Search National Agricultural Library (NAL) Digital Collections
Showing item
0 of from your search.
start over
Registration of 'CP 00-1446' Sugarcane
- Abstract::
- 'CP 00-1446' (Reg. No CV-133, PI 654092) sugarcane (a complex hybrid of Saccharum spp.) was developed through cooperative research conducted by the USDA-ARS, the University of Florida, and the Florida Sugar Cane League, Inc., and was released to growers in Florida in September 2007. CP 00-1446 was selected from a cross of genotypes CP 93-1607 x CP 91-1150 made at Canal Point, FL, in January 1998. The female and male parents were advanced to the penultimate selection stage (Stage 3) and the final stage (Stage 4), respectively, of the Canal Point sugarcane cultivar breeding and selection program. CP 00-1446 was released and recommended for sand soils in Florida because of its high plant cane and acceptable ratoon per hectare yields of cane and sucrose and commercial recoverable sucrose on sand soils, and its acceptable disease reactions to smut [caused by Ustilago scitaminea (Sydow & P. Sydow)] (moderately susceptible), brown rust (caused by Puccinia melanocephala H. & P. Sydow) (moderately resistant), orange rust (caused by Puccinia kuehnii E.J. Butler) (moderately resistant), leaf scald (caused by Xanthomonas albilineans Ashby, Dowson) (resistant), Sugarcane mosaic virus strain E (mosaic) (moderately susceptible), and ratoon stunting disease (caused by Clavibacter xyli subsp. xyli Davis) (resistant) in Florida.
- Author(s):
-
Comstock, Jack C. , Glaz, Barry , Edme, Serge J. , Davidson, R. Wayne , Gilbert, Robert A. , Glynn, Neil C. , Miller, Jimmy D. , Tai, Peter Y.P.
- Subject(s):
-
Saccharum , sugarcane , sugar crops , cultivars , germplasm releases , crop yield , sandy soils , sucrose , disease resistance , genetic resistance , plant diseases and disorders , Florida
- Description:
- Includes references
- Source:
- Journal of plant registrations 2009 Jan., v. 3, no. 1
- Language:
- English
- Year:
- 2009
- Collection:
-
Journal Articles, USDA Authors, Peer-Reviewed
- File:
-
Download [PDF]
- Rights:
- Works produced by employees of the U.S. Government as part of their official duties are not copyrighted within the U.S. The content of this document is not copyrighted.