Rubus idaeus 'New Hampshire'

Cultivar

Angiosperms > Rosales > Rosaceae > Rubus > Rubus idaeus

Characteristics

A perennial hermaphrodite deciduous shrub.
Life form perennial
Growth form shrub
Growth support -
Foliage retention deciduous
Sexuality hermaphrodite
Pollination -
Spread endozoochory
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Mature height (meter) -
Root system -
Rooting depth (meter) -
Root diameter (meter) -
Flower color -
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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: in Durham, N.H., by AF. Yeager, New Hampshire Agr. Expt. Sta. Open-pollinated F2 seedling from an F1 of Taylor × Rubus chamaemorus; introd. in 1955. Tree: winter hardy in northern U.S.; productive. Fruit: red; very firm; ripening in midseason; harvest season long and continuous.
Mode -
Germination duration (days) -
Germination temperacture (C°) -
Germination luminosity -
Germination treatment -
Minimum temperature (C°) -40
Optimum temperature (C°) 17 - 23
Size -
Vigor -
Productivity productive

Identifiers

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Wikipedia (EN)
Wikipedia (FR)

Synonyms

Rubus idaeus 'New Hampshire'