Valuable Chestnut Germplasm In Connecticut
for more information contact Sandra L. Anagnostakis, The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station,
Box 1106, New Haven, CT 06504, phone 203-974-8498, fax 203-974-8502
The renewed interest in chestnut tree breeding has raised questions about
the availability of valuable germplasm. There have been chestnut trees of several
species in this country for a long time (C. sativa, 1773; C. crenata, 1876; C.
mollissima, 1903; C. henryi, 1908; C. seguinii, 1918). The Connecticut Agricultural
Experiment Station and a few private land owners have many very fine trees. In the
1930's and 40's, Arthur Graves and Donald Jones planted many of the trees now
used in the U.S. for breeding and molecular biology experiments. Additions of
species and hybrids were made by Hans Nienstaedt and Richard Jaynes, who both
did their PhD research on chestnut. I have added others over the last 10 years.
Some of my favorites are listed here to illustrate the richness of the resource. Trees
are in Experiment Station plantings (which include over 1000 trees) unless
otherwise noted.
SPECIES
- Japanese - Castanea crenata
- two trees planted in 1876, probably both` Parsons' Japan'
both on private land (Cheshire, Congregational Church;
Old Lyme, Bee and Thistle Inn) (orchard trees)
- USDA-PI #78626, seed from wild trees in Oguriyama, Amori-ken,
Japan, planted 1933 (orchard tree
- USDA-PI #104015, Nobeoka Eirinsho, Yokugomura, Higashi,
Usuki-gun, Miyasaki-ken, Japan (32 deg.
latitude, planted 1935 (orchard tree)
- USDA-PI #104016, Numakunai Eirinsho, Ippoimura, Iwate-gun,
Iwate-ken, Japan, planted 1935 (timber tree)
- USDA-PI #113679, Iwate-ken, Japan, planted 1939 at
the CT Arboretum in New London (orchard trees)
- Seguine - Castanea seguinii
- three trees of USDA-PI #70317, "Mo-lut-tsz" Chiuhwashaan,
Anhwei, China, planted 1929 (dwarf species)
- Chinese Timber Chinquapin - Castanea Henryi
- USDA-PI #104058, "Chu-Lee" or "Chun Lee" "pearl
chestnut," Hsiaohsing, Anhwei, China, planted 1935
- wild seed from Nanjing, China, planted 1992
- Chinese - Castanea mollissima
- two trees of USDA-PI #70315, "hardy trees native to north-eastern
China" planted 1929, one is Graves' "Mahogany" (timber trees)
- USDA-PI #78744, "Tiger Paw" from the Fa Hua Ssu Temple near
Beijing, planted 1932 (orchard tree)
- two trees of USDA-PI #104061, `Lui An' Chekiang Province, China
(28-32 deg. latitude) planted 1935 (timber trees
- four trees of USDA-PI #104063, `Kuei Lee' "large chestnut,"
Hsinteng, Chekiang Province, China, planted 1935 (timber trees)
- two trees of USDA-PI #39721, from Tientsin, China, planted 1916
at the Bartlett Arboretum in Stamford (timber trees)
- one tree of Frank Meyer's import PI #36666, from the Pingchuan
region N.E. of Beijing, planted 1917 at the Bartlett Arboretum in
Stamford CT (this orchard tree is the cultivar `Bartlett')
- grove of 28 trees of USDA-PI #58602 from north eastern China,
planted 1926 in Dayville. These are naturalizing vigorously.
- seedlings (1992) of "wild chestnut" from China which are almost
different enough from mollissima to make them another species
- European - Castanea sativa
- three trees from wild seed collected in the Black Forest in
Germany, planted 1985
- 15 trees from four areas with wild chestnut near Bursa, Turkey,
planted 1991
- 15 trees from seed collected in the Cavcas Biosphere Reserve in
the Caucasus Mountains of southern Russia, planted 1994
- American - Castanea dentata
- about 300 trees, seedlings from Michigan, Wisconsin, New York,
and Connecticut, kept alive by hypovirulence in the blight fungus
population
- two grafts of the tree "Scientist's Cliffs" from land of Flippo Gravett
in Port Republic, Maryland; had measurable resistance to chestnut
blight (see Anagnostakis, 1992)
- 8 trees on Painter Hill Road, near Painter Ridge Rd., in Roxbury,
used in Experiment Station crosses almost yearly from 1948 to
1961, may have some resistance to blight
- American Chinquapins - Castanea pumila
- var. pumila, one tree
- var. ozarkensis, five trees
- var. alnifolia, one tree
- var. asheii, one tree
- var. floridana, three trees
- Hybrids of special interest
- crenata X dentata
- two trees planted 1931, one the "Smith hybrid" and one called
"Hammond-86"
- mollissima X dentata
- four trees planted 1960
- dentata X mollissima
- two trees planted 1936
- (mollissima X dentata) X dentata
- two grafts of the `Clapper' tree and one tree from seed planted
1955, called `Graves'
These trees have been used by Experiment Station Staff and by American
Chestnut Foundation scientist Fred Hebard and others for crosses and experiments
for many years. They are likely to be here for future use as well. A list of the
inventory of Experiment Station plantings (with maps) is available from the author
upon request.
REFERENCES
- Anagnostakis, S. L. 1992. Measuring resistance of chestnut trees to chestnut
blight. Can. J. For. Res. 22:568-571.
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