Malling series

The Malling series is a group of rootstocks for grafting apple trees.

It was developed at the East Malling Research Station of the South-Eastern Agricultural College at Wye in Kent, England.

From about 1912, Ronald Hatton and his colleagues rationalised, standardised and catalogued the various rootstocks in use in Europe at the time under names such as Doucin and Paradise.

[2][3] From about 1917, collaboration between East Malling and the John Innes Institute, in Merton Park in Surrey, gave rise to the Malling-Merton series, which were resistant to Eriosoma lanigerum, the woolly apple aphid.

[2] Common Malling rootstocks in the 1940s: Relative size are dependent on climate, variety and soil.

Size of an apple tree depending on the rootstock used