SUMMARY OF EXPERIMENTS CURRENTLY
BEING CONDUCTED AT THE NW MICHIGAN HORTICULTURAL RESEARCH STATION
1. Red Tart Cherry Cultivar
Trials. These
plantings are under the direction of Dr. Amy Iezzoni, Dept. of Horticulture,
MSU. The tart cherry trials include both red and clear juice types. Plantings
include both promising European cultivars and advanced selections from
Dr. Iezzoni's tart cherry breeding program. Many possible characteristics
can be incorporated into newly developed cultivars including leaf spot
and brown rot resistance, desirable pit shape and size, increased, high
sugar content, and other desirable traits.
2. Sweet Cherry Variety
Trials include
over 279 varieties and advanced selections (305 cultivar/rootstock combinations)
from North America and Europe for evaluation by Jim Nugent and Greg Lang.
More sweet cherries are being planted each year. Trials include several
selections that are self-fruitful types, a trait only recently available
in commercially acceptable varieties. Recent introductions and advanced
selections are under evaluation from sweet cherry breeding programs in
New York (Cornell Univ.), Ontario, British Columbia and Washington (WSU).
3. Rootstocks for Red
Tart and Sweet Cherries.
The original NC-140 cherry rootstock trial was removed after ten years
of evaluation from 1986-1996. A new planting was placed back on this site
in 1998. In the new planting, sweet cherries are being grown and evaluated
on 20 rootstocks, with 12 rootstocks under evaluation with Montmorency
tart cherries. These plantings were established by Dr. Ron Perry and are
now under the direction of Dr. Greg Lang, Dept. of Horticulture, MSU.
4. Cherry Insect Studies
(Entomology plots). This work is under the direction
of Drs. Mark Whalon, Larry Gut and John Wise, Dept of Entomology, MSU.
It involves control studies for major cherry insect pests, including possible
biological control methods. General insecticides have not been applied
in this block since 1982 to build populations of various cherry insects.
During the past twenty-three seasons, Eastern cherry fruit fly has been
very active, providing some of the earliest emergence for this pest in
Michigan. During 1998 and 1999, a project examining cherry fruit fly control
utilizing the insect growth regulator SpintorTM
was conducted. Currently trials are being conducted
to study plum curculio using newly developed trapping technologies in sweet
cherry and tart cherry to better understand this pest's biology and improve
monitoring tactics. Cherry fruit fly trapping and management alternatives
are also under evaluation. Trials for control of two-spotted spider mite
have been added to this work since 2000.
5. Cherry Pathology Studies
are under the direction of George Sundin, Dept. of Plant Pathology, MSU.
Controls for such diseases as bacterial canker, cherry leaf spot, brown
rot, and powdery mildew are being studied. During the past twenty-one seasons,
spray programs on both tart and sweet cherries consisting of both commercial
and experimental fungicides have been evaluated. With the loss of many
fungicides, the importance of this work continues to increase.
6. Cultivar Trials on
Plums and Prunes.
This work is currently under the direction of Mira Danilovich, District
Horticultural Agent. Many cultivars and selections are being examined which
might be applicable to Michigan. In general, two trees of each cultivar
have been planted to get a "first look" at many different fruiting types.
Since there is an immediate need by the Michigan plum industry for improved
cultivars, some 210 different types have already been evaluated. New selections
continue to be added to this trial. Varieties showing promising horticultural
characteristics are also evaluated for their processing characteristics.
A few new selections, which show some promise as a replacement for Stanley
plum, have been budded and were planted in our trials in 1986. These selections
are generally freestone with a round pit without a fragile tip. Limited
plantings of the most promising selections are now being made at grower
locations. Fruit is evaluated for pitting and canning, baby food, juice
and fresh market potential. Nearly all of the oldest cultivars were removed
and the most promising new varieties have been re-established on this site.
7. Apple and Pear Cultivars.
Some 110 apple cultivars have been established to tudy new introductions
which might be profitably grown in Michigan. Additional cultivars are added
each year. Several pear variety/rootstock combinations are also being evaluated.
In 1996, several promising fireblight resistant pears were added to the
collection for evaluation. Many of the older trees in this block were removed
to make room to plant additional variety plantings in the future.
8. NC-140 Apple Rootstock
Trial - Established
in 1999 by Dr. Ron Perry. This trial will evaluate 12 rootstocks grown
with McIntosh on top. Honeycrisp and Gala are planted as guard trees on
various stocks and will also be evaluated.
Additional trials were planted
in 2002, 2003 and 2004 to evaluate the performance of newly released Cornell-Geneva
(CG) Elite rootstocks.
9. International Tart
Cherry Orchard.
This orchard has been established by Dr. Amy Iezzoni and contains tart
cherry selections from several European countries. The most promising selections
from the MSU tart cherry breeding program have also been planted in this
orchard. This trial will continue to expand each year as new selections
are developed and additional varieties are shipped in from other countries.
The oldest trees were removed in 1998 to make way for new selections to
be planted in the future.
10. Spray Deposition.
Dr. Gary VanEe and Richard Ledebuhr, Dept of Ag. Engineering, MSU, have
provided the leadership for an evaluation of methods for quantitative and
qualitative analysis of spray deposition. Their work also involves the
development and improvement of orchard and vineyard spraying equipment.
This work is designed to achieve a reduction in the amount of pesticides
necessary to manage insects and diseases, plus develop management strategies
to address concerns with spray drift. The latest project developed equipment
to apply trunk sprays to help control borers.
11. Soft Fruit Problem
in Tart Cherries.
Research into the causes of the soft fruit problem in tart cherries is
being conducted at MSU, the NW Station and with several grower cooperators
in Northwest and West Central Michigan. The MSU team currently investigating
this critical issue includes Drs. Jim Flore, Steve VanNocker, Wayne Loescher,
Greg Lang and Eric Hanson from the Dept of Horticulture, and Jim Nugent.
Dr. Dan Guyer, Dept of Ag Engineering, is a cooperator. This issue has
become very important to the cherry industry since the loss of Alar in
the late 1980's. Research is focused on the evaluation of fruit components
to determine what internal factors are predisposing fruit to character
breakdown during harvest and assessing production practices and growth
regulators for their effects on fruit firmness.
12. Windbreaks.
In an effort to avoid some of the problems associated with conventional
Poplar windbreaks, windbreaks of Grey Alder were established in 1988 and
a planting of Asiatic Larch was established in 1992.
13. Orchard Floor Management/Ground
Water Study.
This study has recently been completed. This project compared 14 orchard
floor management systems, including living ground covers, mulches, compost
and herbicide controls. The objective is to find alternative management
strategies that produce quality fruit with lower herbicide and fertilizer
inputs to assure that groundwater does not become contaminated. Targeted
for assessment and potential reduction are nitrogen and simazine due to
their potential for leaching. This project is mostly funded through MDA's
Groundwater Stewardship Program with additional funding from USDA's North
Central Regional IPM Research Grant Program. Dr. Charlie Edson was the
program leader. Cooperators include several faculty, station staff, a grower
and a consultant.
14. Wine Grape Research.
A planting of wine grapes was established during 1995 and 96 to evaluate
new selections under northwest Michigan conditions. Various growing systems
and low chemical input varieties will also be evaluated. These projects
are under the direction of Dr. Tom Zabadal with assistance from Dr. Duke
Elsner, MSU-E. In 1998 Dr. Tom Zabadal, Coordinator, SW Michigan Research
and Extension Center, established an additional planting to study growth,
production and hardiness of the vines at various spacings, as well as vines
placed in grow tubes.
15. Nut Planting.
Several selections of chestnuts and hazelnuts have been established under
the direction of Dr. Dennis Fulbright, Dept of Botany and Plant Pathology,
MSU, with the help of the Northern Nut Growers Association.
16. Montmorency/Ujfehertoi
furtos (Balaton) Spacing Trial
is under the direction of Drs. Jim Flore and Amy Iezzoni. Planted in 1994,
this trial will compare several planting distances of Montmorency, to a
newly introduced Hungarian variety of tart cherry, Balaton. This will help
to determine optimum spacing and management to produce the best quality
and high yields. A companion planting was planted in 1995 to evaluate Balaton
on three different rootstocks.
17. Environmental
Monitoring Project – An electronic environmental monitoring instrument
has been installed at the NWMHRS. This equipment is hard wired into two
computers – one providing continual data display in the station's lobby
and a second that accumulates information for transmission to MSU and growers.
This second computer also receives from MSU and automatically sends a 60-hour
daily weather forecast to growers on a 7 day/week schedule. This data is
now linked into a new regional monitoring network to supply localized real-time
information to Michigan growers. Growers access information via internet,
fax or phone to a computer using a voice generator. This project is under
the direction of Dr. Jeff Andresen, MSU Agricultural Meteorologist, with
cooperation developing the regional network provided by this office.
18. Tart Cherry IPM Planting
- A new cherry IPM project was initiated in 1996. The planting consists
of both Montmorency and Balaton planted in 9 blocks of approximately 0.75
acres each. During the initial years, the study focused on orchard floor
management and nematodes. This site is now the primary site for studying
issues related to tart cherry IPM. Primary projects currently being conducted
in this planting include: organic cherry production, perma-culture production,
and innovative cherry fruit fly and plum curculio management studies. This
project was under the primary leadership of Dr. Dave Epstein, Office of
IPM, MSU; Drs. Mark Whalon, George Bird, Dept of Entomology, MSU and Jim
Nugent. Primary financial support has come from USDA's SARE program and
the Michigan Cherry Committee. Although no active research is currently
taking place in this plot, all treatments have been left intact.
19. Training Systems for
Dwarf Sweet Cherries for Processing & Fresh
– This project investigates productivity and training strategies for growing
processing and fresh sweet cherries on dwarfing vs standard rootstocks.
The processing trial, planted at the NWMHRS, consists of the rootstocks
Gisela 5 & 6, mahaleb, mazzard, MXM2 and two Hungarian mahaleb clones,
i.e., CT500 and CT2753. Varieties are Gold, Emperor Francis, Napoleon and
Ranier. The fresh portion of the trial consists of five varieties and four
rootstocks with three training systems. The fresh trial is planted on a
grower site in NW Michigan and at the SW Michigan Research and Extension
Center. The project is led by Bill Shane, Jim Nugent and Greg Lang, with
cooperation from Wally Heuser.
20. Balaton and Danube
on Dwarf Rootstocks – Planting was established in 2001 to evaluate
the potential of growing Balaton and Danube on smaller trees for the fresh
market. Developing tree training methods for this combination will be one
of the objectives of this study. Cooperators include Greg Lang, Amy Iezzoni
and Jim Nugent.
21. Armillaria Root Rot
is a serious problem, which attacks the roots in stone fruits resulting
in tree death. There is no known prevention or cure for cherries. A planting
has been established to evaluate the susceptibility of a wide range of
plant material to the specie of Armillaria present in NW Michigan cherry
orchards. The objective is to find Armillaria resistant rootstock candidates.
The planting includes over 50 different Prunus species or Prunus crosses.
The planting is located on leased property near the NWMHRS. It was established
in 2001, with additional plant material added in 2002 and 2003. More will
be added in the future. The project is under the leadership of Drs. George
Sundin and Greg Lang, with assistance from Jim Nugent.
22. Many Other Experiments
Involving Fruit Trees are being conducted both on and off the Station
in nearby orchards. Fruit maturity, herbicide trials, spray deposition,
fruit thinning and cherry cracking are examples of some of these projects.
These special off-station projects are under the direction of various individuals
from the Departments of Agricultural Engineering, Horticulture, and Entomology,
as well as Station personnel. Special projects will continue in off-site
orchards as needed.
23. Horned-Face
Bee - A new study was initiated in 2005 that investigates the effectiveness
of the pollinators Osmia cornifrons (horn-faced bee (HFB)). HFB
were donated to the station in early spring, and multiple nesting colonies
were placed throughout different cherry blocks. This bee is native to Japan
and its behavior closely resembles related species, such as the blue orchard
bee or ‘mason bee’. These bee species have been used extensively in orchards
in the western U.S. due to their exceptional pollination traits. They are
extremely efficient pollinators, and they prefer to forage on fruit tree
flowers. Osmia species also fly under cool and cloudy weather, which
makes them a desirable pollinator under cool spring conditions. Because
fruit growers can mimic Osmia nesting sites and because these insects
are excellent pollinators, we are very interested in investigating their
use in northwest Michigan orchards. This project is under the direction
of Dr. Nikki Rothwell, Erin Taylor, and Alison Heins.
Please send any comments or suggestions
regarding this site to:
Bill Klein, kleinw@msu.edu
Last Revised: 11-7-05 |