Juneberry - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Juneberry

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Rogue non-uniform plants. Takes additional 1-2 years to establish. NCRS ... Spider mites. Leaf-rolling & tent caterpillars. Limited control. 21 day preharvest ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Juneberry


1
Juneberry
  • Rosaceae Amelanchier alnifolia
  • Serviceberry, Saskatoon berry

2
Range
  • Amelanchier alnifolia- North Central Region
  • Alta., B.C., Man., Ont., N.W.T., Sask., Yukon
    Colo., Idaho, Iowa, Kans., Minn., Mont., Nebr.,
    Nev., N.Mex., N.Dak., Oreg., S.Dak., Tex., Utah,
    Wash., Wyo

3
Habitat
  • Stream banks, river shores, lake shores,
    mountainsides, dry rocky and grassy slopes
    (northern shrub-steppe), hillsides, woods,
    thickets, shaded canyons, moist roadsides
    30-2900 m
  • Drought tolerant require 13 percipitation
  • High pH tolerant
  • Freezing tolerant to -50 to -60C

4
Botanical Description
  • Amelanchier 16-25 species in NA
  • Multistemmed shrub or small tree
  • Other amelanchier names Sarvis, sarvistree,
    shadblow, shadbush, swamp sugar pear, currant
    tree, snowy mespilus, Indian pear
  • Several species used for fruit
  • Success introduced 1878 A. canadensis
  • 2n  68, species hybridize readily, also
    hybridize with sorbus
  • Multistemmed shrub grey bark
  • Leaves round to truncate leaves, usually glabrous

5
Medicinal
  • Tea stomach troubles, childbirth recovery,
  • Bark infusion sore eyes

6
Other Uses
  • Ornamental
  • White flowers
  • Orange-copper fall foliage
  • Early Uses
  • Tough flexible wood for arrows, digging tools,
    stakes, handles etc.
  • Cross-pieces for canoe, basket frame

7
Flower
  • Inflorescences borne on 1yr wood, erect raceme,
    3--6 cm, 5-15 flowers, lowest flower subtended by
    a leaf. 
  • Flowering May-June
  • 3 to 20days
  • Chilling requirement 2000h
  • Flowers self fertile
  • 20 stamen
  • 5 stigmas
  • Summit of the ovary distinctly hairy
  • Sepals reflex after flowering

8
Fruit
  • Pome
  • 1 -10 seed
  • 5-10 mm long
  • blue to purple when ripe
  • 45-60 days after flowering

9
Fruit Use
  • Jams, jelly syrup, pies, fresh, wine
  • Fruit leathers, pemmican
  • Substitute for blueberry

10
Propagation
  • Seed
  • F1 seed from parental clone
  • Will produce plant similar to parent type
  • Collect seed from fresh fruit, extract, wash, dry
  • Stratify 3-4 months at 1-7C
  • Rogue non-uniform plants
  • Takes additional 1-2 years to establish
  • NCRS
  • Plant seed outside in fall in nursery bed
  • Windbreak materials

11
Propagation
  • Cuttings
  • Root 1-1.5 cm diameter, 5-10cm long, fall store
    at 4C in peat moss,
  • Suckers from rhizomes
  • Softwood difficult to root
  • stool bed, etiolated shoots from crown base
  • Hardwood Micropropagation
  • Budding best for tree type

12
Cultivars
  • Martin -15', large fruit size and uniform
    ripening. Excellent mechanical harvest variety.
  • Thiessen -15', Vigorous, sprawling, largefruit,
    excellent fresh, unevenripening
  • Northline -12', Upright spreading form. Suckers
    freely, large blue-black fruit
  • Smoky -12' Wide spreading habit, suckers, most
    productive commercial variety, uneven ripening.
  • Honeywood -15' Large flavorful fruit, flowers
    later than Smoky, even ripening, precocious.
  • Regent 4-6 more ornamental

http//www.lawyernursery.com/
13
3 years to come into production 12 years to full
production Lifespan 30-50years
14
Site selection
  • Northeast slope to avoid frosts
  • Watch for 2-4,D drift potential!
  • Adapted to most soil types
  • (sandy loam ideal)
  • needs good drainage
  • Avoid clay soils
  • pH 5.5 7.5

15
Soil Preparation
  • Soil test pH, NPK, organic matter
  • Weed control previous season
  • Two years if perennial weed problem
  • Cover crop till down, fall annual cover crop

16
Planting
  • Hedgerow N-S
  • 35- 50 from windbreak
  • Between row 3-6 wider than equipment
  • Mechanical harvester,
  • Over row 16
  • Pull type 20
  • Rule of thumb alley width not less than plant
    height
  • U-pick lt400 rows

17
Planting
  • Within row 5-6 apart
  • Keep roots moist!
  • Plant dormant plants when soil temps are 5C lt10C
    (40lt50F)
  • Irrigate until well-established
  • Tissue culture or stoolbed plants
  • Mid-August

18
Calculate Plant
  • Plant Density (trees/acre)
  • N (43560)
  • (AB)D

N number of rows within bed (single 1) A
alley width from trunk to trunk or plant to
plant B bed width D distance between trees
within row
Calculate 5-6 x 16-20
19
Mulching Weed Control
  • Organic mulch
  • Immediately after planting
  • 3-5
  • Wood chip 3
  • 4 swath
  • Plastic mulch trickle irrigation
  • Rip down center as plants sucker

20
Orchard Floor
  • Grass alleys
  • Bunch grasses
  • Reduce compaction
  • Pick your own no mud
  • gt winter survival
  • Weed control essential
  • Foxtail, perennial weeds

21
Orchard Maintenance
  • Young planting remove horizontal stems keep
    vertical vigorous
  • After 3-4 years fruiting, thin older stems. Keep
    5-7 main stems lt1diameter, prune annually in
    March April. 4 year renewal pruning
  • Flowers on 1 yr old wood
  • Highest quality fruit on vigorous branches
  • remove weak, diseased, low branches
  • remove center (shaded) branches

22
Fertilization
  • Soil test
  • 25-50 lb N/acre
  • Potassium requirement increase as come into
    bearing
  • Foliar analysis
  • tissue sample end July mid-August
  • ppm levels are being developed
  • current N-2.5, P-0.2, K 1.2
  • Early spring application budbreak and petal fall

23
Harvest
  • May be mechanically harvested
  • 5 acre minimum size for commercial orchard
  • 6-8 years mature production
  • 10-15 lbs/ shrub 3-4000 lb/a

24
Storage
  • Short shelf life
  • Freeze well, flash freeze maintain 2 years
  • Dehydration anthocyanin browning
  • Dry and infuse with sugar to maintain color and
    fruit stability
  • Historically dried in flat layer/slab

25
Economics
  • Canada 4000 acres 24 mil/yr USD
  • 2/lb PYO
  • 3/lb Fresh mechanical harvest
  • Establish cost 2000/acre
  • Production year 3-6
  • Invest 6000
  • 8-10 years to payback
  • 3000-4000 potential net return /yr

26
Birds
  • Netting - Protection from birds is essential!

27
Disease
  • Entomosporium
  • Leaf berry spot
  • Angular brown spots
  • Fruit cracking shrivel
  • Humid warm conditions
  • Air circulation, fungicides
  • hawthorn, mountain ash,

28
Disease
  • Juniper rust
  • Remove native juniper
  • Fungicide

29
Disease
  • Brown fruit rot
  • Clean up orchard
  • Funginex 190
  • Powdery mildew
  • Air circulation
  • Fungicide
  • Fireblight
  • Prune

30
Insect
  • Wooly Elm Aphid
  • Young plantings
  • Apple curculio
  • Aphids
  • Spider mites
  • Leaf-rolling tent caterpillars
  • Limited control
  • 21 day preharvest

31
Chemical Damage
  • Sensitive to 2,4-D family of herbicides
  • Leaf malformation
  • Sulfur toxicity
  • Leaf drop

32
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33
Nutritional Value Similar to Blueberry
34
Phytochemical
35
Lonicera caeruleaCaprifoliaceae
  • Edible Honeysuckle
  • Russian cultivars
  • 3-6 height
  • Blue fruit
  • Very winter hardy
  • Flowers april-may
  • Requires moist soil

36
Hippophae rhamnoidesElaeagnaceae
  • Sea Buchthorn
  • Indian-Summer
  • 6-12
  • Very hardy, freezing and heat tolerant
  • Yellow-orange berries, dioecious
  • Thorny stems, high in protein, lipids- Omega 3,
    6, 9 VitE, VitC, 190 bioactive components
  • Flower on 2 year old wood
  • 1 male to 6-8 female
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