How Can We Help?
You are here:
< Back
Apple cultivar
Ingrid Marie is an apple cultivar.
It was cultivated by accident around 1910 on the premises of a school in Høed on the island of Funen in Denmark. It is a cross of the two English cultivars Cox's Orange Pippin and Cox's Pomona.[1]
The apple has a red, firm skin and the color continues into the flesh underneath the skin.
'Ingrid Marie' trees grow very well in a moderate warm and humid climate.
Descendant cultivars
- 'Elstar' ('Golden Delicious' × 'Ingrid Marie')[2]
- Aroma (Ingrid Marie x Filippa)
References
- ^ Bjarne Larsen & Torben Bo Toldam-Andersen & Carsten Pedersen & Marian Ørgaard (2017), "Unravelling genetic diversity and cultivar parentage in the Danish apple gene bank collection", Tree Genetics & Genomes, 13, doi:10.1007/s11295-016-1087-7, S2CID 6113330
- ^ National Fruit Collection page
Categories
-
Annuals36
-
Bulbs, Corms & Tubers41
-
Ferns27
-
Fruits3
-
Garden Plants23
-
Grasses26
-
Herb17
-
Insects1
-
Mammals1
-
Midwest Native Plants0
-
Northeast Native Plants112
-
Perennials123
-
Rose1
-
Shrubs47
-
Trees112
-
Tropical Plants53
-
Upland Birds5
-
Vines18
-
Viola Tricolor1
-
Water Gardening & Plants9
-
Waterfowl0
-
Wetland Birds0
-
Wetland Plants4
-
Wildbirds172
-
Wildflowers1
-
Woodland Plants29
Table of Contents
Recent Comments