9 results on '"BRAND, MARK H."'
Search Results
2. Four Sterile or Near-sterile Cultivars of Japanese Barberry in Three Foliage Colors.
- Author
-
Brand, Mark H. and Durocher, Shelley N.
- Subjects
- *
COLOR of plants , *BARBERRIES , *BOTANY , *ORNAMENTAL plants , *CULTIVARS , *GERMINATION , *BERRIES - Abstract
The article reports that Berberis thunbergii L. (Japanese barberry) holds significant market share in the commercial ornamental horticulture industry. Japanese barberry is grown by production nurseries and used in landscaping across the northern half of the U.S. It mentions that Japanese barberry's popularity as a commercial horticulture staple crop has also resulted from its ease of culture under production nursery conditions.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Investigation of the Origin of Aronia mitschurinii using Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis.
- Author
-
Leonard, Peter J., Brand, Mark H., Connolly, Bryan A., and Obae, Samuel G.
- Subjects
- *
ARONIA , *PLANT morphology , *BOTANICAL research , *CULTIVARS , *PLANT populations , *PLANT population genetics - Abstract
Aronia Medik., commonly known as chokeberry, is a genus of deciduous, multistemmed, rosaceous shrubs native to eastern North America. Three species of chokeberry are commonly accepted, A. arbutifolia (L.) Pers., red chokeberry, A. melanocarpa (Michx.) Elliott, black chokeberry, and A. prunifolia (Marshall) Rehder, or purple chokeberry. In Europe, a fourth species of human origin is recognized us Aronia mitschurinii A.K.Skvortsov & Maitul. In North America this type of Aronia is described as cultivars of A. melanocarpa, including 'Viking', 'Nero', and 'Aron'. This species is characterized by near homogeneity of the population, tetraploidy, and a distinct morphology with more robust stems, wider leaf blades, and larger fruits than wild populations of A. melanocarpa. It has been proposed that this genotype originated from Russian pomologist Ivan Michurin's early 20th century experiments involving Aronia x Sorbus hybridization. In this study we used amplified fragment length polymorphic (AFLP) markers to elucidate the relationships of A. mitschurinii to wild North American Aronia, x Sorbaronia C.K. Schneid, Sorbus L., and six additional genera from subtribe Pyrinae (Rosaceae). Data from seven primer combinations were interpreted by the NTSYSpc software package into a similarity matrix using Jaccard's coefficient. Clustering of AFLP similarity data using the unweighted pair group method with arithmetic mean (UPGMA) identified A. mitschurinii as distinct from wild Aronia, grouping it close to x Sorbaronia fallax C. K. Schneid. and x Sorbaronia 'Ivan's Beauty'. Non-metric multidimensional scaling (nMDS) also demonstrated a relationship between A. mitschurinii, x Sorbaronia fallax, a x Sorbaronia x Aronia backcross and compound-leaved Sorbus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Using Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism Markers to Confirm Identity and Correct Labeling of Japanese Barberry (Berberis thunbergii) Cultivars in the Market.
- Author
-
Obae, Samuel G., Brand, Mark H., and Kaitany, Richard C.
- Subjects
- *
BARBERRIES , *ORNAMENTAL shrubs , *URBAN landscape architecture , *CULTIVARS , *GENETIC markers - Abstract
Japanese barberry (Berberis thunbergii DC.) is a popular ornamental shrub used in garden and urban landscaping. Currently there are over 60 B. thunbergii cultivars in the market. To better distinguish its cultivars, we used the amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) technique to develop DNA marker profiles for 59 cultivars and hybrids. These markers were used to authenticate the trueness-to-name of B. thunbergii cultivars in production and in the market, control for intracultivar genetic variants, and develop a molecular key to identify cultivars approved for importation in Canada. Polymorphic markers from seven primer combinations were able to clearly differentiate 57 of 59 cultivars evaluated. Two cultivars, Aurea and Aurea Nana, could not be differentiated because they had identical marker profiles. Among the 274 plants tested, 263 were confirmed to be true-to-name and correctly labeled, whereas 11 plants could not be confirmed true-to-name. Seven of the 20 cultivars evaluated exhibited detectable intracultivar genetic variation. 'Crimson Pygmy' had the highest number of plants exhibiting genetic variability. Overall, nursery producers and retailers do not appear to be mixing or mislabeling cultivars. A molecular key developed from a subset of 25 markers was able to accurately identify and differentiate the 11 B. thunbergii cultivars approved for importation in Canada. This key could be used in a cultivar verification program to facilitate international trade of B. thunbergii cultivars where wheat rust is a concern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Fecundity of Winged Euonymus Cultivars and Their Ability to Invade Various Natural Environments.
- Author
-
Brand, Mark H., Lubell, Jessica D., and Lehrer, Jonathan M.
- Subjects
- *
EUONYMUS , *CULTIVARS , *SEED viability , *GERMINATION , *FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Winged euonymus [Euonymus alatus (Thunb.)] is an important landscape shrub that has demonstrated its potential to be invasive in numerous states across the central and northern United States. Nine cultivars were evaluated for their potential to produce fruits and seeds in a randomized, replicated field planting. Seeds from all cultivars were evaluated for germination rate and initial survival in a deciduous woodland. Seeds collected from 'Compactus' were also sown in five natural environments (full sun meadow, edge of woods, moist woods, dry woods, pine woods) to determine which habitat types support its germination and establishment. Seed production for cultivars varied from 981 to 6090 seeds per plant. The dry deciduous woods and pine woods were the only environments that supported significant germination rates that could be as high as 37.8%. Seedling survival was at least 77% in the deciduous dry woods and at least 55% in the pine woods. In the first replication, establishment rates for cultivars in the dry deciduous woods ranged from a low of 6.5% for 'Odom' Little Moses™ to a high of 42.5% for 'Monstrosus'. In the second replication, all cultivars achieved over 30% establishment and most exceeded 40% establishment. An estimate of the annual seedling contribution per plant per cultivar was calculated by combining seed production data with establishment data for each cultivar. This estimate was predicted to range from 588 to 3763 and therefore none of the nine cultivars evaluated should be considered non-invasive based on our findings. Our findings show that germination and seedling survival rates are high for E. alatus and because the species is long-lived, cultivars will likely have to be completely seed-sterile to be considered non-invasive according to demographic models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Induction of tetraploidy in meristematically active seeds of Japanese barberry (Berberis thunbergii var. atropurpurea) through exposure to colchicine and oryzalin
- Author
-
Lehrer, Jonathan M., Brand, Mark H., and Lubell, Jessica D.
- Subjects
- *
BARBERRIES , *PLANT genetic engineering , *COLCHICINE , *CULTIVARS , *SEEDS , *PLOIDY - Abstract
Abstract: Japanese barberry (Berberis thunbergii DC) is an invasive shrub, widely naturalized across the United States, whose numerous cultivars remain an important horticultural commodity. Maintaining this crop for the future necessitates the development of sterile clones. Exposure to the mitotic inhibitors colchicine and oryzalin is a traditional method for inducing tetraploidy in breeding lines as a precursor to creating sterile genotypes. Treatments utilized pre-germinated B. t. var. atropurpurea seeds with emerged radicles. Seeds were immersed in aqueous solutions of colchicine (.02%, .05%, .1% and .2%) and oryzalin (.002%, .005%, .01% and .02%) dissolved in 1% DMSO for 6, 12 and 24h durations. Seedling ploidy level was determined via flow cytometry following 6 and 52 weeks of growth in the greenhouse. Both anti-mitotic chemicals proved effective at inducing tetraploidy and produced comparable efficiency rates. The survival rate of treated seeds decreased in response to both increased mitotic inhibitor concentration and longer exposure duration. While exposure to oryzalin produced greater seed mortality than colchicine, most seedlings that survived had altered ploidy levels. The most efficient oryzalin concentration was 0.002% with a rating of 28%, while the most efficient colchicine concentrations were in the range from 0.05% to 0.2%. Duration of exposure to mitotic inhibitor was not a significant factor over the range from 6 to 24h. Reversion of tetraploid plants to the diploid state occurred at a low frequency following a dormancy period. Some tetraploid seedlings derived from exposure to both chemicals displayed foliar abnormalities including irregular leaf margins and mottled lamina. The primary advantage of colchicine was low seedling toxicity, while oryzalin was notable for its ability to induce tetraploidy at low concentrations. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. AFLP identification of Berberis thunbergii cultivars, inter-specific hybrids, and their parental pecies.
- Author
-
Lubell, Jessica D., Brand, Mark H., and Lehrer, Jonathan M.
- Subjects
BARBERRIES ,CULTIVARS ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,PLANT genetics ,ORNAMENTAL shrubs - Abstract
Cultivars of Berberis thunbergii DC. are among the most popular garden shrubs in the United States. Using 174 amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markers we were able to differentiate between 43 B. thunbergii cultivars and analyse the genetic similarity of 62 B. thunbergii genotypes, B. julianae, B. koreana, B. vulgaris and B. vulgaris 'Atropurpurea'. Seven different accessions of B. thunbergii 'Crimson Pygmy' from a variety of sources had identical AFLP profiles, indicating that there is only one genotype in cultivation and not a collection of similar genotypes. B. thunbergii cultivars 'Crimson Pygmy', 'Crimson Dwarf', and 'Monomb' Cherry Bomb™ could not be distinguished and appeared to be the same genotype. The B. thunbergii cultivars 'Concorde' and 'Criruzam' Crimson Ruby™ are most likely genotypes of B. × ottawensis since they formed a cluster with known B. × ottawensis cultivars. The B. thunbergii var. atropurpurea accessions analysed had Jaccard's coefficients ranging from 0.89 - 0.99 and, therefore, were probably derived from highly inbred seed. A dichotomous identification key was developed for 42 B. thunbergii cultivars and hybrids and B. vulgaris 'Atropurpurea' using 23 markers. This key can be used to ensure that only legal cultivars are sold, if cultivar-specific bans are enacted, and to prevent the importation of rust-susceptible cultivars into Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. LAYERS OF INTRIGUE: Physocarpus and Powdery Mildew.
- Author
-
Lehrer, Jonathan M., Brand, Mark H., and Lubell, Jessica D.
- Subjects
ORNAMENTAL plants ,CULTIVARS ,BARBERRIES ,POWDERY mildew diseases - Abstract
The article presents a study conducted at the University of Connecticut by a research team led by Dr. Mark H. Brand aimed at investigating the suitability of ornamental ninebark cultivars as alternatives for purple and yellow cultivars of Japanese barberry, Berberis thunbergii. The researchers note the infection of the test plants by powdery mildew soon after the evaluation was commenced. The study suggests that the species will remain inextricably linked since most cultivars are susceptible.
- Published
- 2012
9. Comparing Insect Pollinator Visitation for Six Native Shrub Species and Their Cultivars.
- Author
-
Ricker, Jacob G., Lubell, Jessica D., and Brand, Mark H.
- Subjects
- *
INSECT pollinators , *CULTIVARS , *SPECIES , *INFLORESCENCES , *HONEYBEES , *NATIVE plants , *POLLINATION - Abstract
Interest in native landscape plants to support pollinators has increased. Most native plants sold by nurseries are cultivars, and some consumer and conservation groups question the suitability of native cultivars to support pollinators. In 2017 and 2018, insect pollinator visitation was quantified for six native shrub species and one or more cultivars of each species (Aronia melanocarpa, A. melanocarpa 'UCONNAM012' Ground Hog®, A. melanocarpa 'UCONNAM165' Low Scape Mound®, Clethra alnifolia, C. alnifolia 'Hummingbird', C. alnifolia 'Ruby Spice', Dasiphora fruticosa, D. fruticosa 'Goldfinger', D. fruticosa 'Pink Beauty', Hydrangea arborescens, H. arborescens 'Annabelle', Kalmia latifolia, K. latifolia 'Sarah', Physocarpus opulifolius, and P. opulifolius 'Monlo' Diabolo®). Insects were identified into 12 categories (Apis mellifera, Bombus spp., Andrenidae, Halictidae, Megachilidae, other bees, Lepidoptera, Syrphidae, other flies, wasps, Coleoptera, and other insects). The number of inflorescences and insect visitation was similar for C. alnifolia and its cultivars, and the compact cultivar Hummingbird had the greatest floral density. A. melanocarpa had more total visitors of Andrenidae than both of its compact cultivars because it was larger and produced more inflorescences. Compact Aronia cultivars and the straight species were mostly similar for Andrenidae visitation when compared on a per-inflorescence basis. D. fruticosa had more visitors of Bombus spp. and Megachilidae than both of its cultivars. These insects may have been less attracted to 'Pink Beauty' because of its pink flower color and 'Goldfinger' because of its wider flowers, which result from it being a tetraploid. H. arborescens 'Annabelle' had one-third the number of Bombus spp. visitors as H. arborescens because 'Annabelle' produces >50% fewer fertile florets. P. opulifolius 'Monlo' attracted more syrphids than P. opulifolius possibly because flowers contrasted more strongly with the reddish purple foliage of 'Monlo' than with the green foliage of the straight species. Insect visitation was similar for K. latifolia and K. latifolia 'Sarah'. Based on this work, we determined that native shrub cultivars are not universally less or more attractive to pollinators and must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.