Prunus persica 'Dr. Davis'

Cultivar

Angiosperms > Rosales > Rosaceae > Prunus > Prunus persica

Characteristics

A perennial hermaphrodite deciduous tree.
Life form perennial
Growth form tree
Growth support -
Foliage retention deciduous
Sexuality hermaphrodite
Pollination entomogamy
Spread endozoochory
Mature width (meter) -
Mature height (meter) -
Root system -
Rooting depth (meter) -
Root diameter (meter) -
Flower color -
Blooming months -
Fruit color -
Fruiting months -
Nitrogen fixer -
Photosynthetic pathway -

Environment

Light -
Soil humidity -
Soil texture -
Soil acidity -
Soil nutriment -
Hardiness (USDA) -

Usage

Uses -
Edible -
Therapeutic use -
Human toxicity -
Animal toxicity -

Cultivation

Origin: by L.D. Davis, Davis, Calif. Plant patent 4861; 29 June 1982; assigned to Regents of Univ. of California, Berkeley. Hybrid of L.D. Davis selections D25-9E × G40-5E. Tested as 7-7-52. Tree: medium size and vigor; very productive. Fruit: firm; large; globose; yellow skin over golden yellow flesh; flesh nonmelting, clingstone, brown stone. Ripens late, 1 day before Carolyn. Medium-short pubescence. Flowers pink, medium, nonshowy; leaf glands reniform.
Mode -
Germination duration (days) 120 - 365
Germination temperacture (C°) 18 - 23
Germination luminosity -
Germination treatment -
Minimum temperature (C°) -20
Optimum temperature (C°) 20 - 33
Size small
Vigor moderate vigor
Productivity high productivity

Identifiers

LSID -
WFO ID -
COL ID -
BDTFX ID -
INPN ID -
Wikipedia (EN)
Wikipedia (FR)

Synonyms

Prunus persica 'Dr. Davis'