andre `Georgia Charm` |
Country Status (1)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | USPP9982P (en) |
Citations (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USPP9398P (en) * | 1995-02-10 | 1995-12-12 | Flowerwood Nursery Inc. | Raphiolepis indica variety named `Conor` |
-
1995
- 1995-10-13 US US08/542,632 patent/USPP9982P/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Patent Citations (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USPP9398P (en) * | 1995-02-10 | 1995-12-12 | Flowerwood Nursery Inc. | Raphiolepis indica variety named `Conor` |
Non-Patent Citations (10)
| Title |
|---|
| "The New Royal Horticultural Society Dictionary of Gardening," Anthony Huxley, Editor-in-Chief, 1992, The MacMillan Press Limited, p. 24. |
| Everett, Thomas H., "The New York Botanical Garden Illustrated Encyclopedia of Horticulture," 1992, Garland Publishing, Inc., pp. 2885-2886. |
| Everett, Thomas H., The New York Botanical Garden Illustrated Encyclopedia of Horticulture, 1992, Garland Publishing, Inc., pp. 2885 2886. * |
| Halfacre, R. Gordon, and Anne R. Shawcroft, Landscape Plants of the Southeast, 1979, Sparks Press, p. 128, p. 88 and map. * |
| Lindstrom, Orville M. and Will L. Corley, "Leaf and Stem Cold Hardiness of Four Selections Raphiolepis umbellata Makino," 1992, J. Environ. Hort., 10(1):1-3. |
| Lindstrom, Orville M. and Will L. Corley, Leaf and Stem Cold Hardiness of Four Selections Raphiolepis umbellata Makino, 1992, J. Environ. Hort., 10(1):1 3. * |
| Odenwald, Neil G. and James R. Turner, "Plants for the South: A Guide for Landscape Design," 1980, Claitor's Publishing Division, Baton Rouge, p. 426. |
| Odenwald, Neil G. and James R. Turner, Plants for the South: A Guide for Landscape Design, 1980, Claitor s Publishing Division, Baton Rouge, p. 426. * |
| The Hillier Manual of Trees and Shrubs, Sixth Edition, David & Charles, 1991, p. 356. * |
| The New Royal Horticultural Society Dictionary of Gardening, Anthony Huxley, Editor in Chief, 1992, The MacMillan Press Limited, p. 24. * |
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Legal Events
| Date | Code | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| AS | Assignment |
Owner name: UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA RESEARCH FOUNDATION INC., GE Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:CORLEY, WILL L.;REEL/FRAME:008395/0079 Effective date: 19961022 |