Historic, archived document Do not assume content reflects current scientific knowledge, policies, or practices. U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. _ BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY-—BULLBTIN NO. 420 0 ) Ske oes eae hee “- ‘B. T. GALLOWAY, Chief of Bureat. THREE NB PLANT NTRODERTHNSPROMPAN, DAVID G. FAIRCHILD, Acricuttruran Explorer. | SEED AND PLANT INTRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION, IssueD JUNE 24, 1903. WASHINGTON: : GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. a LO a. ? series of the Bureau. A list of the bulletins issued in the present series follows. ‘BULLETINS OF THE BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY. | ‘The Bureau of Plant Industry, which was organized July 1, 1901, hue _ table Pathological and Physiological TENS _ Botanical Investigations ai sions, and also Seed and Plant Introduction and Distribution, the Arlington BD per- imental Farm, Tea-Culture Investigations, and Domestic Sugar Investigations. ~ HS Beginning with the date of organization of the Bureau, the several series of bull. _ tins of the various Divisions were discontinued, and all are now- Saisie as one Attention is directed to the fact that ‘‘the serial, scientific, and technical publica- kc | a re _ tions of the United States Department of Agriculture are not for general abe — eents. _ All copies not required for official use are by law turned over to the Superintendent of Documents, who is empowered to sell them at cost.’’ All applications for such tenia should, therefore, ‘be made to the Superintendent of Documents, Union - Building, Washington, D. C. se 3 No. 1. The Relation of Lime and Magnesia to Plant Growth. I. Tiviase of Say from a Physiological Standpoint. — II. Experimental Study of the Relation, of Li and Magnesia to Plant Growth. 1901. Price, 10 cents. ~ 2 ae No. 2. Spermatogenesis and Fecundation of Zamia. 1901. Price, 20 cents. \— a No. 3. Macaroni Wheats. 1901.- Price, 20.cents. ~ es No, 4. Range Improvement in Aieaes (Cooperative Experiments with the Ari zona Experiment Station.) 1902. Price, 10 cents. - <2 No. 5. Seeds and Plants Imported Through the Section of Seed and Plant a duction for Distribution in Cooperation with the Agricultural Pe ‘Stations. Inventory No. 9, Numbers 4851-5500. — 1902. Price, 10 cents. No. 6. A List of American Varieties cf Peppers. 1902. Price. 10 cents: oe ae No. 7. The Algerian Durum Wheats: A Classified: List, with Descriptions. 1902. Price, 15 cents. RD No. 8. A Collection of Economic and Other Fungi SS for Distribution. 19 Price, 10 cents. ae No. 9. The North American Species of Spartina. 1902. Price, 10 cents. No. 10. Records of Seed- Distribution and Cooperative Experiments with Grasses: and Forage Plants. 1902. Price, 10 cents. er No: 11; ~ Johnson Grass: Report of Investigations Made During the Season of 190 1902. Price, 10 cents. we No. 12. Stock Ranges of Northwestern California. Notes on the Grasses and Forage oe and Range Conditions. 1902. Price, 15 cents. Fe - 190 ts is 53 oo" No. 13. Experiments in Range Improv ements in Central Texas. Gene No. 14. The Decay of Timber and Methods of Preventing It. 1902. _ Pie se, No. 15. Forage Conditions on the Northern Border of the Great Bas sin, pe Report upon Investigations Made During July and August, 1901, in the =“ - Between Winnemucca, Nevada, and Ontario, Oregon. 1902. ‘Price, 15 cents. — ~ No. 16. A Preliminary Study. of the Germination of the Spores of Agaricus C pestris and Other Basidiomycetous Fungi. 1902... Price, 10 cents. No. 17. Some Diseases of the Cowpea: I. The Wilt Disease of the Compes ane ~ Control. II. A Cowpea Resistant to Root Knot (Heterodera- Radicicola).’ Price, 10 cents. No. 18. Observations on the Mosaic Disease of Tobacco. 1902. — Price, 15 cet No. 19, Kentucky Bluegrass Seed: Harvesting, Curing, and Cleaning. 1902. 10 cents. st No. 20. Manufacture of Semolina and Macaroni. 1902. Price, 15 cents. _ No. 21. List of American Varieties of Vegetables for the Years 1901- a _ Price, 35 cents. 3 [Continued on p. 3 of cover.] PLATE l. t. of Agriculture. Bul. 42, Bureau of Plant Indusiry, U. S. Dep “LNVId YadVd ASANVdV( SHL ‘VLVWOASLIW,) HLIM GaysaA09 SqIsTuH Vv a ee i MEP RIMENT OF ACRICUL TURE. BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY—BULLETIN NO. 42. B. T. GALLOWAY, Chief of Bureau. STHINEE NEW PLANT AN TRODUCTIONS FROMJAPAN, BY DAVID G. FAIRCHILD, AcricutruraL ExpLorEr. SEED AND PLANT INTRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION. IssueD JUNE 24, 1903. Aaa 3 = iH (0 COMME RS > WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. EDO: BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY. Bevery T. Gatitoway, Chief of Bureau. SEED AND PLANT INTRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION. SCIENTIFIC STAFF. A. J. Pieters, Botanist in Charge. Davip G. FatrcuiLp, Agricultural Explorer. W. W. Tracy, sr., Special Agent. S. A. Knapp, Special Agent. JoHN E. W. Tracy, Expert. GEORGE W. OLIVER, Expert. PETE OF TRANSMITTAL. U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, BureEAU OF Puant INpDUusTRY, OFFICE OF THE CHIEF, Washington, D. C., May 13, 1903. Sir: I have the honor to transmit herewith a paper entitled ‘*‘ Three New Plant Introductions from Japan,” and respectfully recommend that it be published as Bulletin No. 42 of this Bureau. This paper was prepared by Mr. D. G. Fairchild, Agricultural Explorer, who has been detailed by you to accompany Mr. Barbour Lathrop on his expeditions in search of valuable seeds and plants, and it has been submitted by the Botanist in Charge of Seed and Plant Introduction and Distribution, with a view to publication. _ The six full-page half-tone illustrations are an essential part of the paper. Respectfully, B. T. GautLoway, Chief of Bureau. Hon. JAMES WILSON, Secretary of Agriculture. lke keane As aresult of his observations on the agriculture of Japan, Mr. D. G. Fairchild has contributed several papers designed to interest American cultivators in new crops. Three of these papers are pub- lished in this Bulletin. One on a Japanese paper plant calls the atten- tion of farmers in the mild and humid regions of the United States to a possible new industry, while those on the udo and on the Japanese horse-radish will doubtless prove of interest both to market gardeners and amateurs who take pleasure in cultivating the best vegetables. The plants and seeds received from Mr. Lathrop, through Mr. Fair- child, have been placed for trial with reliable horticulturists, and the results of these tests will enable us in the course of time to report more fully regarding the adaptability of these plants to our conditions. A. J. PIETERS, Botanist in Charge. OFFICE OF BOTANIST IN CHARGE OF SEED AND PLANT INTRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION, Washington, D. C., May §, 1903. 5 a Ny 7 cerry Se és ¥ . i 7 A t f / ¢ 5 . ie _ ; 2 yy : ‘ . eS : “i Ne Bee ees 7 ? | CON TE NTS: Mitsumata, a Japanese paper plant. VOvaMC ROUGH cos se SRI a eae A NI NU AR ey chen ec Specicstolspaper plants Japanese ee es oe eae eee sere moni Carp la ING eae ee ee ae I Be oe Ne ae era ae ihercullitivationiobmitsumata 2922 s22) ass ea ee eae Cie ae Lhemanwuiacturevor mitsumata: paper October and November. The mild winters in Japan make these fore- ing beds in the open ground possible, and it is probable that as far north as Norfolk, Va., the culture of udo in a similar way could be ear- ried on; 1f not, certainly Florida and California truck growers could cultivate the plant. The kan udo might be grown even farther north where the ground does not freeze until after the last of November. WASABI, THE HORSE-RADISH OF THE JAPANESE. INTRODUCTION. There is a fresh sharpness about Japanese wasabi that not even the finest Austrian sorts of horse-radish possess. The color, too, is not generally white, but a delicate shade of green, and although served much in the same way that horse-radish is served in America, it is quite a different thing. 3 The roots, which are grated up to prepare this Japanese appetizer, are produced by a plant of the same family as the true horse-radish and the mustard, and botanists give it the name of Eutrema wasabi. (Pl. VI., figs. 1 and 2.) To anyone fond of such things this Japanese horse-radish will prove an acceptable novelty, and it is with the object of acclimatizing wasabi. in America that a few young plants have been secured and will be propagated and tested in the trial gardens of the Department of Agriculture. In Japan grated wasabi is a constant accompaniment to the raw fish which forms such a prominent part of a Japanese meal. Without it the fish would taste as unnatural to a diner as blue-point oysters on the half-shell without horse-radish would taste to the average Amer- ican. Wasabi is, in fact, universally used in the inns and tea houses of the country. The wasabi plant is a peculiar one to cultivate, and there are certain localities in Japan where it is grown, notably in the region about Hiroshima. It is popularly believed that the culture must be carried = ai CULTIVATION OF WASABI. 7 91 on in running water, but this is not absolutely correct, for near Nara, in the little village of Kiriyama, there are patches of wasabi which have been grown for many generations by the same family in a loca- tion not flooded with water. With Mr. K. Yendo of the Tokyo Botanic Gardens as interpreter, the writer visited, in June, 1902, one of the cultivators of wasabi and gleaned from him a number of facts about the culture of the vege- table. Mr. Kawakita, whose father and grandfather before him had grown wasabi, carried on its cultivation—as the growers of Fourche Maline do the horse-radish—only as a secondary crop. His patches of the plant were in a narrow valley, shaded by persimmon trees, where the soil was wet by underground springs, just such a place as one would expect to find ferns in were the ground not cultivated. (See Pl VAL fig. 2.) Owing to the ravages of a small caterpillar which had riddled the leaves with holes, the plants presented a sorry enough appearance, and the owner took no pride in showing them. The general appearance of the slopes of the little valley ‘was as if they had been covered with a coarse, broad-leaved dock like the Petasctes, which is common in parks in Europe. THE CULTIVATION OF WASABI. The method of culture practiced by Mr. Kawakita is a simple one enough, the chief point being the selection of a suitable location for the patch. Moisture is essential, and the borders of a mountain brook or a bit of ‘*springy” meadow in the hills would form a suitable situ- ation. Shade is likewise looked upon by this gardener as necessary, and that cast by the kaki or Japanese persimmon trees is preferred. The soil is a stiff clay, mixed with gravel, which retains moisture for a long time. In the month of June, when the 2-year-old plants which are ready for market are dug, the young suckers are carefully removed from the marketable roots and are planted out in the field. They are set in rows that are 13 feet apart and are put only 10 inches from each other in the rows. Weeding is done as found necessary, and in February or March the plants are hilled up to make them produce longer end larger roots for the market. Liquid manure and rape-seed cake are two of the principal fertilizers of the country, and these are applied judiciously in November and March in quantities varying according to the soil conditions. For two years the young wasabi plants are cared for in the field, at the end of which time their roots are large enough to be dug. Over 2 tons of these roots are said to be harvested from an acre. The roots are prepared for market by washing off the dirt, cutting - back the tops, and binding into bundles. They keep for some time, 22 THREE NEW PLANT INTRODUCTIONS. just as horse-radish does. There is said to be a difference between the wasabi which is grown directly in the running water and that cultivated in wet locations in the mountains, the former having a greener color. Roots that are grown in the mountains have a finer flavor than those which are cultivated on the plains, it is said. The roots are generally grated and served as horse-radish is served in America, but they are sometimes pickled with sake vinegar, the residue from the rice wine of the country, or are used to give a snap to certain kinds of confectionery. The fresh leaves are also employed in the manufacture of a pepper sauce by putting them in a bottle, pouring hot water over them, and allowing them to stand for several hours. A vegetable which has become to the Japanese what horse-radish is to the Occidentals can hardly fail to attract the attention of those Americans who are seeking new and appetizing relishes. MG JP se30 his. DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. PuaTE I. Frontispiece.