English:
Identifier: lutherburbankhis04burbuoft (find matches)
Title: Luther Burbank: his methods and discoveries and their practical application. Prepared from his original field notes covering more than 100,000 experiments made during forty years devoted to plant improvement, with the assistance of the Luther Burbank Society and its entire membership, under the editorial direction of John Whitson and Robert John and Henry Smith Williams
Year: 1914 (1910s)
Authors: Burbank, Luther, 1849-1926 John, Robert Whitson, John Williams, Henry Smith, 1863-1943 Luther Burbank Society
Subjects: Plant-breeding
Publisher: New York Luther Burbank Press
Contributing Library: Gerstein - University of Toronto
Digitizing Sponsor: University of Toronto
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ensis. This cross was made both waysin both cases. This is a cross between genera. Some of these hybrid seedlings grew quiterapidly. The growth was generally peculiar, beingcompact and stubby, and often with an unhealthyappearance, especially towards the last of theseason. The foliage and bark most often resem-bled the quince. I expected good results from these interestinghybrids, but not one ever produced even a blos-som. The developments were the same in all seed-lings, however the cross was made. After a fewyears they would decline and die, whether graftedon the quince or the apple or growing on theirown roots. Several varieties of apples were also crossedwith the Bartlett and other pears. This is also abigeneric hybrid, and the result was in the endsimilar to that of crossing the apple and thequince. Most of these seedlings were abnormalin their growth. They were generally dwarfed,but in some cases exceedingly rapid growers wereproduced, especially when the Bartlett pear was (206)
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-.§5 >• ft •-•■ r» <* Q IS !? • «• ^ S li is*a &-02. ft ~». a 5 ■ a a o ^2 o ^=5 3 -• i ^ iQ »% S S3 ?!* a3 = :r»«o2,Jr a<a r-! ^- a o3 S. r a. •■i;«3 «: BaH.**~ - =•2 0. E <» o:* 2. ;;• a 2. <? S^t LUTHER BURBANK crossed with the apple. But none of them gaveany indication of producing blossoms, let alonefruit. These, like the quince-apple hybrid seed-lings, being only cumberers of ground which wasneeded for other purposes, were destroyed. It will be seen, then, that nothing of practicalimportance came of my experiments in hybridiz-ing the apple with its remoter cousins. Never-theless the proof that such hybridization is pos-sible must be regarded as highly interesting. Itseems by no means unlikely that further testsalong these lines might result in revealing somevarieties of these various fruits that would com-bine more advantageously and produce fertile off-spring. As I have said in another connection, there is
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