Document 110
Title: Growing Haskap in Canada
Source URL: https://research-groups.usask.ca/fruit/documents/haskap/growinghaskapinCanada.pdf
Archive provenance: discovery_round_01 curated pdf import | institution=University of Saskatchewan Fruit Program | source_root=https://research-groups.usask.ca | local_archive=/usr/local/var/www/pomologica/data/raw/manual/ingest_queue/discovery_round_01_second_corpus/growinghaskapinCanada.pdf
Type: pdf | Language: en | Rights: unknown
Aliases: 1 | Provenance events: 2 | Evidence claims: 49
Archivist page review: Review parse variants for page 3
Institution: University of Saskatchewan Fruit Program
Publisher:
Site:
Year:
Page count:
Type: extension publication
Metadata source: intake_manifest_v1
| ID | Relation | Source | Target | Source Doc |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 356 | mentioned_in_document | One Green Earth Nursery | Growing Haskap in Canada | 110 |
| 355 | mentioned_in_document | Oregon State University | Growing Haskap in Canada | 110 |
| 354 | mentioned_in_document | University Of Saskatchewan | Growing Haskap in Canada | 110 |
| ID | Type | Year | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| 770 | year_reference | 1950 | Year reference 1950 |
| 776 | institution_mention | 1950 | University Of Saskatchewan |
| 777 | institution_mention | 1950 | Oregon State University |
| 778 | nursery_mention | 1950 | One Green Earth Nursery |
| 771 | year_reference | 1990 | Year reference 1990 |
| 773 | year_reference | 1998 | Year reference 1998 |
| 772 | year_reference | 2003 | Year reference 2003 |
| 775 | year_reference | 2007 | Year reference 2007 |
| 774 | year_reference | 2008 | Year reference 2008 |
Cultivar: Borealis
| Page | Basis | Snippet |
|---|---|---|
| 2 | explicit_cultivar_reference | Figure 1. 'Borealis' is a new cultivar recommended for home gardeners. |
| 3 | explicit_cultivar_reference | In 2007 we released two named varieties ‘Borealis’ and ‘Tundra’ and 3 test selections: 9-91, 9-92 and 9-15. These 5 are Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids. |
| 7 | explicit_cultivar_reference | Selections that had big fat berries (like Borealis and Tundra) were the best, but thin tubular Russian types dehydrated by late July. |
| Page | Type | Claim | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | caption_context | Figure 1 shows fruit of 'Borealis'. | 0.98 |
| 2 | recommendation_context | 'Borealis' is described as a new cultivar recommended for home gardeners. | 0.99 |
| 2 | taxon_context | Within this document, 'Borealis' is treated in the context of haskap, Lonicera caerulea. | 0.9 |
| 3 | release_year_reference | Released in 2007 as one of two named University of Saskatchewan varieties. | 0.98 |
| 3 | entry_pedigree | Identified as one of five Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids discussed in the release sentence. | 0.94 |
| 3 | fruit_size | The five Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids are described as having fruit much larger than Russian cultivars currently on the North American market. | 0.9 |
| 3 | flavor_profile | The five hybrids are described as tasting better than Russian cultivars currently on the North American market. | 0.86 |
| 3 | growth_habit | The five hybrids are described as having a nice round shape. | 0.86 |
| 3 | description_snippet | The leaves of these hybrids are said to have less powdery mildew than other tested varieties. | 0.84 |
| 3 | caption_context | Previous page context identifies Borealis as a new cultivar recommended for home gardeners. | 0.86 |
| 7 | fruit_size | Borealis is given as an example of selections that had big fat berries. | 0.95 |
| 7 | keeping_quality | In an unharvested row trial, big fat berry selections such as Borealis were described as the best for fruit remaining good after normal harvest, compared with thin tubular Russian types that dehydrated by late July. | 0.9 |
| 7 | description_snippet | The page groups Borealis with Tundra as examples of big fat berry selections in a harvest-holding observation from 2006 and 2007. | 0.9 |
Cultivar Citation Focus: This reader is filtered to citation evidence linked to Borealis (ID 1888) within document 110. Use the rows below to jump the PDF directly to relevant passages.
Citation focus: cultivar focus: Borealis (ID 1888) | page focus: 3
Choose a citation row to jump the PDF view. The `focus` term is sent to browser PDF search where supported.
| Page | Type | Quote | Claim | Entity | Jump |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | recommendation_context | Figure 1. 'Borealis' is a new cultivar recommended for home gardeners. | Figure 1 identifies 'Borealis' as a new cultivar and explicitly states it is recommended for home gardeners. | cultivar 1888 | Open Review parse |
| 2 | description_snippet | Figure 1. 'Borealis' is a new cultivar recommended for home gardeners. | Borealis is presented as a new haskap cultivar in a figure-caption context. | cultivar 1888 | Open Review parse |
| 3 | release_year_reference | In 2007 we released two named varieties ‘Borealis’ and ‘Tundra’ and 3 test selections: 9-91, 9-92 and 9-15. These 5 are Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids. They have fruit much larger than Russian cultivars currently on the | Borealis was released by the Uof Sprogram in 2007 as one of two named Russian/Kuril-Island hybrid cultivars. | cultivar 1888 | Open Review parse |
| 3 | entry_pedigree | In 2007 we released two named varieties ‘Borealis’ and ‘Tundra’ and 3 test selections: 9-91, 9-92 and 9-15. These 5 are Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids. They have fruit much larger than Russian cultivars currently on the | Borealis is part of a group identified as Russian/Kuril-Island hybrids. | cultivar 1888 | Open Review parse |
| 3 | fruit_size | In 2007 we released two named varieties ‘Borealis’ and ‘Tundra’ and 3 test selections: 9-91, 9-92 and 9-15. These 5 are Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids. They have fruit much larger than Russian cultivars currently on the | Borealis is described as having fruit much larger than Russian cultivars then on the North American market. | cultivar 1888 | Open Review parse |
| 3 | flavor_profile | In 2007 we released two named varieties ‘Borealis’ and ‘Tundra’ and 3 test selections: 9-91, 9-92 and 9-15. These 5 are Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids. They have fruit much larger than Russian cultivars currently on the | Borealis is described as tasting better than other compared Russian cultivars. | cultivar 1888 | Open Review parse |
| 3 | description_snippet | In 2007 we released two named varieties ‘Borealis’ and ‘Tundra’ and 3 test selections: 9-91, 9-92 and 9-15. These 5 are Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids. They have fruit much larger than Russian cultivars currently on the | Borealis has a nice round shape. | cultivar 1888 | Open Review parse |
| 3 | anecdote_snippet | In 2007 we released two named varieties ‘Borealis’ and ‘Tundra’ and 3 test selections: 9-91, 9-92 and 9-15. These 5 are Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids. They have fruit much larger than Russian cultivars currently on the | Leaves of Borealis showed less powdery mildew than other tested varieties in this program context. | cultivar 1888 | Open Review parse |
| 7 | fruit_size | In 2006 & 2007 we left a row of plants unharvested to see how long the fruit would still be good... Selections that had big fat berries (like Borealis and Tundra) were the best, but thin tubular Russian types dehydrated | Borealis is explicitly cited as a selection with large, fat berries and judged among the best in unharvested holding trials. | cultivar 1888 | Open Review parse |
| 7 | keeping_quality | In 2006 & 2007 we left a row of plants unharvested to see how long the fruit would still be good... Selections that had big fat berries (like Borealis and Tundra) were the best, but thin tubular Russian types dehydrated | In unharvested row tests, berries remained good at least through late August to early September depending on year conditions, implying exten | cultivar 1888 | Open Review parse |
| 7 | description_snippet | In 2006 & 2007 we left a row of plants unharvested to see how long the fruit would still be good... Selections that had big fat berries (like Borealis and Tundra) were the best, but thin tubular Russian types dehydrated | Same multi-variety field observations note that some types showed late fruit dehydration while others retained fruit, with Borealis grouped | cultivar 1888 | Open Review parse |
Embedded viewer uses the local archived PDF directly for more reliable rendering.
| ID | Cultivar | Evidence / Claims | Relationships | History / Pages | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1888 | Borealis | 11 | 0 | 0 | Open cultivar |
| 1889 | Tundra | 10 | 0 | 0 | Open cultivar |
| 1892 | Haskap | 7 | 0 | 0 | Open cultivar |
| 1890 | Blue Belle | 2 | 0 | 0 | Open cultivar |
| 1891 | Berry Blue | 2 | 0 | 0 | Open cultivar |
| parsed only | 9-15 | 9 | 0 | 3, 6 | No staging cultivar page yet |
| parsed only | 9-91 | 5 | 0 | 3 | No staging cultivar page yet |
| parsed only | 9-92 | 5 | 0 | 3 | No staging cultivar page yet |
Relationships: 3
History events: 9
These are the structured records currently tied to this document. They should line up with the document’s main cultivar story.
| Status | License | Holder |
|---|---|---|
| unknown |
| Tier | Score | Assessor | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| tier_3 | 55 | auto | Unclassified domain; requires manual source evaluation |
| Source Lang | Target Lang | Method | Status | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No translation records. | ||||
| Translation ID | Score | Risk | Assessor | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No translation assessments. | ||||
| Status | Visibility | Reviewer | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| No publication records. | |||
| Type | Value | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| nursery_candidate | One Green Earth Nursery | 0.58 |
| institution_candidate | Oregon State University | 0.60 |
| institution_candidate | University of Saskatchewan | 0.60 |
| taxon_keyword | vaccinium | 0.65 |
| taxon_keyword | haskap | 0.75 |
| taxon_keyword | lonicera | 0.75 |
| Type | Claim | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| description_snippet | They have fruit much larger than Russian cultivars currently on the market in North America, taste better and have a nice round shape. | 0.54 |
| description_snippet | Horrible tasting, ornamental versions of this plant were bred in the 1950’s at a research station in Beaverlodge, AB which probably caused fruit breeders in North America to be com | 0.54 |
| ornamental_use | ornamental versions of this plant were bred in the 1950’s at a research station in Beaverlodge | 0.56 |
| ripening_window | ripen each season (earlier than strawberries | 0.56 |
| storage_duration | Keep in mind that it is very hard on a plant to use wilting as a sign to water | 0.56 |
| flavor_profile | taste better and have a nice round shape | 0.57 |
| growth_habit | spreading | 0.52 |
| fruit_color | blue | 0.55 |
| nursery_reference | One Green Earth Nursery | 0.58 |
| institution_reference | Oregon State University | 0.60 |
| institution_reference | University of Saskatchewan | 0.60 |
| year_reference | 2007 | 0.55 |
| year_reference | 2008 | 0.55 |
| year_reference | 1998 | 0.55 |
| year_reference | 2003 | 0.55 |
| year_reference | 1990 | 0.55 |
| year_reference | 1950 | 0.55 |