vfem
Garden Addicted
There are species out there you still can't reproduce from that are much older. Are patents able to be re-submitted before expiration?Northernrose said:I believe that plant patents only last 20 years and it can take 20 years of work to develop a plant worth patenting. Especially when working with fruits that take several years to produce. Say you take plant A and cross with plant B and plant 1000's of seedlings and then after a 10 year trial only one has proven worthy of keeping. I would patent it.
Those seedless grapes found in stores can be cloned by tissue culture in a lab and the growers are trying to protect their hard work with the patent.
Here is an example of a table grape that was developed from complex breeding between four other grapes:
"Fantasy Seedless table grape-
Large, bluish-black, pale green flesh. Sweet, superb quality. Extremely vigorous vine. Midseason (early August in Fresno, Calif.). Derived from Emperor, Black Rose, Red Malaga, Muscat. 100 hours. Self-fruitful"
US plant patents:
"An application for a plant patent consists of the same parts as other applications. The term of a plant patent shall be 20 years from the date on which the application for the patent was filed in the United States or, if the application contains a specific reference to an earlier filed application under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121 or 365(c), from the date the earliest such application was filed."
ETA: Yes seedcorn... I do believe when your life runs out, so does everything you have a hold on! If you leave it in your will all your profits go to you family so be it... but if you do not will, or legally bind anything to your family. Then it is going to be a free for all anyways! Your neighbors sure don't move in on it, but the courts come in and do the same thing and it costs you money to get your piece... its called PROBATE.