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Evaluation of elm clones for tolerance to Dutch elm disease

Reference Type
Journal, Research (Article)

"Rooted cuttings of ten hybrid elm (Ulmus) clones, including one named Patriot, and all derived from various crosses of Homestead, Prospector, Urban, and Selection 970, were established along with a randomly selected American elm clones and three disease-tolerant cultivars (Frontier, Homestead, and Prospector) in a replicated field plot. When the rooted cuttings were 3 years old, they were inoculated with a mixed spore suspension of Ophiostoma novo-ulmi and O. ulmi, the fungi that cause Dutch elm disease. Analyses of variance and regression showed significant variation among clones in crown dieback, survival, and height growth over a 7-year time period following inoculation. The American elm clone and selection 15-87 (an Urban x Prospector clone) showed the most crown dieback and lowest survival rate and were among the slowest in growth rate, 7 years after inoculation. Selections and cultivars showing the least dieback and highest survival were most hybrids from parentages of Urban x Prospector, those from Homestead x Prospector, and Homestead x 970; and cultivars Patriot, Homestead, and Prospector. Many of the same disease-tolerant clones and cultivars also showed the greatest height growth after inoculation. Significant variation in disease symptoms occurred among clones from the Urban x Prospector cross. Results of this study emphasize the importance of selection and testing of specific clones within full-sib families." [Abstract]

Authors
A.M. Townsend, L.W. Douglass
Date Published
2004
Journal/Conference
Journal of Arboriculture
Publisher
International Society of Arboriculture
Publisher Location
Savoy, IL (US)
ISBN/ISSN
0278-5226
Volume/Issue/Number
30//3
Start Page
179
End Page
184
Sub-Topics
Cultivar Selection, Disease, Evaluation/Assessment, Health (tree)
State(s)/Region(s)
National
Keywords
DED, Dutch elm Disease, Ophiostoma, Ulmus
Libraries
UMN
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