Growing Haskap in Canada

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

Open profile JSON | Open citation JSON

Document Metadata

Institution: University of Saskatchewan Fruit Program

Publisher:

Site:

Year:

Page count:

Type: extension publication

Metadata source: intake_manifest_v1

Relationship Records

IDRelationSourceTargetSource Doc
356mentioned_in_documentOne Green Earth NurseryGrowing Haskap in Canada110
355mentioned_in_documentOregon State UniversityGrowing Haskap in Canada110
354mentioned_in_documentUniversity Of SaskatchewanGrowing Haskap in Canada110

History Records

IDTypeYearLabel
770year_reference1950Year reference 1950
776institution_mention1950University Of Saskatchewan
777institution_mention1950Oregon State University
778nursery_mention1950One Green Earth Nursery
771year_reference1990Year reference 1990
773year_reference1998Year reference 1998
772year_reference2003Year reference 2003
775year_reference2007Year reference 2007
774year_reference2008Year reference 2008

Document Reader

Reviewable cultivar from this document:

This selector is limited to cultivars that already have staging pages. Additional parsed names stay in the linked records table below.

3 additional parsed names from this document do not have staging cultivar pages yet.

Parsed Cultivar Detail

Cultivar: Tundra

Pages in document: p2 p3 p7

Entry Snippets

PageBasisSnippet
2explicit_cultivar_referenceFigure 2. 'Tundra' is a new Uof Scultivar recommended for fruit growers.
3explicit_cultivar_referenceIn 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.
7explicit_cultivar_referenceSelections that had big fat berries (like Borealis and Tundra) were the best, but thin tubular Russian types dehydrated by late July.

Raw Parsed Claims

PageTypeClaimConfidence
2caption_contextFigure 2 shows fruit of 'Tundra'.0.98
2recommendation_context'Tundra' is described as a new University of Saskatchewan cultivar recommended for fruit growers.0.99
2breeder_referenceThe caption identifies 'Tundra' as a Uof Scultivar, referring to the University of Saskatchewan.0.96
2taxon_contextWithin this document, 'Tundra' is treated in the context of haskap, Lonicera caerulea.0.9
3release_year_referenceReleased in 2007 as one of two named University of Saskatchewan varieties.0.98
3entry_pedigreeIdentified as one of five Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids discussed in the release sentence.0.94
3fruit_sizeThe five Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids are described as having fruit much larger than Russian cultivars currently on the North American market.0.9
3flavor_profileThe five hybrids are described as tasting better than Russian cultivars currently on the North American market.0.86
3growth_habitThe five hybrids are described as having a nice round shape.0.86
3description_snippetThe leaves of these hybrids are said to have less powdery mildew than other tested varieties.0.84
3caption_contextPrevious page context identifies Tundra as a new University of Saskatchewan cultivar recommended for fruit growers.0.86
7fruit_sizeTundra is given as an example of selections that had big fat berries.0.95
7keeping_qualityIn an unharvested row trial, big fat berry selections such as Tundra 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
7description_snippetThe page groups Tundra with Borealis as examples of big fat berry selections in a harvest-holding observation from 2006 and 2007.0.9

Inherited Context

  • p2: Haskap | Lonicera caerulea | Growing Haskap in Canada | University of Saskatchewan | Department of Plant Sciences | Beaverlodge research station | University of Saskatchewan haskap breeding and cultivar evaluation | Historical Beaverlodge ornamental breeding of blue honeysuck
  • p3: Haskap / Lonicera caerulea | Lonicera caerulea | Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids | University of Saskatchewan Russian / Kuril-Island hybrids | Growing Haskap in Canada | Breeding and cultivar background | Recommendations | University of Saskatchewan | Oregon State University |
  • p7: haskap | Lonicera caerulea | University of Saskatchewan haskap varieties | Figure 8 | Pruning | If disaster strikes | Harvest | Uniform Harvest | University of Saskatchewan | Department of Plant Sciences | University of Saskatchewan fruit breeding program | University of Sask

Cultivar Citation Focus: This reader is filtered to citation evidence linked to Tundra (ID 1889) within document 110. Use the rows below to jump the PDF directly to relevant passages.

Citation focus: cultivar focus: Tundra (ID 1889) | page focus: 2 (auto)

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PageTypeQuoteClaimEntityJump
2recommendation_contextFigure 2. 'Tundra' is a new Uof Scultivar recommended for fruit growers.Figure 2 identifies 'Tundra' as a new Uof Scultivar and recommends it for fruit growers.cultivar 1889Open Review parse
2selection_origin_referenceFigure 2. 'Tundra' is a new Uof Scultivar recommended for fruit growers.Caption language associates Tundra with University of Saskatchewan as a new institutional cultivar.cultivar 1889Open Review parse
3release_year_referenceIn 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 Tundra was released by the Uof Sprogram in 2007 as one of two named Russian/Kuril-Island hybrid cultivars.cultivar 1889Open Review parse
3entry_pedigreeIn 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 Tundra is part of a group identified as Russian/Kuril-Island hybrids.cultivar 1889Open Review parse
3fruit_sizeIn 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 Tundra is described as having fruit much larger than Russian cultivars currently on the North American market.cultivar 1889Open Review parse
3flavor_profileIn 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 Tundra is reported to taste better than other compared Russian cultivars.cultivar 1889Open Review parse
3anecdote_snippetIn 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 Tundra showed less powdery mildew than other tested varieties in this program context.cultivar 1889Open Review parse
7fruit_sizeIn 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 Tundra is explicitly named with Borealis as a big, fat berry selection that performed best in the unharvested holding trial.cultivar 1889Open Review parse
7keeping_qualityIn 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 Fruit from rows including Tundra was part of an observed holding window that lasted into late August in a hot year and into early September cultivar 1889Open Review parse
7description_snippetIn 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 The same observation set contrasts big-fruited selections with thin tubular Russian types, which dehydrated earlier by late July.cultivar 1889Open Review parse

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Linked Cultivars

IDCultivarEvidence / ClaimsRelationshipsHistory / PagesLink
1888Borealis1100Open cultivar
1889Tundra1000Open cultivar
1892Haskap700Open cultivar
1890Blue Belle200Open cultivar
1891Berry Blue200Open cultivar
parsed only9-15903, 6No staging cultivar page yet
parsed only9-91503No staging cultivar page yet
parsed only9-92503No staging cultivar page yet

Document-Linked Records

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.

Rights Records

StatusLicenseHolder
unknown

Credibility Records

TierScoreAssessorRationale
tier_355autoUnclassified domain; requires manual source evaluation

Translation Records

Source LangTarget LangMethodStatusNote
No translation records.

Translation Quality Assessments

Translation IDScoreRiskAssessorRationale
No translation assessments.

Publication Records

StatusVisibilityReviewerNote
No publication records.

Extracted Entities

TypeValueConfidence
nursery_candidateOne Green Earth Nursery0.58
institution_candidateOregon State University0.60
institution_candidateUniversity of Saskatchewan0.60
taxon_keywordvaccinium0.65
taxon_keywordhaskap0.75
taxon_keywordlonicera0.75

Extracted Claims

TypeClaimConfidence
description_snippetThey 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_snippetHorrible 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 com0.54
ornamental_useornamental versions of this plant were bred in the 1950’s at a research station in Beaverlodge0.56
ripening_windowripen each season (earlier than strawberries0.56
storage_durationKeep in mind that it is very hard on a plant to use wilting as a sign to water0.56
flavor_profiletaste better and have a nice round shape0.57
growth_habitspreading0.52
fruit_colorblue0.55
nursery_referenceOne Green Earth Nursery0.58
institution_referenceOregon State University0.60
institution_referenceUniversity of Saskatchewan0.60
year_reference20070.55
year_reference20080.55
year_reference19980.55
year_reference20030.55
year_reference19900.55
year_reference19500.55