
Read: for
more details, see Agricultural Research.. The NC-7 Website: A New Way to
Find Woody OrnamentalsBy Hank Becker September 18, 2000
For gardeners in North Central states, information on desirable new trees,
shrubs, vines and ground covers to plant is as nearby as their computers. The
NC-7 web site has extensive information on more than 175 kinds of woody plants
with potential ornamental use. Agricultural Research Servicescientists at the North Central Regional Plant Introduction Station, Ames,
Iowa, created the web site, which includes information on several maples,
hydrangeas, rhododendrons, spireas, viburnums and weigelas. How these plants
look and perform, evaluations of their aesthetic and adaptive characteristics,
and other details are included on the web site. The data comes from a cooperative project funded by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture and 12 state
agricultural experiment stations in the north-central United States. The
scientists who conduct the horticultural project at the station gather and
disseminate the data. Since 1954, over 550 accessions have been distributed for evaluation and
testing to participating cooperators at 36 trial sites. About 50 percent of
these were trees, both evergreen and deciduous, and 40 percent were shrubs. The
rest were vines, ground covers and herbaceous perennials. The NC-7 web site (http://www.ars-grin.gov/ars/MidWest/Ames/trialhmpge.html)
includes an overview of the trials, a list of the regional cooperators, plant
descriptions, evaluation summaries, tables of the 10-year evaluation data
collected and compiled from the cooperators, and pictures of many of the
plants. For more details, see the September 2000 issue of Agricultural Research magazine. ARS is USDAs chief research arm. The NC-7 project is part of a
nationwide program of horticultural research within ARS. For more information
on other ARS research programs that impact on horticulture, see the list of
"Crop Production, Product Value and Safety" national programs at: http://www.nps.ars.usda.gov Scientific contact: Mark P. Widrlechner and A. Paul Ovrom, ARS
North Central
Regional Plant Introduction Station, Ames, Iowa, phone (515) 294-3511/3454,
fax (515) 294-1903, [email protected][Widrlechner], [email protected][Ovrom]. U.S. Department of Agriculture |