Taxon ID:
Usage Facet: class=edible; edible_score=1.0; ornamental_score=0.0; inferred_from_taxon=no
Relationships: 0 | Linked Entities (visible): 0 | Evidence claims: 2 | History events: 0 | Catalog issue offerings: 0
Open profile JSON | Open lineage explorer | Open lineage JSON
Evidence Badge: emerging | claims=2 | sources=1 | contradictions=0
Claim Types: productivity:1, recommendation_context:1 | Open evidence summary JSON | Open citation drawer JSON
Connected Views: lineage table | lineage graph | history charts | trait matrix | search
Link Filter: showing signal links (candidate hidden); hidden candidate links=0. Show candidate links
Gardenia is listed by Daniels Nursery as a yellow climbing rose. The catalog calls it “the most satisfactory yellow climber” and says it bears many large flowers [S1].
The source gives no breeder, parentage, release date, or place of origin. Gardenia appears in a 1950 nursery catalog page for roses sold for northern and northwestern climates, including Minnesota and the Dakotas [S1].
The description is brief. Gardenia is described by its yellow bloom color, climbing habit, large flowers, and heavy bloom [S1]. The source does not describe fragrance, fruit, hips, disease resistance, ripening season, culinary use, or storage qualities.
Daniels says the roses on this page require winter protection. This is stated even though the nursery describes its stock as hardy, field grown, two-year-old plants selected for the rugged climate of the Northwest [S1]. Gardenia should not be treated from this source as an unprotected zone 3 fruiting perennial. It is an ornamental rose catalog entry, not an edible fruit cultivar record [S1].
Summary source basis
This summary currently draws chiefly from Daniels planting guide, 1950.
Direct parent cultivars
Parentage claim text
Derived or downstream cultivar links
Source-story quotations
Taxonomy context: No family-tree context surfaced yet.
Related cultivars mentioned in source context
Zone assertions are structured rows. Hardiness claim text appears in evidence claims and page-linked citations.
| Zone Min | Zone Max | Zone Text | Assertion Type | Outcome | Location | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No explicit zone assertion rows yet. | ||||||
No linked media assets.
| Document | Title/URL | Rights | Claims | Relationships | History Events | Pages | Snippets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 106 | Daniels planting guide, 1950 | unknown | 2 | 0 | 0 | p12 | Large flowers are borne in profusion.; Described as the most satisfactory yellow climber. |
| Document | Page | Claim Type | Claim | Quote | Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 106 | p12 | productivity | Large flowers are borne in profusion. | GARDENIA—The most satisfactory yellow climber. Large flowers borne in profusion. | page_block:0.90 |
| 106 | p12 | recommendation_context | Described as the most satisfactory yellow climber. | GARDENIA—The most satisfactory yellow climber. Large flowers borne in profusion. | page_block:0.90 |
| Year | Nursery | Catalog Issue | Relation |
|---|---|---|---|
| No catalog issue offerings linked. | |||
| Relation | Type | ID | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| No linked entities at this filter level. | |||
| Type | Claim | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| productivity | Large flowers are borne in profusion. | 0.95 |
| recommendation_context | Described as the most satisfactory yellow climber. | 0.96 |
| ID | Type | Year | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| No history events. | |||