Ulmus 'Nanguen'
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ulmus_'Nanguen' an entity of type: Thing
Ulmus 'Nanguen' (selling name Lutèce) is a complex fourth generation Dutch hybrid cultivar raised at the Dorschkamp Research Institute for Forestry & Landscape Planning, Wageningen. Lutèce was derived from the cross 'Plantyn' × ('Bea Schwarz' selfed), an ancestry comprising four field elms (U. minor), a wych elm (U. glabra), the curious Exeter Elm ('Exoniensis'), and a frost-resistant selection of the Himalayan elm (U. wallichiana). Lutèce has been deemed the modern cultivar most closely resembling the native European elms.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Ulmus 'Nanguen'
rdf:langString
Ulmus 'Nanguen'
rdf:langString
Ulmus 'Nanguen'
xsd:integer
4718013
xsd:integer
1105591777
rdf:langString
'Nanguen' =
rdf:langString
Ulmus
rdf:langString
'Plantyn' ×
<second>
6.31152E8
rdf:langString
Wageningen, The Netherlands
rdf:langString
Ulmus 'Nanguen' (selling name Lutèce) is a complex fourth generation Dutch hybrid cultivar raised at the Dorschkamp Research Institute for Forestry & Landscape Planning, Wageningen. Lutèce was derived from the cross 'Plantyn' × ('Bea Schwarz' selfed), an ancestry comprising four field elms (U. minor), a wych elm (U. glabra), the curious Exeter Elm ('Exoniensis'), and a frost-resistant selection of the Himalayan elm (U. wallichiana). Originally identified as clone 812, Lutèce was not promoted by the Dutch owing to unfounded fears that it may prove susceptible to coral spot fungus (Nectria cinnabarina). Instead, 812 was acquired by the French Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), which subjected the tree to 20 years of field trials in the Bois de Vincennes, Paris, before patenting and release in 2002 as 'Nanguen' = Lutèce. Lutèce has been deemed the modern cultivar most closely resembling the native European elms.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
13193