
The American Chestnut Cooperators Foundation (ACCF) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit scientific and educational foundation organized in 1984. They are dedicated to restoring the
American chestnut
The American chestnut (''Castanea dentata'') is a large, fast-growing deciduous tree of the beech family native to eastern North America. As is true of all species in genus Castanea, the American chestnut produces burred fruit with edible nuts. ...
(''
Castanea dentata
The American chestnut (''Castanea dentata'') is a large, fast-growing deciduous tree of the beech family native to eastern North America. As is true of all species in genus Castanea, the American chestnut produces burred fruit with edible nuts. ...
'') to its former place in the United States' Eastern hardwood forests. Priorities include the development of blight resistant chestnuts and economical biological control measures against chestnut blight in forests. ACCF supports American chestnut research and engages senior citizens, school children, volunteers, and professionals which allows them to help in planting, grafting, and managing the fruits of this research.
Breeding for blight resistance is currently pursued by two separate foundations: The
American Chestnut Foundation
The American Chestnut Foundation (TACF) is a nonprofit United States, American organization dedicated to breeding a chestnut blight, blight-resistant American chestnut, American chestnut (''Castanea dentata'') tree and the reintroduction of thi ...
(TACF) and the American Chestnut Cooperators Foundation. TACF is developing advanced hybrids and building on the work of earlier breeders to improve tree form while enhancing resistance. The American Chestnut Cooperators Foundation is not using Oriental genes for blight resistance, intercrossing among American chestnuts selected for native resistance to the blight.
"All-American intercrosses" defines the breeding strategy of the ACCF. John Rush Elkins, a research chemist and professor emeritus of chemistry at
Concord University
Concord University (Concord) is a public university in Athens, West Virginia. It was founded on February 28, 1872, when the West Virginia Legislature passed "an Act to locate a Branch State Normal School, in the town of Concord Church, in the ...
, and Gary Griffin, professor of plant pathology at
Virginia Tech
Virginia Tech (formally the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University and informally VT, or VPI) is a Public university, public Land-grant college, land-grant research university with its main campus in Blacksburg, Virginia. It also ...
, think there may be several different characteristics which favor blight resistance. They intercrosse among resistant American chestnuts from many locations and expect to improve upon the levels of blight resistance to make an American chestnut that can compete in the forest.

Griffin developed a scale for assessing levels of blight resistance which makes it possible to make selections scientifically. He inoculated five-year-old chestnuts with a standard lethal strain of the blight fungus and measured growth of the cankers. Chestnuts with no resistance to blight make rapid-growing, sunken cankers that are deep and kill tissue right to the wood. Resistant chestnuts make slow-growing, swollen cankers that are superficial and live tissue can be recovered under these cankers. The level of blight resistance is judged by periodic measurement of cankers.

Grafts from large survivors of the blight epidemic were evaluated following inoculations, and controlled crosses among resistant Americans were made beginning in 1980. The first all-American intercrosses are planted in Virginia Tech's Martin American Chestnut Planting in Giles County, VA, and in Beckley, WV. They were inoculated in 1990 and evaluated in 1991 & 1992. Nine of them showed resistance equal to their parents and four of these had resistance comparable to hybrids in the same test.
It appears that inheritance of resistance requires genes of two trees with good combining ability from each source location. More generations of controlled crosses may be required to make American chestnuts produce blight resistance that is regularly inherited by seednuts. It takes at least 7 years for an American chestnut to produce nuts, and new trees must be at least 5 years old before their resistance can be tested by inoculation and the test requires 2 years for evaluation. Some of this time may be saved by utilizing grafts, and further progress may result from Elkins' studies underway which is trying to locate chemical markers for resistance. In the meanwhile, ACCF plantings of all-American intercrosses are producing, from open pollinations, large nut crops.
References
{{Reflist
External links
American Chestnut Cooperators Foundation
American Chestnut Cooperators Foundation