STRAWBERRY PLANT NAMED 'YAKIMA'
20210051909 ยท 2021-02-25
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
The present invention provides a new and distinct strawberry variety designated as Yakima (a.k.a. 109733). A strawberry variety designated Yakima is disclosed. The disclosure relates to asexual propagules of strawberry variety designated Yakima, to the plants and plant parts of strawberry variety designated Yakima, and to methods for producing an asexually reproduced strawberry plant Yakima.
Claims
1. Asexual propagules of strawberry plant designated Yakima, wherein a representative sample of the asexual propagules has been deposited under ATCC Accession No. ______.
2. The asexual propagules of claim 1, wherein the asexual propagules are stolons.
3. A strawberry plant or plant part thereof, produced by growing the asexual propagules of claim 1, wherein the strawberry plant has all of the physiological and morphological characteristics of strawberry plant designated Yakima deposited under ATCC Accession No. ______ when grown under the same environment conditions.
4. The strawberry plant, or plant part of claim 3, wherein the strawberry plant part is selected from the group consisting of a leaf, a flower, a fruit, an achene and a stolon.
5. A strawberry plant, or plant part thereof, produced from the stolons of claim 2, wherein the strawberry plant has all of the physiological and morphological characteristics of strawberry plant designated Yakima deposited under ATCC Accession No. ______ when grown under the same environment conditions.
6. A strawberry plant, or plant part thereof, produced from the stolons of claim 4, wherein the strawberry plant has all of the physiological and morphological characteristics of strawberry plant designated Yakima deposited under ATCC Accession No. ______ when grown under the same environment conditions.
7. A strawberry plant, or plant part thereof, produced by asexual reproduction of the strawberry plant, or plant part thereof, of claim 3, wherein the asexually reproduced strawberry plant has all of the physiological and morphological characteristics of strawberry plant designated Yakima deposited under ATCC Accession No. ______ when grown under the same environment conditions.
8. A strawberry plant, or plant part thereof, having all of the physiological and morphological characteristics of strawberry plant designated Yakima deposited under ATCC Accession No. ______when grown under the same environment conditions.
9. The strawberry plant, or the plant part of claim 8, wherein the plant part is a fruit.
10. The strawberry plant, or the plant part of claim 8, wherein the plant part is a stolon.
11. A method for producing an asexually reproduced strawberry plant, the method comprising asexually reproducing the strawberry plant, or plant part thereof, of claim 3 and growing the resultant asexually reproduced strawberry plant.
12. The method of claim 11, further comprising harvesting a fruit from the asexually reproduced plant.
13. A fruit obtained from the method of claim 12, wherein the fruit has all of the physiological and morphological characteristics of strawberry plant designated Yakima deposited under ATCC Accession No. ______ when grown under the same environment conditions.
14. A method for producing an asexually reproduced strawberry plant, the method comprising asexually reproducing the strawberry plant, or plant part thereof, of claim 5 and growing the resultant asexually reproduced strawberry plant.
15. The method of claim 14, further comprising harvesting a fruit from the asexually reproduced plant.
16. A fruit obtained from the method of claim 15, wherein the fruit has all of the physiological and morphological characteristics of strawberry plant designated Yakima deposited under ATCC Accession No. ______ when grown under the same environment conditions.
17. A method for producing an asexually reproduced strawberry plant, the method comprising asexually reproducing the strawberry plant, or plant part thereof, of claim 8 and growing the resultant asexually reproduced strawberry plant.
18. The method of claim 17, further comprising harvesting a fruit from the asexually reproduced plant.
19. A fruit obtained from the method of claim 18, wherein the fruit has all of the physiological and morphological characteristics of strawberry plant designated Yakima deposited under ATCC Accession No. ______ when grown under the same environment conditions.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0005] The accompanying color photographs depict various characteristics of the cultivar as nearly true as possible to make color reproductions.
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[0009]
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0010] This invention relates to a new and distinctive strawberry cultivar designated as Yakima. This cultivar is primarily adapted to the climate and growing conditions of the central coast of California. This region provides the necessary temperatures required for it to produce a strong vigorous plant and to remain in fruit production from March through October. The nearby Pacific Ocean provides the needed humidity and moderate day temperatures and evening chilling to maintain fruit quality for the production months. Yakima (a.k.a. 109733)
[0011] The following traits and photographs in combination distinguish the strawberry variety Yakima from known strawberry varieties. In addition, the new cultivar was confirmed to be a unique strawberry germplasm when tested against the California Seed & Plant Lab, Inc. (Elverta, Calif.) database using Short Sequence Repeats (SSRs). Plants for the botanical measurements in the present application were grown as annuals. Any color references are made to The Royal Horticultural Society Colour Chart, 1995 Edition, except where general terms of ordinary dictionary significance are used. The botanical measurements listed in Table 1 were made and recorded during the month of June.
[0012] Yakima is distinguished from its paternal parent by the percent of marketable fruit (Table 2), for Yakima percent marketable fruit is twenty percentile points greater than it's paternal parent Lily (U.S. Plant Pat. No. 25,849). Yakima is distinguished from its maternal parent Aida by the figure of it's fruit. The fruit of Yakima is mostly conical, different from the longer somewhat flat wedge shape of the fruit of it's parent Aida. Yakima is similar to the strawberry plant named Monterey (U.S. Plant Pat. No. 19,767), but possesses several distinguishing traits from Monterey. Yakima is distinguished from Montery by the thicker canopy of Yakima and dark green foliage color of Yakima.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Characteristic Type Characteristic Yakima General Plant Habit annual Plant Growth Habit upright Day length neutral Planting season Fall Height 35 cm Width 36 cm Density of foliage medium Plant vigor high Freezing Quality moderate Rain/weather tolerance moderate to high Harvest Ease moderate Leaf Leaf Shape concave Terminal leaflet width 90 mm Terminal leaflet length 100 mm Terminal leaflet 1.11 length/width ratio Teeth per terminal leaflet 17 to 19 Shape of the terminal rounded leaflet base Shape of terminal leaflet concave to straight in cross-section Shape of the terminal serrate to crenate leaflet margin Color of upper side of RHS 136A leaflet Color of lower side of RHS 139C leaflet Leaf blistering weak Leaf glossiness medium Leaf variegation absent Number of leaflets 150 to 219 Terminal Leaflet margin revolute Terminal Leaflet shape Orbicular Terminal Leaflet shape of Rounded apex Limbs Petiole length 25.5 cm Petiole diameter 3.18 to 4.26 mm Petiole pubescence medium Petiole pose of hairs horizontal Petiole color RHS 145A Petiolule length 1.0 to 1.5 cm Petiolule diameter 2.08 to 2.70 mm Stipule length 3.5 cm Stipule width 0.9 to 1.0 cm Stipule pubescence dense Stipule anthocyanin absent Stipule color (color code) RHS 145C Pedicel color (color code) RHS 145A Attitude of hairs on peduncle and pedicel Peduncle size medium Inflorescence Inflorescence position above relative to foliage Flower arrangement of touching petals Flower size medium Flower diameter 2.28 cm Petal shape orbicular Petal apex rounded Petal margin entire Petal base shape concave Petal length 1.17 cm Petal width 1.15 cm Petal length/width ratio 1.02 Petal number per flower 5 to 7 Number of flowers 16 to 36 Upper Petal color RHS 155D Lower Petal color RHS 155D Floral Calyx Diameter 4.08 cm Corolla diameter 2.28 cm Calyx diameter relative larger to corolla Inner calyx same Sepal shape elliptical Sepal apex convex Sepal margin entire Sepal length 1.93 cm Sepal width 0.61 cm Sepal number per flower 12 Receptacle color RHS 4A Fertility not tested Time of flowering (50% May of plants in bloom) Shape of stigma rounded Color of stigma RHS 4A Length of style 5 mm Color of style RHS 4A Color of the ovary RHS 138D Number of stamen 25 Length of the stamens 2.3 mm Shape of anther dorsifixed Size of anther 1.39 mm Color of anther RHS 6A Amount of pollen scarce to moderate Color of pollen RHS 163B Color of filament RHS 145C Length of filament 1.2 to 2.8 mm Fruit Fruiting truss length 6 to 17 cm Fruiting truss diameter 1.4 mm Number of fruit per truss 1 to 5 Fruit length 5.3 cm Fruit width 4.3 cm Fruit skin color RHS 45A Fruit flesh color RHS 44A excluding core Fruit core color RHS 41B Fruit length/width ratio 1.23 Fruit weight 33 g Relative fruit size medium to large Predominant fruit shape long conic and long wedge Shape difference between No shape difference primary & secondary fruits Width of band without of narrow achenes Fruit glossiness strong Position of achenes below surface Achene color RHS 151D Achenes per fruit 340 Achene weight 0.238 g Position of calyx even Fruit Calyx Diameter 5.5 cm level of adherence of calyx medium Color of calyx RHS 137C Pose of calyx segments reflexed Size of calyx in relation same to fruit Firmness of flesh medium to firm Evenness of flesh color nearly even Fruit hollow length 2.3 cm Fruit hollow width 1.4 cm Fruit hollow length/width 1.64 ratio Hollow center absent to medium Sweetness 7 to 14 Brix pH 3.33 Texture when tasted fine to medium Time of flowering April Time of fruit ripening May Harvest maturity (50% of June plants with ripe fruit) Type of bearing day netural Grams of fruit per plant June: 721 g Yield (lb per acre) June: 31,791 lb/acre Firmness soft to firm Surface Texture smooth Appearance Score 4 Storage longevity 5 to 10 days Cull rate: 1-% Usable <10% Stolon Stolon number 1 to 3
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Strawberry fruit summary statistic means of yield, percent marketable, flavor, firmness, figure and size during weeks 15 to 37 over years; Watsonville, California. gGrams (goodgrams or marketable fruit) strawberry fheight fwidth gGrams/ kilos/ plant variety mm mm fht/fw hardness clone acre % Usable frtSizeGrms skin-r flavor Yakima 51.0304 40.2999 1.26626 8.79292 1622 32,443 0.905 31.39 2.13004 2.84304 Lily 40.2262 35.8540 1.12194 8.78205 1304 26,089 0.797 29.95 2.09745 3.05084