Cortland is a cultivar of apple developed at the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva, New York, United States in 1898.[1] The apple was named after nearby Cortland County, New York. It is among the fifteen most popular in the United States[2] and Canada.

'Cortland'
Hybrid parentage'McIntosh' × 'Ben Davis'
Cultivar'Cortland'
OriginGeneva, New York, United States, 1898

Breeding edit

After the many attributes of McIntosh were discovered, plant breeders began crossing it with other varieties to enhance its traits. One of the earliest was the 'Cortland'. Its flavor is sweet compared to McIntosh, and it has a flush of crimson against a pale yellow or green background sprinkled with short, dark red stripes and gray-green dots. It has white flesh and is resistant to browning.

It was first bred by American horticulturalist S.A Beach.[3]

Patented mutants (sports) edit

The original Cortland variety, introduced in 1915 by the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station, produced apples which were 20–30% red, and was not patented.[4] Since then, several sports have been identified and patented:

Date "Inventor" Marketed as Mutated from Assignee Habit Pattern Earlier Color Plant patent number
Jan 19, 1982 LaMont Lamont, Starkspur standard Stark Bro's Nursery spur striped same same US plant patent 4800
Aug 30, 1983 Nicklin Redcort standard Hilltop Nursery standard striped 2 wk. 90% red US plant patent 5095
Oct 7, 1997 Hartenhof NS-911 standard Adams County Nursery standard striped same red overall US plant patent 10049

Descendant cultivars edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ National Fruit Collection, retrieved 19 April 2016
  2. ^ Apple varieties by US Apple Association
  3. ^ Michael H. Chaplin Department of Horticulture, 106 Horticulture Hall, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011 http://hortsci.ashspublications.org/content/28/11/1079.full.pdf
  4. ^ US plant patent 5095