4.7 Article

Pomological Characteristics and Ploidy Levels of Japanese Plum (Prunus salicina Lindl.) Cultivars Preserved in Poland

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10050884

Keywords

Prunus salicina Lindl.; gene bank; cultivars; yield; fruit quality; sharka; ploidy level

Categories

Funding

  1. Polish Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development

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Research was conducted on 36 Japanese plum cultivars at an Experimental Orchard in Dabrowice near Skierniewice from 2015 to 2020, focusing on various aspects including frost resistance, susceptibility to sharka, flowering biology, fruit setting, yield, and ploidy levels. The findings revealed that some cultivars were susceptible to frost and sharka disease, while others performed well in the climate of Central Europe.
Research on the resistance to frost, susceptibility to sharka, flowering biology, fruit setting, yield, and ploidy levels of 36 Japanese plum cultivars (mostly hybrids of Prunus salicina with Prunus cerasifera) were carried out in 2015-2020 at the Experimental Orchard located in Dabrowice near Skierniewice. Relatively mild winters with sporadic temperature drops to nearly -21 degrees C in January of 2017 and 2018 caused slight damage to several cultivars of Japanese plum insufficiently resistant to frost. The trees of most cultivars remained healthy, with no signs of damage. 'Barkhatnaya' and 'Tatyana' cultivars turned out to be very susceptible to sharka. 'Herkules' trees were the most vigorous. 'Barkhatnaja', 'Blue Gigant', 'Shater', and 'Tatyana' trees were characterized by weak growth. The trees of Japanese plum started flowering early, usually in the first or second decade of April. Most of the cultivars belonged to early season cultivars, the fruits of which ripened in July. Based on the assessment of tree productivity, 'Barkhatnaya', 'Inese', 'Shater', 'Tatyana', and 'Vanier' are the best for growing in the climate of Central Europe. 'Tsernushka', 'Chuk', 'Dofi Sandra', 'Early Golden', 'Ewierch Rannyj', 'Yevraziya', 'Gek', 'General', 'Kometa', 'Kometa Late', 'Maschenka', and 'Naidyona' trees also yielded well. 'Blue Gigant', 'Black Amber', and 'Herkules' had the largest fruits, and 'Chuk' and 'Inese' cultivars produced the smallest fruits. Among the assessed Japanese plum cultivars, those with round fruit, dark skin with various shades of purple, yellow flesh, and A cytometric analysis showed that almost all cultivars are diploid, except for 'Herkules' (possibly pentaploid) and 'Yevraziya' (possibly hexaploid or aneuploid).

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