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USPTO: us-12653121 · published 2026-06-16 · patents · A01H 6/202· A01H 5/10

Canola hybrid 21GG2040N

Pith reviewed 2026-06-20 15:00 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification patents A01H 6/202A01H 5/10
keywords canolahybrid varietyplant patentseed depositagriculturebreedingG000124PVZT05R
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0 comments X

The pith

The patent claims a new hybrid canola variety 21GG2040N produced by crossing two deposited parent lines.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

This patent application establishes the hybrid canola variety 21GG2040N as a distinct seed produced by crossing variety G00012 with variety 4PVZT05R. The parent varieties are identified by their deposited representative seeds under specific accession numbers in a public collection. A sympathetic reader would see this as defining a reproducible plant that can be grown and sold under the claimed identity. The claim matters for agriculture because it creates a legal and practical way to propagate and protect this particular hybrid for field use.

Core claim

The central claim is that a seed of hybrid canola variety 21GG2040N is produced by crossing a first plant of variety G00012 with a second plant of variety 4PVZT05R, where representative seeds of the parent varieties have been deposited under NCMA Accession Numbers 202108110 and 202207063 respectively.

What carries the argument

The specific cross between the deposited parent varieties G00012 and 4PVZT05R that generates the hybrid 21GG2040N.

If this is right

  • The hybrid variety can be reproduced on demand using the deposited parent seeds.
  • The variety qualifies for intellectual property protection as a distinct and stable hybrid.
  • Growers can plant and harvest this specific canola hybrid under the claimed identity.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • If the hybrid carries unstated performance advantages such as yield or disease resistance, it could support commercial seed production lines.
  • The same deposition and crossing approach could be used to define additional canola hybrids from other parent combinations.
  • Confirmation of the accession numbers in the seed bank would allow independent verification of the parent lines.

Load-bearing premise

The deposited seeds accurately represent the parent varieties and their cross produces a stable hybrid that matches the claimed description.

What would settle it

Growing the cross from the deposited parent seeds and checking whether the resulting plants form a uniform, stable hybrid that matches the variety description or instead shows variation and instability.

read the original abstract

1 . A seed of hybrid canola variety 21GG2040N, representative seed produced by crossing a first plant of variety G00012 with a second plant of variety 4PVZT05R, wherein representative seed of the varieties G00012 and 4PVZT05R have been deposited under NCMA Accession Numbers 202108110 and 202207063, respectively.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 0 minor

Summary. The manuscript claims a seed of hybrid canola variety 21GG2040N, representative seed produced by crossing a first plant of variety G00012 with a second plant of variety 4PVZT05R, wherein representative seed of the varieties G00012 and 4PVZT05R have been deposited under NCMA Accession Numbers 202108110 and 202207063, respectively.

Significance. If the seed deposits are valid and accurately represent the parent varieties, the claim provides a precise legal definition of the hybrid for purposes such as patent protection. The document contains no empirical data, trait measurements, or stability tests, so its contribution is confined to the legal description rather than any scientific result.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their review and recommendation to accept the manuscript. The submission is a patent claim defining a canola hybrid through its parent varieties and deposited representative seeds, consistent with standard practice for such legal instruments.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity

full rationale

The document is a plant-variety patent. Its sole claim is a legal definition of a hybrid variety by explicit parentage (crossing G00012 × 4PVZT05R) together with reference to two external NCMA seed deposits. No equations, derivations, predictions, fitted parameters, ansatzes, or self-citations appear anywhere in the text. The claim does not reduce to its inputs by construction; it is simply a definitional statement whose validity rests on the external deposits and standard patent requirements, not on any internal logical loop.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

No scientific derivation, data analysis, or theoretical framework is present. The document is a legal patent claim for a plant variety.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5617 in / 991 out tokens · 22958 ms · 2026-06-20T15:00:47.872406+00:00 · methodology

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Lean theorems connected to this paper

Citations machine-checked in the Pith Canon. Every link opens the source theorem in the public Lean library.

  • IndisputableMonolith.Foundation.RealityFromDistinction reality_from_one_distinction unclear
    ?
    unclear

    Relation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.

    A seed of hybrid canola variety 21GG2040N, representative seed produced by crossing a first plant of variety G00012 with a second plant of variety 4PVZT05R, wherein representative seed of the varieties G00012 and 4PVZT05R have been deposited under NCMA Accession Numbers 202108110 and 202207063, respectively.

What do these tags mean?
matches
The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
supports
The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
extends
The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
uses
The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
contradicts
The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
unclear
Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.