Skip to main content
ARS Home » Pacific West Area » Corvallis, Oregon » National Clonal Germplasm Repository » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #241900

Title: Maxine M. Thompson - Dedication

Author
item Hummer, Kim

Submitted to: Horticultural Reviews
Publication Type: Other
Publication Acceptance Date: 10/9/2010
Publication Date: 10/9/2010
Citation: Hummer, K.E. 2010. Maxine M. Thompson - Dedication. Horticultural Reviews. 38:xvii-xix.

Interpretive Summary: This manuscript summarizes the research career of Dr. Maxine M. Thompson, world renown horticulturist, plant breeder, and plant explorer. She became the first women professor at the Oregon State University, Deparment of Horticulture. She studied blackberry cytology and genetics and floral development in hazelnuts. She made crosses that resulted in the release of 8 hazelnuts. She lead or participated in 8 USDA sponsored plant collecting expeditions and obtained 645 seedlots and plants to the US National Plant Germplasm System. She received the Crop Science Society's Frank M. Meyer Medal for Plant Genetic Resources in 1997 and the American Pomological Society's Wilder Medal in 2000. Dr. Thompson is now breeding, evaluating, and selecting blue honeysuckle as a new fruit crop for the Willamette Valley in Oregon.

Technical Abstract: This manuscript summarizes the research career of Dr. Maxine M. Thompson, world renown horticulturist, plant breeder, and plant explorer. She became the first women professor at the Oregon State University, Deparment of Horticulture. She studied Rubus cytology and genetics and floral development in hazelnuts. She made crosses that resulted in the release of 8 hazelnuts. She lead or participated in 8 USDA sponsored plant collecting expeditions and obtained 645 seedlots and plants to the US National Plant Germplasm System. She received the Crop Science Society's Frank M. Meyer Medal for Plant Genetic Resources in 1997 and the American Pomological Society's Wilder Medal in 2000. Dr. Thompson is now breeding, evaluating, and selecting blue honeysuckle, Lonicera caerulea L., as a new fruit crop for the Willamette Valley in Oregon.