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Small fruit breeder Courtney Weber
shown here among his 11,000 test seedlings, released 2 varieties
of strawberries from his breeding programthe first
since 1991.

The new 'Clancy' strawberry

The new 'L'Amour' strawberry
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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July
7 , 2003
Contact:
Linda McCandless, 315-787-2417
CORNELL RELEASES
TWO NEW STRAWBERRIES
By Linda McCandless
GENEVA, NY: To get the luscious strawberries
that consumers want, fruit growers baby their plants. To get the
same luscious fruit, strawberry breeder Courtney Weber could be
accused of beating his.
"I encourage diseases and insects
to do their worst," says Weber, the Cornell University horticultural
scientist who directs the small fruit breeding program at the New
York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva, NY. "That
way, when a new selection is finally released, growers can be assured
their results will be even better than mine."
Weber officially released two new
strawberries last week, and named them after his favorite authors,
L'Amour and Clancy.
"Common geographic names and anything
remotely related to the color red have been used for other varieties,"
says Weber. He thought it would be easier for people to recognize
new strawberry releases from Cornell if he changed to a new naming
scheme. Strawberries with easy-to-remember names like King, Herriott,
Steinbeck, Orwell, Twain, Cussler, and Crichton are already in the
pipeline. "No endorsement by the authors is intended or suggested,"
he notes.
Weber is reinvigorating a breeding
program that has not released a strawberry since 1991. He currently
has two acres of strawberries-about 11,000 seedlings-undergoing
testing and evaluation. Most breeders are doing well if they get
a new variety out of every 10,000 to 15,000 plants.
"Growers look for new varieties that
fill a niche in the wholesale, retail, or pick-your-own markets,"
says Weber. "They want good eating quality, with a decent shelf
life, on a plant that holds its own in the field against the weather,
the bugs and the diseases. They want berries that appeal to consumers
and contribute to the bottom line."
Developing a new strawberry variety
can take 10 to 15 years. Berry, apple, grape, and stone fruit breeders
at the Experiment Station select for yield, flavor, winter hardiness,
insect and disease resistance, and vigor. They have introduced 245
new fruit varieties since the Station's founding in 1880; 38 have
been strawberries.
What L'Amour and Clancy Have to
Offer
The fruit eating quality and flavor
of L'Amour is very good, notes Weber. It fits well in the market
currently served by Honeoye, a Station variety that was introduced
in 1979. L'Amour was tested as NY 1829. A bright red, early-June-bearing
hybrid of (MDUS5252 x Etna) x Cavendish, it is attractively long
and conical, firm but not hard, with good winter hardiness and vigor.
It was first selected for testing in 1994.
Clancy is darker red than L'Amour,
bears in late June, and is a hybrid seedling of MDUS4774 x MDUS5199.
It fruits after Jewel, in a late-season market that traditionally
has been hard to fill because it is difficult to get a good eating
berry that stays firm and holds up to hot weather. Clancy holds
its berries high off the ground. This makes them less susceptible
to the fungal diseases that usually attack late-season crops. Clancy
was tested as NYUS304B, and has good eating quality. It was developed
in conjunction with the USDA strawberry-breeding program in Beltsville,
MD, and first selected from a cross made in 1988.
Virus Testing is Key
In the Geneva small fruit program,
strawberries are developed by conventional plant breeding techniques,
in a process of trial and error that requires great patience. Promising
new varieties are selected, numbered, and crossed with each other.
Data is kept on thousands of seedlings, selections, and varieties.
New technology has not shortened the
release process, but it does insure higher quality nursery stock.
Virus elimination-a fairly recent technological advance made possible
through tissue culture and ELISA testing-means growers have access
to virus-free stock, so they can plant virus-free fields of new
varieties and not introduce diseases onto their farms.
Clancy and L'Amour were selected for
release years ago. But it takes a long time for plants to be tested
as virus-free, and then to propagate enough virus-free material
to meet the increased demand when a new release is named.
Both berries will be available to
commercial and backyard growers in limited test quantities for 2004,
and in larger quantities in 2005, through Nourse Farms, Indiana
Berry & Plant Company, and StrawberryTyme Farms.
# # # #
View
'Clancy' press release handout (pdf)
View 'L'Amour' press
release handout (pdf)
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