Prunus 'Climax'

'Climax' is a Prunus cultivar, considered to be a plum. It was introduced in 1899 by plant breeder Luther Burbank.

Prunus 'Climax'
Hybrid parentagePrunus simonii × Prunus salicina
Cultivar'Climax'
Marketing names'Royal of Van Deman'[1]
OriginUSA. Santa Rosa, California

Burbank devoted a lot of work to hybridizing two plum species, the apricot plum or Simon plum Prunus simonii and the Japanese plum Prunus salicina. He developed a number of cultivars from the hybrid,[2][3] of which 'Climax' was particularly notable for its importance to the fruit shipping industry of California.[4]

Description

The 'Climax' tree is less productive than some other plum cultivars. The fruit is extremely large and heart-shaped, with yellow flesh that is sweet and very juicy. The flesh clings to the stone. The skin is dark red with yellow spots, and somewhat unpleasant in flavour, but peels away easily from the flesh when the fruit is fully ripe.[1]

gollark: Any sufficiently developed and widely used software inevitably accretes large amounts of incomprehensible tweaks.
gollark: oh *beeoformicite*.
gollark: Which is zero cost in the way most people mean, even though it takes compile time to solve the constraints and whatever.
gollark: In Rust (praise be), yes.
gollark: Yes, that.

References

  1. Khanizadeh, S.; Cousineau, J. (2000). Our Plums/Les Pruniers de chez nous. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada/Agriculteur et Agroalimentaire Canada. ISBN 0-660-61568-1.
  2. Burbank, Luther (1921). How Plants Are Trained to Work for Man. V. New York: P. F. Collier and Son Co. p. 223.
  3. Jones, D.F. (1928). "Burbank's results with plums". Journal of Heredity. 19 (8): 359–372.
  4. David Starr Jordan (1905). "Some experiments of Luther Burbank". The Popular Science Monthly. 66: 201–225. page 222
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.