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CLEM 5 /62    Theobroma cacao

 Bartley, B.G.D. (1993)
Notes on the meaning and origins of clone names. B.G.D Bartley. Personal Communications.

Derivation: CLEMentina farm.
Collected by Bartley.
Location: ICTA, Ecuador.

Notes:  Material labelled CLEM and CLM were previously believed to be the same (End et al. 1992) [END92A]. They are now know to be of separate groups of clones.

Progeny from S 62 in Trinidad Cocoa Board Collection 1967.

Bartley, 1993a [BAR93A]. The material introduced into Trinidad in 1967 was identified as H. Clementina S 62 O.P. and H. CLEM. NAC. 5. and thus both were probably seed introductions.

The clone S 62 came from Vinces (according to Muntzing) and is therefore probably the same as EET 62 [ECU]. The H. CLEM 5/ may refer to the Nacional material.

The clones held at ICGT today are CLEM 5/62/1 and CLEM S-62 and it is unclear whether both of these clones are CLEM S62/ progeny (slightly mislabelled) or whether CLEM 5/62/1 represents a progeny of CLEM 5. In either case this material is not the same as Pound's CL and CLM material.


 

 HELD IN

 Trinidad and Tobago, International Cocoa Genebank, Trinidad (ICG,T)
List received in 2011   Reference
• Local Name: CLEM 5/62

Colour: moderate anthocyanin
 Reference

Bartley, B.G.D. (1993) Notes on the meaning and origins of clone names. B.G.D Bartley. Personal Communications.
CRU (2011) ICG,T accessions. CRU website.
Frances Bekele & Gillian Bidaisee (2022) Morphological data from the International Cocoa Collection (ICG,T) maintained by the Cocoa Research Centre (CRC), Trinidad & Tobago. Unpublished data on fruit, bean, flower and flush morphology supplied as an Excel spreadsheet by Frances Bekele. Last update March 2022.