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Glen Mor: disease-resistant raspberry launched at Fruit for the Future 2020

New raspberry variety Glen Mor was launched at Fruit for the Future 2020
“We are very excited to release Glen Mor as our first variety with the root rot marker, combining resistance with superior commercial quality"

A new raspberry with exceptional fruit quality and high productivity, plus resistance to deadly disease root rot, was introduced today at the start of industry event Fruit for the Future 2020. The new rasp, named Glen Mor, was bred by James Hutton Limited in Dundee, with support from the UK Raspberry Breeding Consortium and the Scottish Government.

Nikki Jennings, Hutton soft fruit breeder, said: “Among the three new raspberry varieties James Hutton Limited has released to soft fruit growers in 2020, Glen Mor is the floricane raspberry variety the industry has been waiting for, with genetic marker Rub118b conferring resistance to raspberry root rot.”

Root rot is devastating to raspberry in temperate regions around the world and is impossible to eradicate from infested soils with current available control. It has prompted a shift to raspberry production out of the soil into substrate, in pots, to escape the pathogen, which is a costly growing system.

Breeding for root rot resistance has long been a major objective of raspberry breeding at the James Hutton Institute. Dr Julie Graham has spent over a decade developing the first genetic linkage map for raspberry and subsequently identifying molecular markers to link important traits to genetic regions. Deployed early in the breeding process, this has helped speed the release of new varieties.

Trials of Glen Mor have seen plants spent six years in a soil plot infested with root rot and have shown no symptoms of the disease, despite flooding over several seasons.

The variety was fast-tracked from the breeding programme due to both outstanding trial results and retailer feedback. It was selected for release by the 2014-2019 tranche of the James Hutton Limited Raspberry Breeding Consortium, a partnership of marketing and grower groups, propagators, AHDB and Scottish Government. This Consortium funds the breeding programme to create new raspberry varieties with superior fruit quality, suitable for the whole supply chain and are economical to grow.

Glen Mor has outstanding fruit quality, yield and flavour and due to its size and presentation, is economical to pick. Its large fruit size made choosing a name easy; Mor translates in old Scots as large, big or great. Glen Mor’s flavour is described by breeder Nikki Jennings as “fruity and sweet, but with a balance of acid and notes of coconut”.

She added: “We are very excited to release Glen Mor as our first variety with the root rot marker, combining resistance with superior commercial quality. Root rot resistance offers growers the option to return to soil production which makes plants much easier to manage at a lower cost.” 

Fruit for the Future (24-28 August) is the annual soft fruit-themed industry event hosted by the James Hutton Institute, intended for farmers, agronomists, representatives of the food and drink industries, scientists and others interested in soft fruit.

This year the event is taking place virtually, with a week's worth of updates from all Hutton soft fruit breeding programmes: raspberries, blueberries, blackcurrants, blackberries and the all-new honeyberries. Three BASIS and two NRoSo points are available to delegates; see www.hutton.ac.uk/FFF20 for a full event programme.

Press and media enquiries: 

Bernardo Rodriguez-Salcedo, Media Manager, James Hutton Institute, Tel: +44 (0)1224 395089 (direct line), +44 (0)344 928 5428 (switchboard) or +44 (0)7791 193918 (mobile).


Printed from /news/glen-mor-disease-resistant-raspberry-launched-fruit-future-2020 on 19/03/24 03:52:15 AM

The James Hutton Research Institute is the result of the merger in April 2011 of MLURI and SCRI. This merger formed a new powerhouse for research into food, land use, and climate change.