Cultivar 241: Mantet

Taxon ID: 1

Usage Facet: class=edible; edible_score=1.0; ornamental_score=0.0; inferred_from_taxon=yes

Relationships: 1 | Linked Entities (visible): 1 | Evidence claims: 16 | History events: 3 | Catalog issue offerings: 0

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Evidence Badge: emerging | claims=16 | sources=2 | contradictions=0

Claim Types: description_snippet:3, source_reference_abbreviation:3, anecdote_snippet:1, breeding_cross:1, fruit_color:1, fruit_size:1, hardiness_code_expansion:1, release_year_reference:1, selection_origin_reference:1 | Open evidence summary JSON | Open citation drawer JSON

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Wiki Draft

Mantet is an early dessert apple from the Experimental Station at Morden, Manitoba. It was released in 1929 as a seedling of Tetofsky.[S1] [S3] [S5] It was one of the first apple introductions from the Morden program and soon stood out as a true eating apple for prairie growers.[S1] [S5] One later account says W. T. Macoun tasted it at Morden and exclaimed, "Man! there's a real apple," and it was then named Mantet without further trial.[S1]

Sources describe the tree as upright, moderately vigorous, hardy, and productive.[S5] Mantet had fruited in the Swan River and Peace River valleys by the mid 1940s, placing it well into northern prairie testing and use, though one earlier prairie judgment called it "a good apple but too tender."[S1] [S5] A South Dakota nursery listing also shows it in commerce beyond Canada.[S2]

The fruit is described as medium to below medium, or up to about 6 cm, roundish, with an amber ground color and a heavy bright red wash or stripes.[S1] [S5] The flesh is whitish, fine grained, tender, juicy, and aromatic, with excellent quality for fresh eating.[S3] [S5] One prairie descriptor table records it as medium sized, amber with pinkish red overcolor, whitish fleshed, and intended for fresh use.[S3]

Mantet ripens in late August and September and was remembered as a promising, popular early eating apple.[S5] The sources here do not give it a long storage life, and its main importance is as an early fresh apple rather than a keeper.[S5] One note also warns that it is subject to sunscald.[S1]

In broader prairie fruit history, Mantet matters both as a Morden introduction and as breeding material. The cultivar itself descends from Tetofsky.[S3] [S5] Separately, Mantet later appears as a parent in Prairie Fruit Breeding Project crosses such as Rescue x Mantet, showing that it remained useful in later apple breeding and was not only an orchard variety.[S4]

Summary source basis

This summary currently draws chiefly from Edible Apples in Prairie Canada, with 4 additional supporting sources linked below.

Featured source descriptions

“It was named Mantet without further trial.”
[1]
“Included in the cross "Rescue x Mantet" with 3 selections at Lacombe 3.”
[5]
“Subject to sunscald.”
[1]
“Medium season entry.”
[4]

Parentage

Direct parent cultivars

Parentage claim text

Lineage Links

Derived or downstream cultivar links

Story Highlights

Source-story quotations

Family Navigation

Taxonomy context: No family-tree context surfaced yet.

Related cultivars mentioned in source context

No sibling cultivars surfaced from source quotes yet.

Cold Hardiness

Zone assertions are structured rows. Hardiness claim text appears in evidence claims and page-linked citations.

Zone MinZone MaxZone TextAssertion TypeOutcomeLocationConfidence
No explicit zone assertion rows yet.

Media Gallery

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Citation Drawer (Top Supporting Sources)

DocumentTitle/URLRightsClaimsRelationshipsHistory EventsPagesSnippets
3Edible Apples in Prairie Canadaunknown1500p45References cited: WCSH (Western Canadian Society for Horticulture (1944- ).).; Hardiness rated moderately hardy (H2).; Listed as a standard apple (standard apple, fruit 5 cm diameter or more).; Hardiness noted as H2, ind
57Noretunknown113n/aRescue x Mantet; relationship: cross_parent; history: Selection origin University of Alberta; history: Selection origin Morden Research Station, Agriculture Canada, by Dr

Citation Evidence (Page-Linked Quotes)

DocumentPageClaim TypeClaimQuoteMatch
3p45source_reference_abbreviationReferences cited: WCSH (Western Canadian Society for Horticulture (1944- ).).Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45entry_hardiness_observationHardiness rated moderately hardy (H2).Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45description_snippetListed as a standard apple (standard apple, fruit 5 cm diameter or more).Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45hardiness_code_expansionHardiness noted as H2, indicating moderately hardy in the document legend.Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45source_reference_abbreviationFire blight notation FB2 is recorded.Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45source_reference_abbreviationReference cited as WCSH (1955), likely Western Canadian Society for Horticulture.Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45description_snippetCoutts (1991) called it "a good apple but too tender."Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45description_snippetSubject to sunscald.Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45release_year_referenceIt was named Mantet without further trial.Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45anecdote_snippetJ.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple."Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45entry_locationReported to fruit in Peace Country.Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45fruit_colorFruit is washed and striped bright red.Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45fruit_sizeStandard apple; fruit to 6 cm.Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45selection_origin_referenceMorden selection or record dated 1929.Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90
3p45entry_pedigreeTetofsky seedling.Mantet (Tetofsky sdlg) Morden (1929) ST Fruit to 6cm, washed and striped bright red. Fruits in peace country. J.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple.page_block:0.90

Nursery Offering Timeline

YearNurseryCatalog IssueRelation
No catalog issue offerings linked.

Linked Entities

RelationTypeIDLabel
cross_parentcultivar240Rescue

Evidence Claims

TypeClaimConfidence
source_reference_abbreviationReferences cited: WCSH (Western Canadian Society for Horticulture (1944- ).).0.93
entry_hardiness_observationHardiness rated moderately hardy (H2).0.96
description_snippetListed as a standard apple (standard apple, fruit 5 cm diameter or more).0.96
hardiness_code_expansionHardiness noted as H2, indicating moderately hardy in the document legend.0.95
source_reference_abbreviationFire blight notation FB2 is recorded.0.73
source_reference_abbreviationReference cited as WCSH (1955), likely Western Canadian Society for Horticulture.0.91
description_snippetCoutts (1991) called it "a good apple but too tender."0.94
description_snippetSubject to sunscald.0.96
release_year_referenceIt was named Mantet without further trial.0.94
anecdote_snippetJ.I. Macoun visited Morden as Dominion Horticulturist and exclaimed on tasting it, "Man! there's a real apple."0.95
entry_locationReported to fruit in Peace Country.0.88
fruit_colorFruit is washed and striped bright red.0.97
fruit_sizeStandard apple; fruit to 6 cm.0.96
selection_origin_referenceMorden selection or record dated 1929.0.96
entry_pedigreeTetofsky seedling.0.97
breeding_crossRescue x Mantet0.65

History Events

IDTypeYearLabel
501selection_origin_eventSelection origin University of Alberta
500selection_origin_eventSelection origin Morden Research Station, Agriculture Canada, by Dr
499cross_event1975Rescue x Mantet