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Posted on May 19th, 2025 in Community Development, Forestry, Woodlands | No Comments »

The Purdue Hardwood Tree Improvement and Regeneration Center has signed a commercialHTIRC logo partnership agreement with Tree Pro to distribute select hardwood seedlings from its breeding program beginning in March 2025.

The partnership, which will mark the HTIRC’s first commercial release of seedlings in its 25-year history, will see West Lafayette, Ind., based Tree Pro distribute bare root seedlings of six species across its timber select, conservation and wildlife lines. Timber select varieties will include black walnut, black cherry, northern red oak, white oak and pure and hybrid butternut. Conservation species include pure butternut and American chestnut. The wildlife line will feature select precocious white oak.

The HTIRC collection is available for purchase now on the Tree Pro website. Delivery of the seedlings is set for March 2025.

For over five decades, Purdue University and the HTIRC have assembled, tested and selected populations of Indiana’s most valuable hardwood tree species (black cherry, black walnut, northern red oak and white oak) for deployment across the Midwest’s Central Hardwood Forest region. Populations of all four species have been selected for stem straightness and growth rate and are under continuous improvement as breeders remove underperforming clones and seedlings from seed production areas.

Today, as a product of the HTIRC’s efforts, numerous progeny tests, grafted clone banks and orchards exist at Purdue properties across Indiana and are now producing commercial quantities of seed for distribution.  A commercial partnership with Tree Pro now gives the HTIRC an outlet to distribute its hardwood trees to landowners throughout the Central Hardwood Forest Region.

“Tree Pro’s established reputation with conservation groups, private landowners and foresters makes them an ideal distributor of the HTIRC’s select material,” said Matt Ginzel, director of the HTIRC. “We want to make it clear that this partnership will not take away from our existing relationship to provide seeds and seedlings to the Indiana Department of Natural Resources. This simply gives us another avenue to get our material into the hands of the public and to achieve our goal of increasing the value and resilience of woodlands by enriching the diversity of seedlings available for reforestation efforts.”Tree Pro logo

Tree Pro has been in business for 37 years and is known for its tree protection products (Miracle Tube) and lines of fruit and nut trees oriented to hunters and wildlife enthusiasts.

“When we were approached about the opportunity to distribute genetically diverse select hardwood seedlings from the HTIRC, we were instantly excited,” said Tommy Mills, co-owner of Tree Pro. “It brings our start as a company with black walnuts full circle.”

In addition to making selections on four major hardwood species, the HTIRC has been working to preserve and develop disease-resistant populations of two endangered native fine hardwood species –  butternut and American chestnut.

After more than 20 years of work, the HTIRC now possesses the most diverse collection of butternut in theThe HTIRC/Hoosier National Forest pure butternut orchard in Huntingburg, Indiana United States, and has made significant advances in breeding butternuts resistant to the deadly butternut canker fungus. The HTIRC’s canker-resistant butternut program utilizes both pure butternut and hybrids between the butternut (Juglans cinerea) and the Japanese walnut (Juglans ailantifolia), with a program goal of decreasing the proportion of Japanese walnut genetics in the population while increasing overall canker resistance. A collection of pure, disease susceptible butternuts also is maintained for research purposes, and provides valuable seed for organizations and individuals that prefer pure butternut over hybrid butternut.

The American chestnut, once the backbone of timber production for all uses in the eastern United States and a prolific producer of nuts for animals and humans alike, is now functionally extinct due to the accidental introduction of the chestnut blight fungus in 1904. In collaboration with the American Chestnut Foundation and other entities, the HTIRC has assembled an American chestnut collection that represents pure American chestnuts from Indiana and neighboring states. It stands as one of the few grafted American chestnut collections in the country. While currently unavailable for public release, the HTIRC’s ongoing efforts to breed a blight-resistant American chestnut encompasses the use of both interspecific hybrid breeding and biotechnology to restore a long-lost forest species.

“The mother trees for HTIRC’s Timber Select lines were all selected for straight stems with few defects like low forks that can negatively impact standing timber value, while the Timber Select butternuts were selected for their resistance to butternut canker disease,” said Caleb Kell, operational tree breeder for the HTIRC. “Landowners have a good chance of getting similar characteristics out of their seedlings if they are planted on suitable soils with deer protection, which is one of Tree Pro’s specialties.”

Here is a quick list of what is available for purchase:

  • HTIRC Timber Select Black Walnut
  • HTIRC Timber Select Black Cherry
  • HTIRC Timber Select Northern Red Oak
  • HTIRC Timber Select White Oak
  • HTIRC Timber Select Pure and Hybrid Butternut
  • HTIRC Conservation Pure Butternut
  • HTIRC Conservation American Chestnut
  • HTIRC Wildlife Select Precocious White Oak

View full article with descriptions of seedlings available along with additional photos, Purdue Forestry and Natural Resources News & Stories: HTIRC Partners with Tree Pro to Distribute Hardwood Seedlings.

Other resources:
Forestry & Natural Resources
Tropical HTIRC
An Introduction to Trees of Indiana, The Education Store, Purdue Extension resource center
Native Trees of the Midwest, Purdue University Press
Shrubs and Woody Vines of Indiana and the Midwest, Purdue University Press
ID That Tree, Playlist, Subscribe to Purdue Extension – Forestry and Natural Resources YouTube Channel
A Woodland Management Moment, Playlist, Purdue Extension – FNR YouTube Channel
Investing in Indiana Woodlands, The Education Store
Forest Improvement Handbook, The Education Store
Finding help from a professional forester, Indiana Forestry & Woodland Owners Association
District Forester, Indiana DNR Division of Forestry, for over 10 acres of woodlands
Directory of Professional Foresters, Indiana Forestry & Woodland Owners Association (IFWOA)

Wendy Mayer, FNR Communications Coordinator
Purdue University Department of Forestry and Natural Resources


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