GRIN Accession |
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Synonyms:Hong Ting Hsian; DONATED 09/09/1977 China by Agricultural College
Relationships |
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The accession, Daucus carota var. sativus, is an ancestor of generated germplasm, B3180M. |
The sample, PI 419042.ALB.1992.1, is sample of accession, Daucus carota var. sativus. |
The sample, PI 419042.ALB.2015.1, is sample of accession, Daucus carota var. sativus. |
The sample, PI 419042.ALB.2015.2, is sample of accession, Daucus carota var. sativus. |
The sample, PI_419042_79ncei01_SD:NC7.100SEEDWGT.TRANSFER.FROM.NC7IV.TABLE, is sample of accession, Daucus carota var. sativus. |
The sample, PI_419042_78ncai01_SD:NC7.100SEEDWGT.TRANSFER.FROM.NC7IV.TABLE, is sample of accession, Daucus carota var. sativus. |
The sample, PI 419042.Loarca.2016.1, is sample of accession, Daucus carota var. sativus. |
The sample, PI 419042.Loarca.2016.2, is sample of accession, Daucus carota var. sativus. |
The sample, PI 419042.Loarca.2017.1, is sample of accession, Daucus carota var. sativus. |
The sample, PI 419042.Loarca.2017.2, is sample of accession, Daucus carota var. sativus. |
Name | Description |
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Traits evaluated: HUNDRED SEED WEIGHT (100SEEDWGT) Method: This is the generic evaluation method that can be used for transferring hundred seed weights from the prod.nc7iv table to the prod.ob table. The prod.ob table is where the values for the descriptors are stored. | |
Strandberg, J.O. 1992. Evaluations of plant introductions of Daucus species for tolerance of Alternaria Dauci and some other horticultural characteristics. University of Florida Central Florida Research and Education Center. Sanford, Florida. Research Report SAN 93-03 | |
Hancock, Wisconsin evaluations for Alternaria resistance in 2015 | |
This study is the first field-based, multi-year experiment to evaluate shoot-growth trait variation over a 100-day growing season in a carrot diversity panel (N=695) that includes genetically diverse carrot accessions from the United States Department of Agriculture National Plant Germplasm System. This study provides the first broad-sense heritability estimates for early-season seedling vigor and early-season canopy coverage on a diverse collection. We also develop a method for characterizing flowering to identify accessions that are predominantly biennial, which could be incorporated into biennial breeding programs without substantially increasing the risk of annual growth habits. |
Name | Description |
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Images from carrot roots grown in 2018 used by the SCRI Project Grown at the University of Wisconsin Hancock Agricultural Research Station (44.117850, -89.552265) from May to October 2018. | |
Images from carrot roots grown in 2019 used by the SCRI Project. Grown at the University of California - Desert Research and Extension Center (32.816363, -115.441595) from October 2018 to March 2019 |
Image | Annotations |
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