Search and Access Archived Conference Presentations

The 2009 ASHS Annual Conference

1449:
Evaluating Sterility of a Late-Flowering Ornamental Tung Oil Tree (Aleurites fordii)

Monday, July 27, 2009
Illinois/Missouri/Meramec (Millennium Hotel St. Louis)
Timothy Rinehart, Southern Horticultural Laboratory, USDA ARS, Poplarville, MS
Ned Edwards, Southern Horticultural Laboratory, USDA ARS, Poplarville, MS
We recently identified an Aleurites fordii seedling with ornamental potential that shows late flowering, approximately 4 weeks delayed, and does not produce normal drupes, which are toxic and a nuisance to lawn mowers since they are large (5-8 cm) and heavy. The ornamental and landscape industries could benefit from a small (4-6 meter), deciduous landscape tree that has no known insect or disease problems, has uniform growth habit, tolerates diverse soil conditions and drought, is readily propagated, and has a tropical flair with large, heart-shaped leaves and Catalpa-like blooms. Clusters of approximately 60 flowers open before the leaves in early spring and have 5 to 7 ivory petals with pink to red throats. Flowers are monoecious and both male and female flowers are visible on the late-flowering selection. Staminate male flowers produce visible pollen but staining and microscopy measurements show a high percentage of large, heavily-stained pollen grains mixed with unstained normal-sized pollen. Genome size comparisons using a flow cytometer do not suggest ploidy differences between the late-flowering selection and plants in our tung oil germplasm collection. Tung oil trees are not self-sterile and flowering times for normal trees and the late-flowering selection overlap slightly. However, male sterility combined with late-flowering could account for the lack of drupes. Two-way controlled crosses were made between seven bud-grafted clones of the late-flowering selection and seven random plants from the tung-oil tree germplasm collection to confirm sterility. Cold-hardiness evaluations of bud-grafted clones are underway since previous literature indicates hardiness only in USDA cold-hardiness zones 8 to 10, which would limit the potential of this tree.