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The Time is Ripe for an Apple That Tastes Like Berries and One That Doesn’t Brown

June 25th, 2008 · No Comments · Gardening News, New Plants

Apple Trees
Questions & Answers (Q&A)
New AppleMention an apple and most people will immediately associate the word with a crisp, juicy, sweet-tart red fruit. However, ask Cornell fruit geneticist Susan Brown about apples, and she will share visions of deep red flesh or skin patterned like feathers on a bird’s back, of flavours like anise, berries, or roses. She will talk of apples loaded with cancer-preventive antioxidants or as much vitamin C as an orange, that do not brown when cut or go soft in storage.At the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station (NYSAES) in Geneva, N.Y., these apples already exist, and new possibilities — whether exotic, delicious, kind of weird or just plain awful (think gasoline, nail-polish remover or soap) — are literally endless.

Every seed holds a mystery

Apples are as infinitely variable as the number of seeds they produce the world over, and planting a seed will never produce a tree just like the one it came from. Though a tree confers the same qualities on all the apples it bears, the five to 10 seeds inside each apple are all unique offspring.

The only way to replicate a desirable apple is to graft a cutting from the tree that produced it onto some sturdy rootstock, explains Brown, the Herman M. Cohn Professor of Horticultural Sciences. The trees that yield the varieties popular with consumers are all clones of solitary originals that, in the old days at least, probably grew by chance in a cider orchard or wilderness.

Though chance and intuition will always play a role in the birth of some great apples, creating superior new varieties that will catch on with consumers involves a heavy dose of science.

The apple-breeding program at NYSAES dates back 125 years and has reaped 63 cultivars, including the Empire, Macoun, Jonagold, and Cortland.

“When I came into the program in 1990, I realized that a lot of our varieties were based on McIntosh or Empire because they are ideally suited to our location,” Brown says. However, she was concerned about the lack of genetic diversity in commercial apples. “I have really sought to save traits that I think will add to our knowledge of genes and how they can be deployed. The rootstock breeding program also does this.”

Brown arrived at Cornell just as revolutionary advances in molecular genetics technology were sparking the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences-led Genomics Initiative, now known as the New Life Sciences Initiative.

“In 1990 there were probably only 28 families of genes,” Brown recalls. “A family of genes would be, for example, several genes for scab resistance. We did not have a lot that we could use to make more efficient what was admittedly a long, expensive process. Now we have genetic markers that we can use. I can show you a small seedling and tell you whether that little seedling, when it grows up, is going to have red or yellow fruit, or have a gene for disease resistance or not. I can get scab resistance without any problem at all.”

Brown also hopes to make the apple business more profitable for the state’s 674 growers. She works closely with New York stakeholders, both to find out what improvements they would like to see in apples and to have their help with grower trials of promising new varieties. “We have fruit in grower trials pretty much all throughout New York,” she says.

Branching out

She also works to create trees that not only produce well but successfully resist multiple insect pests and pathogens, and do it all while beautifully enhancing a variety of landscapes.

Apple trees, it turns out, do not have to look like a trunk with upward, out-spreading branches. Brown has fruit-bearing trees that are perfectly columnar, others that weep and some crosses of the types that are both columnar and weeping. Her favourite type looks like a bush, with dense, upward-thrusting branches of uniform length. “All the branches stop at almost the same point,” she notes. “We spend a lot of time pruning trees, trying to bring them down so that growers can get in there with ladders.” She even has one that is only a foot high and is already bearing fruit.

With so much of the apple’s enormous potential yet to explore, she and her colleagues are excited about beefing up Cornell’s tree-fruit genomics program with three new genomicists, the first of which will be an expert in the genetics of tree architecture.

“Our goal is to establish a centre in tree fruit genomics,” she says. “We have the USDA germplasm repository, with more than 2,000 accessions of apple, my breeding program, the rootstock breeding program, and the USDA grape group in the next building is a center of excellence in grape genomics,” she says. In addition, “Every year we harvest at least 10,000 seeds. We have 33 acres of seedlings, which is a huge amount, and we have to evaluate them for many characteristics. We’re one of the largest programs in the world.”

Another goal for Brown is to create an apple that can convert a new generation of children to eating fruit. She got an idea about what might work when she put crab apples in her kids’ lunches as a joke and they came home raving about how good they were. “Kids like more fully flavoured apples with higher acidity — that’s how Granny Smith became popular,” she says. “My goal is not to get kids to eat crab-apples but to develop large varieties that are really powerful. I want to make apples that are really desirable to the younger market, because if they don’t eat them now, then they’re never going to eat them.”

Moreover, if they do not eat them, there is no end to what they will be missing.

This article has been abridged from College of Agriculture and Life Sciences News.Adapted from materials provided by Cornell University. (2008, June 23). Original article written by Jeanne Griffith.


Apple Trees Pictures

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Apple Trees Question & Answers

Apple Trees Question: 1


Apple Trees?

Can any one give me information about apple trees like what kind of think to buy for it to keep it healthy

Answer:
you need neighbours to have one too, so im told. something about polination!

Apple Trees Question: 2


How to spray apple trees for bugs and prevent squirrels?

I have two dwarf apple trees (golden delicious and red delicious). By August and September, the apples have bugs in them, and a lot of apples fall down from tree possibly because of squirrels.

Answer:
You need to go to a garden center and ask for advice. NOT HOME DEPOT. You are going to have to be on a spray schedule. They will tell you what to use, and when. The apples are falling off from the bugs.

Apple Trees Question: 3


Where can I find an online pollination compatibility chart regarding apple and cherry trees?

I am planting 1 Honeygold apple tree, 1 honeycrisp apple tree, and 1 Evans Bali cherry tree. Will the two apple trees cross-polinate? Do I need another cherry tree or another variety of cherry tree to polinate each other? Thanks!

Answer:

Apple Trees Question: 4


Can certain types of pear trees pollinate certain types of apple trees?

If I were to get one pear tree and one apple tree, would they be able to cross pollinate with each other resulting in them both producing fruit? Or would I need 2 compatible pear trees and 2 compatible apple trees to get both fruits?

Answer:

Apple Trees Question: 5


I have just discovered some damage to my young apple and birch trees?

Apparently some deer stripped off some of the bark on my last year's planted birch trees and my three year old apple tree. What can I do to help these trees survive the damage or is it already too late even though spring is just beginning to hit here and they haven't come out of winter dormancy yet? I am more concerned about the apple tree than anything else. The apple tree is a Haralson apple.

Answer:
I think they will probably be all right, but just in case, go to a reputable nursery and ask where you could find a "Master Gardner" (I never quite got that far). That person may recommend a sealer like you would use when cutting off limbs. Andt the previous answerer said, check with the county extension office, I am pretty sure they have Master Gardners there. What I would like for you to do to prevent future damage is save the hair from your hairbrushes, put it in old nylon stockings (or better yet stinky gym socks) and hang them around the trees, that will keep all kind of foraging critters away. I do know a variety of herbs that will keep them away too, but I think you need to address the damage first. BB )O(

Apple Trees Question: 6


I just got two Macintosh apple trees, do I have to have a different kind of apple tree to get apples?

This is just two trees in the back yard. Do you need another species for pollination or just another tree? If I do need another kind for pollination what kind of apple tree will work. I've read up on this and every answer is different. Some say they will self pollinate and other say they won't? HELP!!!!!!!!!!!!

Answer:
Hello, I disagree that a McIntosh will pollinate another McIntosh apple tree. The McIntosh is a early blooming apple and you will need another apple tree that has the same bloom period or a early blooming crab apple tree. Here is a pollination chart from Washington State University detailing fruit pollination http://www.spokane-county.wsu.edu/spokane/eastside/Fact%20Sheets/C105%20Pollination%20of%20Fruit%20Trees%2005.pdf. If you are interested in a crab apple to pollinate your McIntosh trees you can use a Dolgo crab apple. http://www.naturehills.com/product/dolgo_crabapple.aspx I hope your backyard can fit another tree. I wish I had better news.

Apple Trees Question: 7


Where can I buy good apple trees?

I am looking for Honeycrisp apple trees and I can not find any web sites that have them without paying a arm and a leg for them. My local nursery does not have the honeycrisp.

Answer:
Check here: http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fgp%2Fsite-directory%2F&tag=funjok-20&linkCode=ur2&camp=1789&creative=9325 You will find what you like! Good luck!

Apple Trees Question: 8


Why do some of my apple trees still have some leaves?

I live in Tuscaloosa, Al and most of the leaves on most of our various fruit trees here at the house are long since gone. However, I have a couple of apple trees that are still holding on to some of their leaves towards the tips of the limbs. Is this natural or a sign of some problem the tree is having?

Answer:
I had leaves and a few apples still hanging here in California; but it's a good idea to knock them off if you can, in order to keep overwintering insects or fungus from getting a headstart in spring. Waterspouts usually hold on to the leaves longer than the productive branches.

Apple Trees Question: 9


What pesticide should I use on my apple trees?

My apple trees are six years old and have produced fruit in the past. For the past two years, shortly after the tree has blossomed something eats the blooms. There is no damage to the leaves or bark.

Answer:
agent orange

Apple Trees Question: 10


How do you plant apple trees?

I have two apple trees, and i need two know how to take care of them, like when to posion the pests, how to cut the tree branches, and when to plant them?

Answer:
Dig hole in ground big enough to take the roots spread out, bung in loads of goo compost with added slow fertilizer, firm it in, loosen top 2'' of soil. thats it. Make sure the graft is not below soil level.

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