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Please noteThe majority of genebanks are committed to providing small samples of genebank material for purposes of research and education on request (usually via their website) usually for free, usually between 5g and 10g per accession requested. However response time and quality of sample sent can vary between genebanks.
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| Given name + traits | Accession # + images + dates | Genetic data | OriginNOTE + collected | Ancestry | Other names + other # | Notes | ||
| # CItr 12748 @ USDA-ARS (USA) INFO > GRIS | GRIS{ne1, Ne2; Ne2s; Ne2ms; ch1, Ch2; d1, D2, d3; Rht-B1a, Rht-D1a; Glu-A1c, Glu-B1b, Glu-D1a; Glu-A1c, Glu-B1c, Glu-D1a; Glu-A1c, Glu-B1b, Glu-D1d; Glu-A3c, Glu-B3b, Glu-D3c; Lr12} | United States, Indiana (developed) | other # = Vermillion; Purdue 414A9-2-3; CI 12748; ; GRIS{K-45083; CI-12748; CI-13080; AUS-1556} | Remark: Soft red winter wheat. Vermillion originated from the same cross as Knox. It was distributed in Indiana to provide an alternative early variety with certain characteristics which compliment those of Knox. It is susceptible to powdery mildew while Knox is resistant. It exceeds Knox in winterhardiness, has stiffer straw, and has less loose smut infection under natural conditions. History: DEVELOPED 1955 Indiana, United States by Patterson, F., Purdue University; Compton, L., Purdue University; Caldwell, R., USDA-Bureau of Plant Industry; Schafer, J., USDA-ARS | ||||
| Given name + traits | Accession # + images + dates | Genetic data | OriginNOTE + collected | Ancestry | Other names + other # | Notes | ||
| # CItr 12748 @ USDA-ARS (USA) INFO > GRIS | GRIS{ne1, Ne2; Ne2s; Ne2ms; ch1, Ch2; d1, D2, d3; Rht-B1a, Rht-D1a; Glu-A1c, Glu-B1b, Glu-D1a; Glu-A1c, Glu-B1c, Glu-D1a; Glu-A1c, Glu-B1b, Glu-D1d; Glu-A3c, Glu-B3b, Glu-D3c; Lr12} | United States, Indiana (developed) | other # = Vermillion; Purdue 414A9-2-3; CI 12748; ; GRIS{K-45083; CI-12748; CI-13080; AUS-1556} | Remark: Soft red winter wheat. Vermillion originated from the same cross as Knox. It was distributed in Indiana to provide an alternative early variety with certain characteristics which compliment those of Knox. It is susceptible to powdery mildew while Knox is resistant. It exceeds Knox in winterhardiness, has stiffer straw, and has less loose smut infection under natural conditions. History: DEVELOPED 1955 Indiana, United States by Patterson, F., Purdue University; Compton, L., Purdue University; Caldwell, R., USDA-Bureau of Plant Industry; Schafer, J., USDA-ARS | ||||