Georgia-VAL/HO

Peanuts

‘Georgia-Val/HO’ is a new high-yielding, high-oleic, large-podded and large-seeded, valencia-type peanut variety that was released in 2020 by the Georgia Agricultural Experiment Stations. It was developed by Dr. William D. Branch at the University of Georgia, Coastal Plain Experiment Station in Tifton, GA. Georgia-Val/HO has an atypical flat, semi-prostrate growth habit and medium maturity, but typical valencia 3-seed per pod and red seedcoat color. It also has moderate TSWV resistance compared to other New Mexico valencia varieties. During four-years averaged over two-planting dates (April and May), Georgia-Val/HO had significantly less TSWV and total disease, higher pod yield, TSMK grade, and dollar values compared to NuMex-01, H&W Val. 136, New Mexico Valencia A, and New Mexico Valencia C in Georgia. Georgia-Val/HO had significantly higher overall performance in both an early April and optimum May planting dates. Georgia-Val/HO combines high yield, grade, and dollar values with large pods and seed, and the high-oleic trait for longer shelf-life of peanut and peanut products.


Breeder

Dr. William D. Branch

Dr. William D. Branch is an award-winning plant breeder who oversees the peanut breeding program at the University of Georgia’s Tifton campus. He has long been actively involved in the development of improved varieties of peanuts. These desirable traits include increasing yield, grade, better shelling characteristics and shelf-life; enhancing flavor and nutritional qualities; and improving resistance to disease, insects, viruses, nematodes, aflatoxin and drought.

Since joining UGA in 1978 as an Assistant Geneticist, Dr. Branch has received numerous awards for his work, including the Dow AgroScience Award for Excellence in Research (2005), the American Peanut Council’s Peanut Research and Education Award (2003) and the Georgia Crop Improvement Association Distinguished Service Award (2003).

Dr. Branch holds a 100 percent research appointment in peanut breeding. It normally takes about 10 years to develop a new cultivar, and he has released 19 new peanut cultivars from 1986 through 2012 (including one a year from 1999 through 2012). He holds seven plant patents and has been involved in the publication of numerous plant breeding and crop science papers.

Dr. Branch has served as Chairman, Peanut Crop Registration Committee for Crop Science Society of America; Coordinator, National Uniform Peanut Performance Tests involving all major peanut states; and as a member of the Peanut Crop Germplasm Committee of the USDA National Plant Germplasm System. He also served on the Georgia Crop Improvement Association Advisory Committee and the Peanut Commodity Committee and the Plant Cultivar and Germplasm Release committees of the UGA College of College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.

His professional affiliations include the American Society of Agronomy, the Crop Science Society of America, the American Peanut Research and Education Society, the American Genetic Association, the Council of Agricultural Science and Technology, the American Peanut Council, and Sigma Xi.

He received his B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees from Oklahoma State University at Stillwater, OK.


Affiliations

  • Department of Crop & Soil Sciences
  • University of Georgia, Tifton Campus