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                                      Fruits of
Tropical & Sub-Tropical Regions
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|           This section continues with the
  discussion of fruits from the previous Fruits of Temperate Regions.   There are thousands of tropical
  fruits.  Many of them are consumed
  locally on a daily basis.  There are
  over 250 edible fruits in the Philippines alone.  The tropics have the capacity to produce large quantities of
  fruit and international trade is adding new kinds as rapid shipment
  possibilities increase.  Some tropical
  frutis such as the banana, mango and pineapple are now as familiar as the
  apple and pear in temperate regions. 
  In comparison with fruits of temperate regions, many tropical species
  have been much neglected in international markets.  Tropical edible fruits are particularly important in the
  families Anacardiaceae, Annonaceae, Myrtaceae, Eutaceae, Sapotaceae and
  Sapindaceae.  Of these the Rutaceae is
  the best known and most important for it includes the citrus fruits.               Citrus was domesticated from wild
  ancestors in Eastern and Southern Asia in ancient times.  Some species have been cultivated since
  before 1,000 B.C.  They were at times
  grown for other reasons than as food. 
  Citron, for example, was planted in the famous Hanging Gardens of
  Babylon for use in toilet water and pomades. 
  These fruits were early introduced into the Mediterranean region where
  they have always been an important crop. 
  There are over 100 species of Citrus described, many of which are undoubtedly of
  hybrid origin.  However, only a few
  ever became of commercial importance.             Citrus trees are thorny aromatic
  with leathery evergreen leaves that are dotted glandularly.  Although they appear simple, they are
  actually unifoliate compound leaves with a joint between the leaf blade and
  the stalk.  The white or purplish
  flowers are solitary, but produced in great abundance, and they are often
  very fragrant.  The fruit is a
  modified berry known as a hesperidium. 
  This type has a thick leathery rind with numerous oil glands.  The flesh is very juicy with many juice
  sacs.  A notable feature of these
  plants is the fact that they do not develop root hairs and are dependent on
  mycorrhiza.  These are fungi that are
  closely associated with the roots and are for the absorption of liquids.             Citrus cultivation is carried out
  on a large scale.  It is usually grown
  at sea level where sufficient moisture is readily available, or under
  irrigation.  Any well-drained soil,
  except an extremely sandy one, is suitable. 
  The various species differ in their resistance to cold, but generally
  a temperature ranging from 14-120 deg. Fahrenheit
  is best.  Mostly budding
  propagates them.  The species
  hybridize readily both in the wild and in cultivation, and there is a great
  tendency to form “sports.”             Citrus is grown worldwide although
  they are tropical plants so that most of the commercial groves are in
  subtropical regions.  The fruits ripen
  at different times of the year depending on the species and variety.  Oranges and grapefruit are allowed to
  ripen on the trees, while lemons and limes are picked green.             The United States has led the
  world in the production of citrus fruits. 
  Florida and California are the principal states, while Texas, Arizona,
  Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi and Georgia have a small acreage.  The Mediterranean countries are second
  with Spain, Portugal, Italy and Palestine being the most important.  The West Indies, Mexico and Central
  America are of increasing importance. 
  Brazil, Argentina, South Africa, Australia, China and Japan are also
  large producers.             Grapefruit and oranges are highly
  prized as table fruits.  Apart from
  their palatability, they constitute a valuable addition to the human
  diet.  All citrus fruits contain
  considerable quantities of the essential Vitamin C, the antiscorbutic
  vitamin, as well as fruit acids.  They
  are also made into marmalade and various confections.  Canned products, especially in the case of
  the grapefruit, have been developed. 
  Both the flesh and the juice are preserved in this way.  Frequently the juice of citrus fruits is
  more important than the fruit itself and it is widely used both in alcoholic
  and nonalcoholic beverages.  Frozen
  juice is readily available.  The rind
  of nearly all citrus yields a valuable essential oil.  The dried waste pulp is an excellent
  cattle feed.  Other by-products
  include citric acid, various glucosides and pectin.                  Citrus sinensis is indigenous to
  Southeastern Asia, most likely China or Cochin China.  It was first cultivated sometime between
  1,500 and 1,000 B.C.  It arrived in
  India very early in history and was carried to Europe by Genoese traders
  early in the 15th Century.  Spain was
  responsible for its introduction into America.  It reached Florida in 1565 and California in 1769.             The tree is a small evergreen with
  slender blunt spines.  It grows upward
  to 20 ft. in height under cultivation. 
  The leaves have narrow-winged petioles and the flowers are white and
  very fragrant.  The fruit is almost
  round, with an abundant, sweet, solid pulp and spindle-shaped juice
  sacs.  Seeds are usually present but
  may be sparse or absent.  The orange
  is the hardiest member of the genus and can be grown in any warm dry climate
  where the soil is fertile and well watered. 
  At first it was grown from seed, but today most plants are budded or
  grafted.  Several types of sweet
  oranges have been developed:  Spanish
  oranges, with large coarse-grained fruits; Mediterranean varieties, with
  fine-grained fruits; blood oranges with a red pulp, or streaked red and
  white; and the navel oranges, which are mostly seedless and characterized by
  the navel at one end.  This is formed
  by the protrusion of additional carpels produced inside the flesh.  Oranges contain 5-10 percent sugar, 1-2
  percent citric acid and Vitamin C.             In the United States California
  leads in the production of oranges. 
  The cultivation of two different varieties enables harvest the year
  round.  The most important of these is
  the Washington Navel or Bahia
  Orange.  This mostly seedless
  orange originated in Brazil, but in the California climate has become the
  great commercial orange of the world. 
  It is the largest variety, with a thick bright-orange skin, and bears
  during the winter months.  Another variety,
  the Robertson Navel has a thin skin but is not as
  productive.  There is also a Summer Navel Orange that does well in cooler
  weather.  The three types have
  slightly different growth habits, with the Summer Navel being the fastest
  grower and very prolific bearer with large fruit.  A smaller Valencia Orange, a Spanish
  type with seeds is grown in California and also in Florida, Texas, Arizona
  and Louisiana.  Sweet orange
  production is also high in Brazil, Spain, Italy, Palestine and Mexico.  In California during the latter 20th
  Century some new varieties of Valencia orange were developed that had large
  fruits with easily peeled skins.  Also
  a sport of the Navel Orange, the Trovita Orange,
  which bears off and on year round, is very sweet with large fruit and seeds.             The principal use of sweet oranges
  is for fresh fruit and juice.  The
  peel is candied and oil of orange is extracted from the rind.  This essential oil is used in the perfume
  and soap industries, in medicine and for flavoring.  Dissolving a small amount of the oil in alcohol makes orange
  extract.  Orange trees are
  occasionally grown for ornamental purposes.               Sour orange, Citrus aurantium, also called the
  Bitter, Bigarade or Seville orange, is also native
  to Southeastern Asia, but is more drought resistant.  This plant was brought to Spain by the
  Arabs in ancient times and was cultivated there several thousand years before
  the sweet orange.  It is a small tree,
  20-30 ft. in height with blunt spines. 
  The petioles have broad wings. 
  The flowers are exceedingly fragrant and are the source of the oil of
  neroli, used in perfumery.  The large,
  globose, orange-red fruits are rough and have a very acid pulp.  However, the flesh is of good quality with
  small spindle-shaped juice sacs.  A
  hollow core develops at the center when the fruit is ripe.  In America the sour orange is grown
  chiefly for ornamental purposes and as stock in grafting.  It is grown in Spain extensively where the
  fruits are used for marmalade, orangeade and candied orange peel.  The essential oil obtained from the rind
  is used in perfumery, medicine, and in the manufacture of the liqueur Curaçao.               Bergamot
  Orange, Citrus
  aurantium subsp. bergamia, is a small spiny tree with golden-yellow pear-shaped
  fruit.  The pulp is very acid and
  inedible.  This variety is grown in
  the Mediterranean region as a source of the essential oil of bergamot.               Mandarin Orange, Citrus reticulata, comprises the
  so-called glove oranges:  the
  orange-yellow mandarins and the reddish-orange tangerines.  The tree is native to China and Cochin
  China.  The small round fruits have a
  peel that is easily removed and segments that separate readily.  They are widely grown in Japan, South Europe
  and the Gulf States of America, mainly Florida, Alabama and Mississippi.  The Satsuma orange is a small very hardy
  type with a deep-orange pulp and few seeds. 
  In California during the late 20th Century several new varieties of
  mandarin or tangerine had been developed with a variety of excellent flavors.               Often named as a separate species,
  Citrus
  nobilis,
  the King
  Orange is
  probably a hybrid between a sweet orange and a mandarin.  It was introduced into the United States
  in 1882.  It bears heavily, is frost
  tolerant and the sweet slightly acid flesh with broad blunt juice sacs is
  very palatable.  This fruit has
  nevertheless not been very much in demand.               The origin of the Grapefruit, Citrus paradisi, is somewhat
  doubtful.  But there is some consensus
  that it originated in Barbados, West Indies as a sport of the shaddock or
  possibly as a hybrid with the sweet orange. 
  Nevertheless, there is the possibility that it may have been
  introduced from the Old World.             Grapefruit is a vigorous tree,
  20-40 ft. in height with winged petioles. 
  The round or pear-shaped, pale-yellow, smooth fruits are produced in
  clusters.  They are the larges of the
  edible citrus fruits, weighing from 2-12 lbs. and with a diameter of 4-6
  in.  The skin is thin with many
  inconspicuous oil glands.  The flesh
  is acid or sub acid and mildly bitter, with large spindle-shaped juice sacs.             The plant was brought to Florida
  from the West Indies in 1809 and was used as an ornamental tree until
  1880.  In the United States Florida,
  Texas, Arizona and California produce the major portion of the crop.  There are different varieties, with the
  Florida Indian River and California Coachella White varieties having the best
  quality.  The Rio Red Grapefruit with excellent flavor was
  developed for South Texas, but it also does very well in Southern
  California.  The Oro
  Blanco variety was developed for California’s cooler climatic zones where
  other varieties did not sweeten adequately. 
  Variable acreage occurs in the West Indies, Middle East and South
  Africa.               Lemon, Citrus limon, is believed to be native
  to Southeastern Asia where it has been grown since ancient times.  It reached India at an early date as
  witnessed by the existence of a Sanskrit word for it.  It has been grown in the Mediterranean
  region since the days of the Greek and Roman civilizations, and ahs always
  been especially well adapted to that area. 
  The tree is small, 10-20 ft. in height with short spines and large
  white and purple flowers.  The small,
  light-yellow oval fruits end in a blunt point.  The fruit should be picked when yellow when it has peaked in
  flavor.  However, commercial sources
  often pick the fruit green and later it is ripened in storage.  lemons contain 1/2 percent sugar and 5
  percent citric acid.  The juice is
  used for lemonade and other beverages and as a flavoring, bleaching agent and
  stain remover.  Commercial production
  is restricted to climates with low-frost winters.  California has produced the majority of lemons with Spain and
  Argentina following.  The rind is the
  source of oil of lemon.                 Lime, Citrus aurantifolia, was first
  domesticated in the East Indies.  it
  is very susceptible to cold and is a distinctly tropical plant.  It is a low straggling shrub or small tree
  with numerous very sharp spines and small white flowers.  The fruits vary in sice from 1.25 to 3 in.
  in diameter depending on the variety. 
  They are thin skinned with an abundant acid pulp and oval pointed
  juice sacs.  The lime is one of the
  sourest fruits and is not eaten directly. 
  it is grown mainly for the juice that is often extracted and shipped
  in a raw or concentrated form.  Lime
  juice is used in beverages, as a source of citric acid and medicinally to
  prevent scurvy.  Although famous for
  the latter purpose, lime juice contains only one-quarter as much Vitamin C as
  either grapefruit or oranges.  Limes
  are grown to some extent throughout the tropics and are of commercial
  importance in Egypt, Mexico, The West Indies, Florida and California.  The Barss Lime or Tahitian Lime is a large seedless variety that has some
  frost resistance.  Oil of lime is
  expressed from the rind.               Kumquats, Fortunella
  spp.,
  are the smallest of the citrus fruits. 
  They are small evergreen shrubs with white flowers that smell like
  ants, and golden-yellow fruits produced in clusters.  The fruits vary from 1-2 inches in
  diameter with a thick spicy rind, acid flesh and small seeds.  They are grown for ornamental purposes and
  for their fruit, either eaten whole or preserved.  Two species that are commercially grown are F.
  japonica
  with globose fruits and F. margarita with oval fruits.               Citron, Citrus medica, is the oldest of the
  citrus fruits and the first to be known in Europe as early as the 4th Century
  B.C.   It is believed to have
  originated in Northern India and has long been cultivated in Southeastern
  Asia.  It was described by
  Theophrastus from Babylon (Hill 1952). 
  The citron is a small thorny tree with attractive purple and white
  flowers and a fruit that resembles a large lemon.  It is fragrant, greenish yellow in color, oblong in shape and
  from 6-9 inches in length.  The skin
  is thick and tough and the acid pulp is low in volume.  Commercial citron is the candied
  rind.  It is prepared by treating the
  fruit with brine to remove the bitter oil. 
  This also brings out the flavor and aroma and prevents decay.  The rind is then candied in a sugar and
  glucose solution.  Citron is one of
  the best and most expensive of the condiments.  Citron is cultivated mainly in Corsica, Sicily, Greece and the
  West Indies.  The essential oil of
  cedrat used in perfumery is expressed from the rind.                  Citrus
  grandis,
  also known as Pomelo, is indigenous to Malaya and Polynesia.  Several varieties are grown in Southern
  Asia.  The fruit appears like a
  grapefruit, but it is much larger, sometimes growing to the size of a
  watermelon and weighing 10-20 lbs.  It
  is more pear-shaped, with larger juice sacs and a hollow core, and it has a
  coarse thick rind and thick leathery septa. 
  The reddish flesh is aromatic and spicy, but quite bitter.  Captain Shaddock, for whom it was named,
  introduced it into the West Indies. 
  It is believed that the shaddock gave rise to the grapefruit.               Poncirus trifoliata is indigenous in China
  and Japan.  It is a low tree with
  large spines and trifoliate deciduous leaves.  For this reason it was segregated from Citrus.  The white flowers are produced before the
  leaves.  The rough hairy orange fruits
  have a bitter, gummy, inedible pulp. 
  The plant is very hardy and is used to form hybrids and as a rootstock
  for grafting the other citrus fruits. 
  It has been cultivated as an ornamental as far north as New York.             Efforts to produce edible citrus
  fruits that are hardier than oranges led to the formation of many
  hybrids.  Some of these such as the Citrange, a hybrid between the trifoliate
  and the sweet orange, may be grown in the Southern United States.  Others include the Tangelo
  (grapefruit
  X tangerine), Limequat (lime X kumquat), Orangequat
  (orange
  X kumquat), Citrangequat (kumquat X citrange), Tangor
  (tangerine
  X orange), tangerona and orangelo.                 Banana, Musa paradisiaca subsp. sapientum, is one of the most
  important of all tropical fruits.  It has
  spread all over the tropical world from its original home in the humid
  tropics of Malaya or India.  It is one
  of the world’s oldest cultivated crops. 
  It was important in Assyria in 1,100 B.C., and it was well known to
  all the other early civilizations.  It
  reached Polynesia at a very early date and was brought to the West Indies in
  1,500.             Banana is one of the tallest of
  the herbaceous plants.  Its robust
  treelike stem is made up of the sheathing spiral leaf bases that contain
  fibers of sufficient strength to make possible this erect growth.  At the top of the stem, which can vary in
  height from 10-30 ft., there is produced a crown of large oval deep green
  leaves.  These may be up to 12 ft. in
  length and 2 ft in width with a prominent midrib.               A single inflorescence is
  produced that consists of clustered flowers which are nearly surrounded by
  large, fleshy, reddish, spathelike scales and which drop off as the fruits
  mature.  The flower stalk develops
  from the rootstalk and pushes its way up through the hollow stem, emerging in
  the center of the crown.  It soon
  curves over owing to its great weight.             These
  drooping inflorescences develop into the “bunches” of bananas.  Marketable bunches may weight from 80-140
  pounds and consist of from 6-15 clusters, known as “hands” or “combs.”  Usually each hand contains 10-20
  individual bananas, or “fingers.” 
  Bunches with as many as 22 hands and 300 individual bananas have been
  produced, but these are not common. 
  The fruit of cultivated varieties is a modified berry and lacks
  seeds.  Wild species do occur that
  produce normal seeds.  As soon as the
  tree bears it dies or is cut down, and suckers develop from the rhizome that
  give rise to new plants.  A single
  clump may be productive for several years. 
  Bananas grow rapidly and have a very high yield.  Of course, this varies with the locality
  and may be as low as 125 or as high as 300 to 400 bunches to the acre.  The same area of land that can produce
  4,400 lbs. of bananas only may produce 33 lbs. of wheat and 98 lbs. of
  potatoes.  Leading exporters are
  Jamaica, Mexico, Central America and Ecuador.             Over 300 varieties of banana are
  known.  Only a few of these reach
  markets of the world, the principal type being the Gros Michel.  Tropical American markets have about 15
  kinds, but the majority are grown in tropical Asia.  There are other species of banana, one of which, the Dwarf banana, Musa nana, is occasionally
  exported.  This species is especially
  important in Southern Asia, Africa and the Pacific islands.  Red bananas,
  Musa velutina,
  are quite common.  Musa cavendishii is a dwarf that is
  especially suited to home gardens             Bananas for export are picked and
  shipped green.  When thoroughly ripe,
  as indicated by brown blotches on the yellow skin, they constitute a very
  healthy and nourishing food.  They
  have a high content of carbohydrates with some fats and proteins.  Their food value is three times that of
  wheat.  Bananas are usually eaten raw,
  but may be cooked, especially when still green.  Banana flour is made from dried green fruits.  Banana ‘figs” are dried slices of ripe
  fruits.  A wine is also made from the
  ripe fruit.  The high potassium
  content may be unsuitable for some diets, however.   Plantain             Musa paradisiaca is a close relative of
  the banana and one of the great food plants of the tropics.  Indigenous to Southern Asia, it has
  furnished food for the inhabitants since ancient times.  There are over 80 varieties; many so old
  that seed has never propagated them within recorded time.  Plantains are allowed to ripen and then
  are always consumed cooked, fried or made into flour and are very digestible.               Several tropical American fruits in
  the genus Annona have been called
  "Custard
  Apples".  In all species the fruit is a fleshy
  syncarp that is formed by the fusion of numerous ripened ovaries and the
  receptacle.  The family Annonaceae
  includes over 600 species most of which have edible fruits.  It affords promise for future development.               Annona cherimolia is a favorite dessert
  fruit.  It was known from ancient
  times in the Andes of Ecuador and Peru. 
  It is now grown in Central America, Mexico, the West Indies,
  California, Florida, Africa and India. 
  The tree is small and shrubby with very fragrant flowers that have the
  odor of tropical fruit such as pineapple and coconut.  The light green fruits are globular or
  conical and from 4-10 in. long.  The
  delicious white or yellowish flesh is very aromatic with a soft and custard
  like consistency.  Efforts to enhance
  pollination are required such as maintaining a high humidity during flowering
  or by hand pollination.  The pollen
  matures in the evening while the pistel is receptive in the morning.               Annona squamosa, also known as Sugar
  Apple, is
  indigenous in South America and the West Indies.  The yellowish-green tuberculate fruit is 2-3 inches in
  diameter.  It has white custard like
  pulp and is the most highly prized of the group.  Pollen matures  in the
  evening but successful pollination is usually successful only in the
  morning.  Maintaining a high relative
  humidity during the night allows for self-pollination.  In drier situations the pollen must be
  gathered in the evening and mechanically administered in the morning.               Annona muricata, also known as Guanabana, is a small slender
  tree of the West Indies.  It bears
  large ovoid spiny fruit that are deep green in color.  Some fruits may weight as much as 8-10
  pounds and be a foot in length.  The
  white juicy flesh is very aromatic and is unrivaled for sherbets and drinks.               Annona reticulata, also known as Bullock’s
  Heart, is
  very common in the tropics.  The fruit
  is heart shaped, 4-6 in. long and brownish or reddish in color.  The soft white or cream-colored sweetly
  aromatic pulp is somewhat glandular toward the rind and rather insipid and
  cloying.  It is indigenous in the West
  Indies.               Phoenix dactylifera is an ancient crop that
  was known before 3,000 B.C.  Its
  origin is either in Arabia or India, but it has been domesticated throughout
  Southwestern Asia and Northern Africa. 
  It was of great importance in Babylonia and had reached Egypt long
  before the Christian era.             The date is a palm tree with slender trunk that can reach
  70-100 ft in height.  It produces
  offshoots from its base and is therefore often found growing in clumps.  It has a crown of stiff, pinnate,
  ascending and descending leaves of 20-20 ft in length.  The numerous flowers, sometimes 10,000 to
  an inflorescence, are surrounded by a spathe.  Male and female flowers are produced on different trees, and in
  cultivation 90 percent of the male trees are removed.  The fruit is a nearly round drupe or
  one-seeded berry.  It is hard and
  green at first but later turns yellow or red.  The flesh is thick and very sweet, soft or dry and hard,
  according to the variety.  The date
  palm is very drought resistant, but in arid regions grows best in areas where
  there are springs or subterranean water sources (oases).  It often serves as a staple food as well
  as the main source of fruits and sugar in dry regions of the world.  Typically it is a plant of hot sunny
  climates with low humidity.  Seeds or
  cuttings propagate dates.  They are
  very long-lived, often reaching an age of over 200 years.  There are over 1,000 varieties grown.  Unripe fruits are consumed a month or more
  before harvest as a crunchy, sweet delicacy. 
  Fruits that are ripened on the tree command a higher price than those
  that are picked unripe and subjected to a steam ripening process.  Unlike most fruits they have a high food
  value, with 54 percent sugar and 7 percent protein as well as pectin and
  gums.             Dates are consumed as a table
  fruit and in jams, pastes, cooking and alcoholic beverages.  In some desert regions there ore more than
  800 uses made of this plant.  Every
  part of the plant is utilized and the fruits have even served as
  currency.  Iraq has produced over 80
  percent of the commercial crop. 
  Arabia and Northern Africa are also large producers.  Although date palms have been grown in
  California since the 18th Century, they did not become commercially important
  until 1890.  By the 21st Century
  commercial dates, including over 20 varieties, were being grown in both
  California and Arizona.  There they
  are hand pollinated and the ripening clusters are protected from birds and
  rain by special paper sacs.               Durian, Duria zibethinus, is indigenous to
  Malaya and occurs locally in that area and west to Burma and south to the
  East Indies.  It is rarely
  cultivated.  It is a tall handsome
  tree that reaches 80 ft in height with large conical spiny fruits, 6-8 in. in
  diameter.  The leaves are densely
  covered with golden hairs on their undersides.  The flowers are yellow or creamy white.  The custard like flesh has an exquisite
  flavor and is at the same time aromatic and sweet with a unique balsamic
  taste.  However, the odor can be
  extremely offensive to persons with a particular gene so that the fruit has
  been banned in certain hotels and public places.  Durians are nevertheless highly prized by people and
  animals.  It has been associated with
  rejuvenating powers.               The Edible fig, Ficus carica, has been under
  cultivation since ancient times.  It
  is indigenous to Southern Arabia and had spread to the Mediterranean region
  in prehistoric times.  It is often
  mentioned in the Bible.  Theophrastus
  was familiar with many varieties and his “Enquiry into Plants” gives a
  detailed account of fig cultivation (Hill 1952).  Today figs are grown worldwide where the climate is
  suitable.  In colder winter climates
  (e.g., Illinois) the fig trunk may be bent horizontally and covered with
  gunny sacks and dry leaves in autumn to reduce frost damage.             The fig is a shrub or small tree
  with typically lobed leaves.  The
  fruit is a synconium, a fleshy hollow receptacle with a narrow aperture at
  the tip.  The true fruits, which are
  small achenes, are borne on short stalks on the inside of the synconium.  There are several different kinds of
  edible figs:  Smyrna, Caprifigs,
  Common Figs and San Pedro Figs.              Figs are used fresh, dried, canned
  or preserved.  A large amount is used
  in baking and ground up for fig coffee. 
  Additional to their food value they have definite laxative properties
  and are important in medicine.  In the
  United States most of the fig crop comes from California and Texas.               These have no
  staminate flowers and thus the fruits develop without pollination and have no
  seeds.  Two crops are produced
  annually.  The first crop (brebas) is
  larger and juicier and is usually consumed fresh.  They are borne on the old wood.  The second crop is produced in the axils of the leaves.  They are used fresh or dried.  There are over 800 varieties of common
  figs.  Propagation is by cuttings.               These are
  wild figs that grow naturally in the Mediterranean region and in Western Asia
  and are thought to represent the primitive type.  There is no commercial value for the fruit but cultivation is
  essential to the development of the Smyrna fig.  The life history of the Capri Fig is closely related with that
  of a small wasp, Blastophaga psenes, which affects
  pollination.  Three crops of fruit are
  produced yearly.  The spring crop
  (profichi) contains staminate flowers and the so-called gall-flowers.  These are similar to pistillate flowers
  but they have short styled ovaries. 
  The fig wasp enters the young figs and lays eggs in the gall
  flowers.  After about two months the
  new generation of wasps hatches and emerges from the fig, becoming covered
  with pollen in the process.  By this
  time the summer crop of figs (mammoni) has been produced that contain mainly
  gall flowers.  The wasps enter these
  and deposit eggs in most of them. 
  Although the wasp pollinates these, the presence of the larvae
  inhibits seed development.  Flowers in
  which eggs were not placed are able to develop fertile seed.  There is usually a continual crop of these
  summer figs until cold weather, and figs and wasps can be found in all stages
  of development.  Later in the season
  the winter crop of figs (mamme) is developed and after being visited by the
  wasps remains on the tree over winter. 
  The larvae mature in April when a new crop of profichi figs is ready
  to receive the wasps and the annual cycle is resumed.               There are no staminate flowers
  produced in Smyrna Figs, and thus these figs are completely dependent on
  cross-pollination from Capri Figs. 
  The process is called Caprification and is
  carried out artificially.  Branches of
  Capri figs of the profichi crop are suspended on the Smyrna tree.  The wasps on emerging enter the partly
  developed Smyrna figs and pollinate them. 
  Unlike the Capri figs, the ovaries have styles so long that the wasp
  is unable to deposit eggs in the correct location.  Therefore the ovules are able to develop normally after
  fertilization.  The wasps then emerge
  from the fig or die within the cavity. 
  Smyrna figs have a superior nutty flavor due to the presence of the
  fertile seeds.  They are the most
  important commercial fig and are extensively grown in Asia Minor, Algeria,
  Greece and some sections of Portugal and California.               These are
  grown in California with two crops annually. 
  The first develops without pollination, while the second fails to
  mature and falls from the tree, unless it is caprified.               Granadillas
  are the edible fruits of several species of passionflower.  These are woody tendril-bearing vines with
  solitary showl flowers and a many-seeded berry.  They are indigenous to tropical America.             The Purple Granadilla, Passiflora edulis, is native to Brazil
  but has been cultivated worldwide.  In
  Australia it is of considerable economic importance.  it is also grown in Sri Lanka, The
  Mediterranean area and the southern United States.  The flowers are white with a white and purple crown.  The deep-purple fruit is about 3 in. long
  and is used as a table fruit and in sherbets, candy and beverages.             Other common species are the Giant
  Granadilla,
  Passiflora
  quadrangularis,
  with greenish-yellow flowers that reach 10 in. in length; and the Sweet Granadilla, Passiflora ligularis.               Guava, Psidium
  guajava,
  is native to tropical America where it has been cultivated for
  centuries.  It was known to the Incas
  and had spread all over tropical America before the European
  colonization.  It is now common in the
  tropics everywhere and is of especial importance in Florida and California.  The small tree or shrub has white
  flowers.  The yellow berrylike fruit
  is about 4 in. long with variously colored flesh.  The aromatic, sweet and juicy fruit is highly flavored with a
  fine balance between the content of acid, sugar and pectin.  It is a rich source of Vitamins A, B. and
  C and of ascorbic acid.  It is usually
  used for preserves, pastes and jellies and for beverages.  The powder from dehydrated fruits is used
  to fortify other jellies and jams.             Strawberry
  Guava, Psidium littorale, is native to Brazil
  and cultivated elsewhere.  It has small
  red fruits with a very sweet juicy pulp. 
  They are used fresh or in beverages.   Other
  Myrtaceae  <Photos>             The
  family Myrtaceae, which includes guavas, probably has as many, if not more,
  species with edible fruits than any other family.  Besides guavas of which there are at least 155 species, there
  are the eugenias and syzgiums with almost 700 species.  Some of these are of great importance.             The Rose
  Apple, Syzygium jambos, is indigenous to tropical
  Asia but has spread worldwide.  It is
  grown in Florida for its greenish-yellow fruits that are used in preserves
  and candy.             The Pitanga
  or Surinam Cherry, Eugenia uniflora, is grown in Florida
  and California for use as a fresh fruit and in jellies and sherbets.             The Grumichama, Eugenia dombeyi, The Jambolan
  or Java
  Plum, Syzygium cumini, and the Chia
  or Mountain
  Apple, Syzygium malaccensis, are all native to
  South Eastern Asia but may be found growing in other tropical countries.  Other related species are the Feijoa, Feijoa sellowiana, and the Jaboticaba, Myrciaria cauliflora.  The Jaboticaba is a very beautiful tree
  native to Brazil.  It is frequently
  planted as an ornamental.  The grapelike
  fruits are borne on the branches and trunk and are used for fresh fruit,
  jellies, wines and cordials.               Jujube, Zizyphus jujuba, is indigenous to
  China and has been cultivated there since before 2,000 B.C.  It is one of the principal fruits consumed
  in China and is also grown elsewhere in the subtropics worldwide.  The plant is remarkably free of pests.  It is a large bush or small spiny tree
  with small dark-brown fleshy drupes that have a white, crisp, rich
  flesh.  It is consumed fresh, dried or
  preserved and is also used in cooking and making candy.            Lychee, Litchi chinensis, is indigenous to
  Cochin China and Thailand.  It has been
  an important fruit in Southeastern Asia since before 100 B.C.  The plant is now widely grown in the
  tropics and subtropics.  The tree is
  also a valuable ornamental.  It
  reaches a height of 35-40 ft. and has a broad round-topped crown and leathery
  shiny leaves.  The fruits are
  distinctively round, 1-2 in. in diameter and are borne in loose
  clusters.  Fruit set can be enhanced
  by twisting a thin copper wire around the base of the florescence,  but the wires must be removed once the
  immature fruits are formed or the tree will die.  The pericarp is bright red and leathery, turning brown and
  brittle on drying.  The translucent
  white flesh surrounds a single large seed. 
  In the dried fruit, the so-called “Litchi Nuts,” the flesh is very
  aromatic and has a raisin like consistency. 
  Litchis produced in China and Taiwan are canned for the export market.               Loquat, Eriobotrya japonica, is one of the few tropical
  fruits that belong to the Rosaceae, a family which has such a large number of
  edible fruits in temperate regions. 
  The tree is native to China but is now grown in most tropical and
  subtropical areas.  It has flourished
  in California, The Gulf States and Florida. 
  It is a small evergreen tree with broad leaves and fragrant white
  flowers that appear in autumn.  The
  small, round, downy, yellow-orange fruits area produced in the spring.  The flesh is lightly acid and not as sweet
  and rich as most tropical fruits.  It
  is highly valued in the Orient and has been grown there since antiquity.  Japan and Australia produce the largest
  crop.  The fruit is used fresh and is
  made into jellies, sauces and pies.               Chrysobalanus icaco L occurs on the sandy shores of southern Florida to the West
  Indies and Brazil.  it has plumlike
  fruits that make excellent conserves but which are too acid for consuming
  fresh.               Mango, Mangifera
  indica,
  is one of the oldest and most important of tropical fruits.  It was cultivated since before 4,000
  B.C.  It is a sacred tree in
  India.  Indigenous to Southern Asia,
  it is now widely grown in all tropical and some subtropical areas.  Mango is one of the few tropical plants
  that have been improved under cultivation and there are over 515
  horticultural varieties grown.  The
  tree is a handsome evergreen, reaching 90 ft. in height with small pink
  flowers in large panicles.  The fruit
  is a fleshy drupe with a thick yellowish-red skin and a large seed.  The size, shape, and quality mangos vary
  greatly.  The lengths are 3-5 in.  The pulp is orange, yellow or red and when
  ripe has a rich, aromatic flavor with a perfect blending of sweetness and
  acidity.  Young and inferior fruits
  are often fibrous and unpleasantly acid.             Mangos are of much greater
  importance tropical climates than apples are in temperate zones.  They furnish food for at least one-fifth of
  the world’s inhabitants.  Most of the
  harvest is consumed fresh.  They are
  also used in preserves, sauces, and salads and as chutney.  They may also be cooked, dried and canned.             The related genus Spondias includes three species
  that furnish fruits often found in tropical markets.  The Golden Apple, Otaheite Apple or Ambarella, Spondias cytherea, is native to the
  Society Islands and is cultivated in both hemispheres.  Although inferior to the mango, it is
  consumed fresh, cooked and in sherbets and beverages.             The Yellow
  Mombin or Hog
  Plum, Spondias mombin, and the Red Mombin or Spanish Plum, S. purpurea, are natives of
  tropical America where they are widely distributed as both wild and
  cultivated trees.  The fruits are
  consumed raw, cooked or in jams and jellies.               Mangosteen, Garcinia mangostana, has been called The
  World’s Best Flavored Fruit.  It is
  highly valued in areas where it can be grown.  Native to Malaya it is common in the East Indies, Cochin China
  and Ceylon.  It has also spread to
  other tropical areas of the world. 
  The tree is small and rarely exceeds 30 ft. in height.  It has deep-green foliage and the fruit is
  a dark purple berry, 2-3 in. in length with adherent sepals at the base.  The rind is one-half inch thick and the
  flesh is so delicate that it melts almost like ice cream.  The pulp is white or yellowish, with
  crimson veins and exudes a yellow juice of exquisite flavor                There are more than 200 species
  of Garcinia, about two-third of
  which have edible fruits.  The Mamey or Mammee Apple, Mammea americana, is a close
  Neotropical relative that is an important fruit in the West Indies and
  tropical America.  The aromatic flesh
  is magenta colored with the consistency of an avocado.               Olive, Olea europaea, is one of the oldest
  of fruits and had been grown from prehistoric time.  It is actually used more like a vegetable
  and an edible oil, however. 
  It was known in Egypt in the 17th Century B.C. and is often mentioned
  in the Bible and in Roman and Greek writings.  It is now cultivated everywhere throughout the tropics and
  subtropics.  It has been grown in
  California since 1769.             The tree is a small evergreen
  25-40 ft in height with leathery entire leaves.  It bears whitish flowers and a one-seeded drupe.  The fruit is shiny purplish black when
  ripe.  Although they live to a great
  age under favorable conditions, olive trees require careful cultivation.  A deep fertile soil and a temperature
  averaging 57 degrees Fahrenheit, and no lower than 14 deg. Fahrenheit
  are preferred.  Irrigation is often
  required for a good crop.  Cuttings
  propagate the tree.             The fruit contains a bitter
  glucoside and has to be processed before it is palatable.  After a heavy frost some fruits may be
  eaten directly from the tree.  The
  processing is done by pickling and heating with sodium hydroxide.  Ripe olives have high food content for
  they are one of the few fruits rich in oil. 
  They are cultivated for eating, but more especially as a source of
  olive oil.  Green olives are also a
  favorite preparation.  These are
  picked by hand when fully grown but still unripe.  They are cleaned, and treated with lye, which softens them and
  removes the bitter contents that are present, or merely soaked for a few
  weeks in salt solution before being pickled in brine.  Stuffed olives, with the pit removed and
  replaced by a pimiento or nut, are a familiar product.  The best quality olives are grown in the
  Mediterranean area, especially Greece and southern Italy.  The oil that is extracted from California
  grown olives lacks the flavor of that from Mediterranean crops.               Papaya, Carica papaya, is indigenous to the
  West Indies and Mexico.  It is now
  grown worldwide in the tropics and subtropics.  The fruit is valuable for food and medicinal purposes.  The tree is in reality a giant herb that
  will grow to 25 ft. in height. 
  Varieties may be either dioecious or monocious.  The straight stem is rather succulent,
  with a crown of large deeply 7-lobed leaves and yellow flowers.  The fruits are fleshy berries that
  resemble melons.  They are
  yellow-orange in color and may weight up to 20 lbs.  They are borne on long stalks just below the crown of
  leaves.  The growth rate is very rapid
  and the yield high and can be grown in subtropical areas with some frost
  protection.  Papaya is an excellent
  breakfast fruit especially when served with the juice of limes.  It is also used for salads, pies, sherbets
  and confections.  Unripe fruits are
  cooked like squash or preserved.  The
  fruit and other parts of the plant contain a latex that is used in
  chewing-gum manufacture.  One of the
  constituents of the latex is a digestive ferment, Papain that
  acts on proteins in a manner similar to pepsin.  This ferment is important in medicine and is also used for
  tenderizing meat.                Papaw, Asimina triloba, is native to
  temperate North America.  The tree is deciduous
  with drooping leaves, axillary purple flowers that show before the leaves,
  and edible fruits.  It grows from New
  York to Florida and Texas.               American
  Persimmon,
  Diospyros
  virginiana,
  is a hardy small tree of the southeastern United States.  The fruits ripen after a frost and are of
  high quality and delicious flavor. 
  The unripe fruits are very acid but the ripe fruits do not hold up
  well in storage and have more pulp.               Japanese
  Persimmon,
  Diospyros
  kaki, is
  indigenous to China but has spread from there worldwide.  There have been over 810 varieties grown
  in Japan.  The tree is cultivated in
  France and other Mediterranean countries and is common in California,
  Florida, Texas and the Gulf States. 
  It is a large tree, 20 ft or more in height, with orange-red fruits
  about 3 in. in diameter.  Persimmons
  are edible berries with an enlarged calyx at the base.  They are consumed fresh or dried.  Intestinal allergic reactions may occur in
  some who eat this fruit.               Pineapple, Ananas comosus, is one of the first
  tropical fruits to be grown commercially. 
  No other tropical crop except rubber has had a more rapid rise in
  international commerce.  This is due
  in large part to good luck and management as well as to its own high quality.             Pineapples are indigenous to
  Northern South America.  It was widely
  grown in the West Indies in Pre-Columbian times.  Wild varieties still exist in Brazil.  The ananas, as they were called, were carried by the Europeans
  to the Old World and from there spread all over tropical Asia, Africa, the
  East Indies and Polynesia.             The plant is a biennial, with a
  short stem and rosette of stiff leaves, 3 ft. in length, with spiny tips and
  prickly margins (Hill 1952).  The
  flowers occur in dense beads and are crowned by a tuft of leaves.  The large fruits, weighting from 1-20
  lbs., are syncarps.  These are
  multiple accessory fruits formed from the whole inflorescence.  The individual ripened ovaries are
  embedded in a fleshy mass formed from the bracts, sepals, petals and axis of
  the inflorescence.  The cultivated
  varieties are mostly seedless. 
  Pineapple is a very dependable crop. 
  Propagation is by suckers, slips or by planting the crown.  They can be grown in a poor dry sandy
  soil, but often require iron supplements. 
  There are many varieties.               Few fruits with better flavor or
  more wholesome qualities are known. 
  Besides the content of sugar and fruit acids, a valuable digestive
  ferment, Bromelin, is present.  Pineapples must ripen on the plant to develop the best
  flavor.  However, most of the fruits
  that are exported are picked before maturity and often tend to be too acid
  and are not as full flavored. 
  Pineapples have been preserved in cans since 1900, either as juice or
  slices.  A fiber called Piña
  is obtained from the leaves.             The principal commercial areas are
  Hawaii, Central America, the West Indies and Southeast Asia.  Garden plantings are common in California,
  Florida and some Gulf States.                 Pomegranate, Punica granatum, is native to
  Iran.  It has been grown for centuries
  and very early spread throughout the Mediterranean region and Southern
  Asia.  It grew in the Hanging Gardens
  of Babylon.  The plant is a bush or
  low tree with orange-red flowers.  The
  round berry-like brownish-yellow or reddish fruits are 2-4 in. in diameter
  and are crowned with a thick persistent calyx.  A leathery rind encloses the pulp with amethyst colored juice
  surrounding many seeds.  The segments
  enclosing the seeds are very bitter so that some experience is necessary in
  eating this fruit.  Pomegranates are
  very refreshing and are used as a table or salad fruit and in beverages.  The roots, rind and seeds are
  medicinal.  In the United States
  California, Arizona and New Mexico lead the production.               Sapodilla, Achras zapota, is a delicious
  dessert fruit of tropical America. 
  The tree is a stately evergreen, 75 ft. in height, with a dense crown
  and horizontal branches.  The flowers
  are white and the fruit is rough brown and 3-4 in. in diameter.  The yellowish-brown flesh is translucent
  and very sweet.  Young fruits contain
  tannin and are unpalatable.  The tree
  is grown in Florida and in the tropics and subtropics of the Old World.  The principal commercial product from this
  tree is not the fruit but the milky latex that is the chief source of chicle
  for making chewing gum.             There are over 400 species in the
  family Sapotaceae, most of them being edible.  Of these the sapote, star apple and canistel are most
  important.             Sapote, Calocarpum
  sapota,
  and other species, are common in Central America and the West Indies.  The russet-brown fruit, 3-6 in. long, has
  a sweet spicy flesh and is important in the local diet.  It is consumed fresh, in salads or as a
  conserve.             Canistel or
  Egg Fruit, Lucuma
  nervosa and
  other species, is a beautiful tree with orange-yellow fruit and a sweet and
  aromatic pulp.  Native to Northern
  South America, it is cultivated in Brazil and has been naturalized in Florida
  and the West Indies.  The fruit is
  consumed fresh, in salads, or for pies, puddings and jam.               Tamarind, Tamarindus indica, may have originated
  in tropical Africa or Southern Asia. 
  It is a large tree, 80 ft. in height, with a dense crown and is often
  grown for shade and ornamental purposes in semiarid regions.  The fruits are brown pods, 3-8 in.
  long.  The sour pulp contains 12
  percent tartaric acid, 30 percent sugar. 
  Tamarinds are extensively used in India and the Orient as fresh fruit,
  in beverages, for preserving and in medicine.  The fruits were used in Europe during the Middle Ages.  Tamarinds are common in Florida, the West
  Indies and some Gulf States.     Bilimbi
  and Carambola  <Photos>             Bilimbi, Averrhoa bilimbi, and Carambola, Averrhoa carambola, are indigenous in
  Southeastern Asia but are grown in the tropics worldwide.  The small fruits are acid so they are
  cooked with sugar before eating.   Otaheite or
  Star Gooseberry  <Photos>             Phyllanthus acidus, has yellow cherrylike
  fruits that are excellent when eaten with sugar.  The small tree is ornamental but has developed wild in Florida and
  the West Indies.   Governor’s or
  Madagascar Plum  <Photos>             Flacourtia indica is an Asiatic species
  with excellent fruits.               Carissa grandiflora and other species of
  South Africa are spiny ornamentals that are often used as a hedge plant in
  subtropical areas.  The small scarlet
  fruits are consumed raw or cooked or used for jellies and preserves.               Malpighia
  glabra of
  the West Indies is commonly grown from Texas to Northern South America.  It has juicy red cherry like fruits that
  are high in Vitamin C and are usually cooked or used for beverages.   The plants are sensitive to pruning and
  will not set fruit if pruning is severely done.   Ceriman
  or Pine Tree
  Fruit  <Photos>             Monstera deliciosa is an ornamental aroid
  often planted in greenhouses.  It has
  long conelike fruits with a pleasant pineapple-like flavor when ripe.               Casimioa edulis is indigenous to the
  highlands of Mexico and Central America. 
  It was introduced into California, the southern United States and the
  West Indies.  The apple like fruits
  have a soft, yellow, sweet, custard like pulp.  Proper ripening is required to preclude bitterness.               Cyphomandra
  betacea,
  is native to Peru but it is extensively cultivated throughout the Andean
  region.  It was introduced into Puerto
  Rico and Southeastern Asia.  The oval,
  reddish-orange fruits are consumed raw or cooked, but do not compete in quality
  with bush tomatoes.     Naranjilla or Lulu  <Photos>             Solanum
  quitoense
  is a robust herb with very large leaves and orange fruits that are produced
  in abundance throughout the year.  It
  is common in the high Andes from Peru to Colombia.  The fruit has a very delicious and refreshing juice that is
  rich in protein and minerals.   | 
 
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