Opuntia plant named ‘Seleno-Red’
USPP24052P3 · kind P3 · plant
Assignees
Inventors
Key dates
| Filing date | Mar 21, 2012 |
| Grant date | Dec 3, 2013 |
| Priority date | — |
| Expiry date | Jun 9, 2032 |
Classification
- Technology area (CPC —)General
Abstract
A new and distinctly salt and boron tolerant cultivar of prickly pear (Opuntia ficus-indica), named ‘Seleno-Red,’ is particularly distinguishable by its ability to tolerate and grow in high concentration of salt, boron and selenium-laden soil. The cultigen was originally discovered by stringent selection of randomly harvested cladodes (modified stems) and potentially from isolation of a single unique cladode or sport that exhibited high levels of salt and boron tolerance necessary for survival, and then propagated into the ‘Seleno-Red’ cultivar. The cladodes were originally randomly harvested from different individual plants and screened from within a naturally segregating wild population or accession. The ‘Seleno-Red’ cultivar has orange-red flowers, mature green cladodes without glochids, and red-purple fruit. When grown in a saline/selenium-laden soil, the spineless ‘Seleno-Red’ cultivar absorbs high concentrations of natural-occurring selenium, volatilizes selenium, and produces edible cladodes and fruit enriched with potential anti-carcinogenic forms of organic selenium.
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.