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citrus Nasir Ayub Group.pdf

  1. Citrus Nasir Ayub Group Members Department: Food Science UOS
  2. Introduction • Origin: South East Asia • Family: Rutaceae • A prized fruit of Pakistan • Ranks 1st among all fruits • Shares 34% in total fruit production • Shares one-third of total value of fruit’s exports • 95 % kinnow Produced in Punjab
  3. Classification • Swingle (1943) divided the genus citrus into 3 independent genera: 1. Citrus included 16 species 2. Poncirus include 1 species 3. Fortunella include 4 species • Hodgson (1961) divided citrus into 36 species. • Mostly Swingle classification is followed with some modifications suggested by Hodgson.
  4. • Family: Rutaceae • Sub Family: Aurantioideae • Sub family consists of 2 tribes: • Clausenae and Citreae • Citreae has 33 genera including • Citrus (Sweet orange, mandarin, grapefruit, lime and lemons) • Poncirus (kumquat) • Fortunella (trifoliate orange)
  5. Distinguishing features of 3 genera Genus Citrus: • Unifoliate • Ovary has 8 or more cells • Evergreen trees and shrubs • Spiny with thick, leathery leaves and winged petioles • Flowers are white or in some species pink on the outside, Pentamerous, axillary and scented. • They have small calyxes, hard sepals and thick petals with densely spaced oil cells. • The stamens are numerous (15-60) and the ovary superior with 8-15 carpels containing few to several ovules • Fruit has thick leathery rind, botanically it is a special type of berry called a hesperidium. • Fruit is globose, sub-globose or elliptical filled with juice sacs or vesicles. • Fruit contain few to many white or light green seeds, which are generally polyembryonic.
  6. Distinguishing features of 3 genera Genus Citrus: is divided into two sub-genera 1. Eucitrus: all edible citrus species 2. Papeda: contain acrid oil droplets in the juice vesicles and are inedible
  7. Distinguishing features of 3 genera Few important commercial citrus species are: Citrus sinensis (L) Osbeck----Sweet Orange Citrus reticulate Blance----Mandarin Citrus paradisi Macf. Grapefruit----(Pomelo) Citrus grandis (L) Osbeck Chakotra---(Pummelo) Citrus limettioides Tan.----Sweet lime Citrus aurantifolia Swing----Kaghzi Lime Citrus limonia (L)----Lemon Citrus medica (L)----Citron Citrus aurantium (L)----Sour orange Citrus jambheri Lush----Rough Lemon
  8. Distinguishing features of 3 genera Genus Poncirus: • It has only one species P. trifoliate Raf., • Compound leaves with three leaflets • Deciduous • Tree is small and spiny • Flowers are sessile, and borne on previous-year wood in the axils of spines. They open wide and flat and are creamy white. • The inedible, pubescent fruit has 6-8 segments, is filled with smooth seeds and is orange-yellow at maturity. • Poncirus is generally used as a rootstock in colder regions and for growing dwarf trees.
  9. Distinguishing features of 3 genera Genus Fortunella: • It has four species, of which the commercially important ones are F. margarita Swing. (oval kumquat) and F. japonica Swing. (round kumquat). • The trees are small with small green leaves paler on the other side. • The flowers are white and smaller than those of citrus • Fruit is small, orange colored, 3-6 celled, acidic and juicy but with a sweet and edible rind. The other species are F. crassifolia Swing and F. hindsii Swing.
  10. Hybrids Hybrids Parents Citranges Poncirus × sweet orange Citrangesquats Citranges× fortunella Tangelos Mandarins × grapefruit Limequats Lime × fortunella Citrumellos Poncirus × grapefruit Citrandrins Poncirus × mandarins Kinnow Nobilis ×deliciosa
  11. Soil • Deep sandy loam, loam and clay loam • pH: 5.5-8.5 • Subsoil should be free from hard pan, sticky clay and water logged conditions • Poor soils with high pH are not suitable • Soil requirements depend upon the type of rootstock used for various species and varieties. • Rough lemon is a good rootstock for dry, sandy loam soils of Punjab, whereas sour orange performs better on the moist and heavy soil of NWFP.
  12. Climate • Tropical and Sub Tropical • Up to 450-750m elevation • Temperature is an important factor. In cool regions, vegetative growth is less, fruit growth is slow, ripening is delayed and fruit is acidic. In colder regions, pigmented cultivars like Red Blood sweet orange develop excellent quality. • Temperature range: 13-40°C • Can endure 0-2°C without injury, depending on the cultivar and duration of cold period. • Grapefruit is the high temperature resistant citrus sp. • Extreme cold and frost can burn flowers and young twigs.
  13. Climate • Species appear to resist frost in the following descending manner • Mandarin, sour orange, sweet orange, chakotra, grape fruit, sweet lime, lemon, kaghzi lime and citron. • In hotter regions, trees produce more growth and fruit grows faster and ripens earlier but fruit may suffer from sunburn • In Pakistan, the central divisions of Punjab– Sargodha, Faisalabad, Lahore and Multan---produce excellent citrus. • In NWFP, Peshawar, D.I. Khan and Dir are important citrus producing areas.
  14. Temperature Requirement • Seed Germination: 15-30°C • Vegetative Growth: Optimum shoot growth: 25-31°C Optimum root growth: 25-26 °C
  15. Flowering • Season: February- March • Lemon: Throughout year, when growing in coastal regions with mild winter Spring, when growing in dry areas with hot summer and cold winter
  16. Fruit Set • Optimum Temperature for pollen viability: 15-20°C • Pollen tube growth is temperature dependent • High temperature causes poor fruit set
  17. Propagation • Sexual: Seeds • Asexual: Budding Layering Grafting
  18. Planting Seasons • Spring February- March • Autumn September-October
  19. Citrus Nursery • Extraction of seeds • August- September • Storage of seeds • Preparation of seed bed Length 5-6 ft Width 3 ft Height 6-9 inch Distance from seed to seed 4-6 inch Use fungicides and depth of seed should be 1 cm
  20. • Transplantation of seedling: • Seedling should be transplanted after 6-12 month • Plant to plant distance 6-9 inch • Row to row distance same as plant to plant distance • Please left some space empty after four lines • Care of seedlings • Budding and grafting of seedlings • Selection of scion wood, preparation of rootstock • Aftercare of budded/grafted plants
  21. Recommended Propagation Techniques Fruits Recommended Methods Sweet Orange, Mandarin T-Budding, T-Grafting Grapefruit and Eureka Lemon T-Budding Sweet Lime Stem cutting Khaghzi Lime Layering
  22. Time of Fertilizer Application Nutrients and Doses Time of Application FYM Dec-January 1/3 N + P + K (full dose) Before flowering (Feb) 1/3 N At pea stage 1/3 N In August Micronutrients Foliar application in Feb
  23. Planting Geometry • Square System Planting distance: 22´ to 25´ 64-90 plants/acre • High Density Plantation R×R: 10 ft P×P: 10 ft
  24. Intercropping • From 1-6 yrs of age: short stature crops with shallow root system are allowed to grow Mung, Mash, Masoor, Peas • Exhaustive crops with deep root system are not allowed to grow Sugarcane, Cotton, Wheat • Afterwards clean cultivation is recommended • No hoeing or cultivation except once in a year to kill the weeds.
  25. Irrigation Over irrigation is more injurious than under irrigation in citrus • Surface irrigation 1. Basin system 2. Modified basin system 3. Flood irrigation • Sprinkler irrigation • Drip irrigation
  26. Irrigation Schedule Season/Month Irrigation Frequency Spring (Feb-March) Once a month Summer (April-July) Twice a month Monsoon (August) Subject to rainfall Autumn (Sept-Oct) No irrigation Winter (Nov-Jan) Once a month
  27. Precautions in Applying Irrigation • Irrigation water may not be allowed to touch directly to the stem of citrus tree • Field and water channels should be precisely leveled • Stop irrigation at flowering time • Stop irrigation two weeks before harvesting • Restrict irrigation in Oct-Nov • Light irrigation during frosty nights
  28. Determination of irrigation • Fruit growth • Wilting symptoms • Tensiometer
  29. Tensiometer
  30. Pruning • For establishment of strong well balanced framework • Facilitate management practices like spraying, picking etc. • To ensure balance between vegetative vigor and fruitfulness • To improve penetration and increase the set of inferior fruit • Increase soluble solids and improve rind color • To produce new and productive wood • Tree age 70-100 years California due to pruning
  31. Physiological Disorders • Alternate Bearing • Unfruitfulness • Fruit Drop • Granulation
  32. For disease there is some specific causal organism and which can be corrected It is very hard and difficult to correct/control the physiological disorder
  33. Alternate Bearing Nutritional imbalance Varietal character Mandarin Sweet orange Grape fruti Kinnow , Wilking V.late, W. Navel Mardh seedless, 1. Heavy manuring during off year 2. Fruit thinning during on year 3. Delayed harvesting during off year 4. Early harvesting during on year
  34. Unfruitfulness  Physiological or genetic causes  Involve hormonal or nutritional imbalances  Climatic factors • Genetic or physiological • Incompatibility • Heterostyly • Ovule abortion
  35. Involve hormonal or nutritional imbalances • General weakness may be removed by an appropriate fertilizer program • While excessive vegetative growth • Withholding nutrition • Root pruning or ringing of main branches • Climatic factors • Certain varieties refused to produce in particular environments e.g Washington navel
  36. Fruit Drop Start from blooming and continue up to harvest 1 Flower drop Bloom heavily---- thousand of flowers Usually 95% drop and 5% set fruit Fruit set % range form 1-4% Reasons: 1. Climatic conditions 2. Weak plant, deficiency of nutrients 3. Mutual flower competition 4. Heavy winds, or rain fall
  37. Fruit Drop 2- Initial fruit drop Fruit drop after fruit set Due to nutritional imbalance Weak trees 3- June drop 1. Occurs in month of May and June 2. Natural load sharing 3. Drop of poorly developing fruits 4. Around 96% young fruit drop occurs in Pineapple orange 5. Around 75% drop ----- in Kinnow
  38. Fruit Drop 4- Pre-harvest drop 1. This drop is at mature stage 2. It is a commercial loss to the grower 3. Failure in auxins synthesis due to abscission layer 4. Attack of insects and disease 5. Controlled with application of hormones 6. GA and 2,4-D, NAA etc
  39. Granulation/Raciness •The condition is characterised by large, hardened and apparently dry juice vesicles •The stem end of fruit is more effected as compared to styler end •Some time one half, one third or under extreme cases whole fruit is affected •It cannot be identified externally, because there is no external abnormality 1. The cell wall of granulated vesicles are thick 2. Sugar contents are reduced then normal 3. Mineral content are increased then the normal
  40. Granulation/Raciness •Due to thick walls of fruit vesicles more minerals, less sugar content it seems to be dry •Granulation increase of harvesting is delayed •Frequent irrigation or water standing in the root zone for longer period of time may also increase the incidence of granulation Corrective measure •Spot picking of larger fruits at earlier stage •Large interval of irrigation •Spraying of growth regulators
  41. Granulation/Raciness
  42. Major Diseases • Phytophthora Gummosis or Foot rot • Trunk Gummosis • Damping off/ Root rot • Wither tip • Citrus Canker • Citrus Greening • Citrus Quick Decline • Citrus Slow Decline
  43. Citrus Canker 1- Citrus Canker (Xanthomonas compestris) Bacterial disease Appear on leaves, branches, fruit a- Symptoms 1. Small yellow spots are formed on upper epidermis, then on lower epidermis 2. Later, spots become bigger, brown, raised 3. Diseased area die and leaving hole 4. Spots also appear on twigs and fruit drop Example: K lime, Lemon, Grapefruit, Sweet lime, Sweet orange b- Corrective measure 1. Selection of healthy nursery plants 2. Prune the affected part and spray with bacteriaside
  44. Citrus Canker Citrus Canker on fruit Citrus Canker on leaves
  45. Citrus Withertip 2- Citrus wither tip (Colletotricum gloeosporioids) Fungal disease a- Symptoms 1. All aerial part, leaves, braches and fruit are affected 2. Wilting from braches from top to bottom 3. Branches looks silvery grey leafless 4. Leaf fall is common 5. Pathogen kill the plant b- Corrective measure 1. Improve growing conditions of the orchard 2. Spraying with cu based fungicides
  46. Citrus Withertip Citrus withertip
  47. Citrus Greening • Causal organism was first considered as virus. Later evidenced as mycoplasmal diseases and now classified as Ricketisa like organisms (RLO) • Yellowing of veins and adjacent tissue • Mottling of entire leaf • Premature defoliation • Die back of twigs and have shorter internodes • Decay of feeder rootlets and lateral roots • Decline and ultimate death of entire tree. • Transmitted by grafting and Citrus psylla • This disease is more severe on sweet oranges than on mandarin, acid lime and grapefruit. Control: • Application of tetracycline-antibiotic • Control of Citrus psylla
  48. Citrus Tristeza Virus • Vein clearing in lime • Bronzing of leaves • Stem pitting • Twig and root die back • Leaf drop • Foliage wilt • Sudden death • Tree debilitation • Reduced fruit size • Necrosis of cambial tissue
  49. Citrus Tristeza Virus Control: • Aphid contol • Use of tristeza tolerant rootstock • Eradication of all infected trees • Use of virus free buds employed for budding
  50. Insect Pests of Citrus • Citrus psylla • Citrus leaf miner • Citrus fruit fly • Lemon butterfly • Citrus mealy bug • Citrus thrips
  51. Citrus Psylla Leaf Miner Mealy Bug Lemon Butterfly Weevil citrus leaf miner
  52. Citrus Psylla 1- Citrus Psylla Sucking types insect, Adult are brown in colour, black antena, Insect attack at the time of blooming Attacked the fresh growth, which is important for fruiting in citrus Corrective measure Pre-bloom prophylactic spray of insecticides during January and February
  53. Adult; Citrus Psylla Nymph; Citrus Psylla
  54. Citrus Leaf Miner 1- Citrus leaf miner Chewing types insect, Small silvery white insect with black eyes and wings fringed with hairs, It make the tunnels in the leaves, which looks silvery white, Attack on young nursery plants more Corrective measure Spray with insecticides during leaf emerging Avoid using citrus hedges around citrus orchards or nurseries
  55. Damage caused by citrus leaf miner Citrus leaf miner
  56. Causes of Low Production • High pH • Low organic matter • Saline soils • Uncertain weather conditions during flowering (fog, frost, rains) • Use of unfit tube well water • Faulty intercropping • Inadequate and imbalance fertilizer application • Poor plant protection measures • Non judicious irrigation • Low grade nursery plants • Mechanical injury to the plants during hoeing and ploughing
  57. Suggestions (short and long terms) 1. Surveys • Periodical assessment of disease status • New areas • New diseases • Identification of priorities • Characterization of viruses 2. Nursery Improvement • Registration • Phyto-sanitation, production of virus free stock • Adoption of recommended horticultural practices
  58. 3. Production / Maintenance of High Quality Nursery Plants • Quarantine area • Clean stock (mother trees, virus testing, thermotherapy, indexing) • Certification • Economic evaluation 4. Improvement of Orchards • Eradication of infected trees • Horticultural practices
  59. 5. Insect- Vector Relationships • Identification of vectors • Transmission of viruses • Population dynamics of vectors • Search for predators and parasites of citrus psyllids • Sound, viable IPM
  60. Promising Varieties of Citrus SWEET ORANGE • Musambi • Pineapple • Jaffa • Blood Red • Hamlin • Washington Navel • Valencia Late • Salustiana • Torocco • Moro
  61. Mandarins • Kinnow • Feutrell’s Early • Honey Mandarin • Fair Child • Fremont • Minneola • Orlando
  62. Grapefruit • Marsh seedless • Foster • Duncan • Shamber • Red Blush • Star Ruby • Frost Marsh
  63. Lemon and kumquat • Eureka lemon • Meiwa • Naghmi
  64. Research Centers/Inst. • University of Agriculture, Faisalabad, • Horticultural Research Center, Sahiwal, • Orange Research Insitute Sargodha, • Ayyub Agricultural Research Institute, Faisalabad, • Barani Agricultural Research Institute, Chakwal, • National Agriculture Research Center (NARC), Isalamabad, • Zarai Taraqati Bank Limited (ZTBL) Farm, Islamabad, • Tarnab Agricultural Research Station, Peshawar • Federal Seed Certification, Germplasm unit, Sherkhana, Peshawar
  65. Germplasm at Different Places in Pakistan Total No. of Cultivars Scion Rootstock 210 156 56 Province Citrus Cultivars Punjab 170 Federal Area 80 Khyber PK 46 Baluchistan 11
  66. This number is a handsome to be used in our citrus diversification program but still we have failed to properly use this gene pool information.
  67. Citrus Cultivars at Different Centers/Inst. Centre/Institute Citrus Cultivars Hort. Res. Station (Sahiwal) 170 U.A. Faisalabad 89 ZTBL Farm (Islamabad) 80 FSC Germplasm Unit Sher Khana, Peshawar 46 CRI (Sargodha) 43 AARI (FSD) 34 BARI (Chakwal) 23 Tarnab (Peshawar) NARC, Islamabad 16 12
  68. Genotypes Available at Different Inst. Islamabad Name of Station Mandarin& Tangerine Sweet Oranges Grapefruit Lemon& Limes Rootstocks Hybrids Fortunella HRS, Sahiwal 24 46 16 26 46 10 2 UAF, Faisalaba d 9 30 10 9 24 5 2 ZTBL Farm, Islamabad 21 28 8 23 - - - FSC, Peshawar 6 20 5 4 11 - - ORI, Sargodha 5 31 2 3 2 - 2 AARI, Faisalaba d 5 13 - 7 - 9 - BARI, Chakwal 7 9 4 3 - - TARS, Pehawar 4 8 - 3 1 - - NARC, 2 4 - 3 3 - -
  69. Citrus Gene Pool of Pakistan Sweet Oranges 1. Atwood Early Navel 2. Ruby Blood 3. Olinda Valencia 4. Mediterranean 5. Boquet-De-Fleura 6. Pineapple 7. Hamlin 8. Moro Blood 9. Frost Valencia 10. Campbell Valencia 11.Torocco 12. Chinotto 13.Casa Grande 14. Marrs Early 15.Cutter Valencia 16. Salustiana 17.Kozan 18. Trabulus 19.Frost Navel 20. Hinkley 21.Joppa 22. Parson Brown 23.Sanguinello 24. Shamoute 25.Jaffa 26. Washington Navel 27.Musambi 28. Succari 29.Washington Navel-3033 30. Washington Navel-315
  70. 31. Sanguinello Mos. 4955 32. Tarocco Nuc. 33. Moro Nucellar 34. Navelate Orange 35. New Hall Orange 36. Navelina Orange 37. Valencia Late 38. Blood Red 39. Ruby Red Seedling 40. Midsweet Seedling 41. Amber Sweet Seedling 42. Valencia Seedling 43. Navel Seedling 44. Cara Cara Navel 45. Siamese Sweet Orange 46. Rhode Red Valencia 47. Venille 48. Sweet Seville 49. Lue-Gim-Roi-King 50. Mars Early 51. Dweet 52. Frost Navel 53. 7.U.A.F 54. 8.U.A.F
  71. Mandarins 1. Kinnow 2. Willow Leaf 3. Wilking 4. Pixie 5. Ponkan 6. Murcott 7. Honey Mandarin 8. Sunket Sunkey 9. Nova 10. Oscila 11.Shamel 12. Clausellino 13.Satsuma 14. Clemenules 15.Clementine 16. Clementina 17.Fair Child 18. Freemont 19.Frost Dancy Tangerine 20. Algerian 21.Fortune 22. Sunbrust 23.Natal Nartjee 24. Mangal Singh 25.USDF Dancy 26. Kinnow Tetraploid 27.Kinnow Seedless 28. Feutrells Early
  72. Grapefruit Reed Frost Marsh Red Blush 2. 4. 6. O. P . Davis Seedling 8. 1. 3. 5. 7. 9. Ruby Red 11. Marsh Seedless 13. Rio Red 15. Frost Fresh Shamber Marsh Jbc-430 Red Mexican Foster Little River 10. Foster 12. Star Ruby 14. Flame Seedling 16. Duncan
  73. Hybrids 1. Seminola 2. Minneola Tangelo 3. Orlando Tangelo 4. Pearl 5. Mepo Tangelo 6. Kinnow (4x) X Kinnow (2x) 7. Kinnow (2x) X Kinnow (4x) 8. Succari (2x) X Kinnow (4x) 9. Kinnow (4x) X Succari (2x) 10. Mosambi X Kinnow 11. Kinnow X Mosambi 12. Feutrell’s Early X Valencia Late 13. Washington Navel X Duncan 14. Valencia Late X Duncan 15. Valencia Late X Jaffa 16. Jaffa X Valencia Late 17. Kinnow X Ferutrell’s Early 18. Ferutrell’s Early X Kinnow 19. Valencia Late X Feutrell’s Early 20. Mosambi X Shamber 21. Shamber X Mosambi 22. AARI Pride(PineappleX Mosambi) 23. Hamlin X Kinnow 24. Orlando X Kinnow 25. Fair Child X Kinnow 26. Kinnow X Orlando 27. Orlando X Fair Child
  74. Lemon& Limes Sweet Lime 1. Palestine 2. Peshawari Lime 3. Local Mitha Acid Lime 4. Kaghzi Lime 5. Tahiti Lime 6. Eustis Lime 7. Lakeland 8. Bearss Lemons 9. Allen Eureka 10. Corona Foothill Eureka 11. Prior Lisbon 12. Caver’s Lisbon 13. Cook Eureka-N 14. Frost Eureka-N 15. Limoneria 16. Foothill Lisbon 17. CaseCade Eureka 18. Frost Lisbon 19. Caver’s Lisbon O.L 20. Verna 21. Corpaci 22. Feminelo 23. Promofiori 24. Santa Teresa 25. U.C.L.A 26. Monachello 27. Mesero Lemon 28. Coock Eureka
  75. Root Stocks 1. Rouh Lemon/Jatti Khatti 2. Citron/Mokari 3. Kharna Khatta 4. Khatta Taru Jabba 5. Sweet Lime 6. Jullundri Khatti 7. Jambheri Ceylon 8. Jambheri Lyallpur 9. Shaddock 10. Galgal 11. Dewana Khatti 12. Seville Kimb 13. Gada Dehi 14. Nasnaran 15. Sour Orange 16. Sylhet Lime 17. Mithi 18. Citrus Hystrix 19. Cleoptra 20. Mayer’s Lemon 21. Carrizo Citrange 22. Troyer Citrange 23. Savage Citrange 24. Citrumello-1452 25. Citrumello-4475 26. Sachton Citrumello 27. Milam 28. Red Rough Lemon 29. Keen Sour Orange 30. Brazillian Sour Orange
  76. 31. Bassie 32. Koethan Sweet Orange 33. Taiwanica 34. Rubidoux Trifoliate 35. Volkamariana 36. Yuzu 37. Macrophylla 38. Calpi 39. Pomercy 40. Bearss 41. Rangpur Lime 42. Etrog-6013 43. Etrog-861 44. Bitter Sweet Orange 45. Yuma Citrange 46. Sun Chu Shah 47. Smooth Flat Seville 48. Citrus Obvoid 49. Rangpur limeX Troyer Citrange 50. Benton Citrange 51. Trifoliate Orange 52. Sunki X Benecke 53. Algerian 54. Hirodo Bunton Pummello 55. Flying Dragon 56. Bigrade Australian Kumquats 2. Mewa 1. Nagmi Others 1. Bara Masi 2. Bunton Pummello
  77. Establishment of Modern citrus Nursery
  78. Common Nursery Management Practices • No scientific/technical basis • No phytosanitory measures • Selection of low quality seed, rootstock, bud wood (Not certified) • Problem of to have a true to type plant • No disinfection of tools • Budding/grafting at low height
  79. • Proper site selection (No one is taking care) • Lack of growing Structures • Suitability and propagation methods are the other problems • Faulty cultural practices • Unregistered nurseries • Lack of indexing facilities
  80. Citrus Certification Programme • A virus-Free citrus bud wood program for Texas in 1948 (Roistacher and Graca 1996). • Certification of citrus in Turkey in 1950 (Balogu 1998) • Certification and registration program in Florida in 1953 (Youtsey 1992) • Virus and virus-like diseases of citrus in Greece and certification in 1970 (Kyriakopoulou 1998). • The citrus bud wood improvement program for Argentina in 1992 (Anderson 2001)
  81. • National program for the production of certified citrus plants in Tunisia in 1993 (Cherifmattson 1998) • Texas virus-free citrus bud wood program development in 1993 (Kahlke et al 2000) • Sanitary status and certification of citrus in Egypt in 1998 (Abdel-Salam 1998) • In Pakistan certification program was started in 2001 at U.A.F.
  82. Detection • Biological indexing (Mexican lime in the green house at 18oC - 25oC ) • Lab. indexing (ELISA, PCR, Electron Microscopy)
  83. Virus Indexing • Indicator Host • Graft Inoculations • Symptomology • Greenhouse Requirements • Serology and Molecular detection methods
  84. Multiplication • Foundation Trees (Indoor/outdoor) • Seed Orchards (indoor/outdoor) • Budwood increase (Preferred as a shadehouse operation) • Distribution/marketing of budwood • Follow-up action by certification agency
  85. Disease Free Nursery System Followings are the main steps keeping in view the successful establishment of certification model (Su, 1998): • Micrografting for obtaining pathogen free citrus foundation stocks. • Scion- Propagation Parent Trees. • Pathogen-free Citrus Seedlings. • Citrus Growers.
  86. FLOW CHART OF CITRUS BUDWOOD CERTIFICATION PROGRAMME OVERSEAS IMPORTS LOCAL SELECTIONS BREEDING PROGRAMME CANDIDATETREES THERMOHERAPY 32C0 SHOOT TIP GRAFTING INDEXING SOURCE TREE GREEN HOUSE FOUNDATIONBLOCK INDEXAND ANNUALINSPECTION HORTICULTURAL EVALUATION BUD & SEED MULTIPLICATION COMMERCIAL NURSERIES CERTRIFIEDTREES COMMERCIAL PLANTINGS
  87. Activities in Certification Program • Survey for the incidence of CTV (Punjab, Khyber. PK, Sindh and Baluchistan) • Lab indexing followed by biological indexing • Grafting of citrus plant from virus free budwood • Establishment of foundation block • Production of virus free plants through shoot tip grafting • Production of disease free (nematodes) through container grown citrus nursery. • Marketing of virus free budwood and plants for the nurserymen
  88. Future Strategies • Quarantine • Certification • (Establishment of sanitated citrus germplasm)
  89. Suggestions • Legislation in nursery industry should be made • Govt. and private sector should be involved for raising the certified plants on commercial level • To make the disease free true to type progeny plants, testing training should be extended from government institutions • Only certified plants should be recommended for plantation and restrictions should be done for such nurseries those do not follow it • Quarantine measures should be observed strictly • Enhancement and conservation of existed Germplasm on more scientific basis
  90. Citrus Not Native Typically Grafted Long Harvest Season Easy
  91. Oranges
  92. Navel Orange October - January 3 - 3/12 0 - 6 Seeds Small Crops
  93. ‘Cara Cara’ Navel October - January 3 - 3 1/2 0 - 6 Seeds Red Colored Flesh Compact Growth Habit
  94. ‘Hamlin’ October - January 2 3/4 - 3 0 - 6 Seeds Most productive Poor juice color
  95. ‘Valencia’ March - June 2 3/4 - 3 0 - 6 Seeds Best Juice Orange Excellent juice color
  96. Grapefruit
  97. ‘Duncan’ Grapefruit Dec. - May 3 1/2 - 5 30 - 70 seeds Good Flavor White Flesh
  98. ‘Marsh’ November - May 3 1/2 - 4 1/2 0 - 6 Seeds Number 1 for processing
  99. ‘Thompson’ (Pink Marsh) December -May 3 3/4 - 4 1/2 0 - 6 Seeds No blush to peel
  100. Red Grapefruit December - May
  101. Tangerines and Hybrids
  102. ‘Minneola’ December - February 3 - 3 1/2 7 - 12 seeds Very Cold Hardy Prominent neck at stem end
  103. ‘Sunburst’ November - December 2 1/2 - 3 1 - 20 seeds Most widely planted
  104. ‘Murcott’ (Honey Tangerine) January - March 2 3/4 10 - 20 seeds Thin Skin High sugar content
  105. ‘Temple’ January - March 2 3/4 - 3 15 - 20 seeds peels easily Pebbly rind texture Cold sensitive
  106. Satsuma Sept. - November 2 1/4 - 2 1/2 0 - 6 seeds Earliest of mandarin types Cold hardy Loose skin
  107. Acid Fruit
  108. Persian Lime June - September 1 3/4 - 2 1/2 0 - 1 seed Thorny Trees Cold sensitive Susceptible to styler end rot
  109. Key Lime Everbearing 1 1/4 - 1 3/4 3 - 8 seeds Cold susceptible Thorny or thornless
  110. ‘Meyer’ Lemon November - March 2 1/2 - 3 10 seeds Bush growth habit Most cold hardy lemon Smooth skin High juice content
  111. ‘Nagami’ Kumquat Nov. - April 1 1/2 X 1 0 - 3 seeds Very cold hardy More acid than meiwa
  112. ‘Meiwa’ Kumquat Nov. - April 1 - 1 1/2 3 - 5 seeds Large round kumquat Spicy, sweet pulp Cold hardy
  113. ‘Tavares’ Limequat November - March 1 3/4- 2 X 1 1/4 - 1 1/2 2 - 5 seeds Good substitute for limes Cold hardy
  114. Calamondin Harvest all year 1 - 1 ½” 3 - 5 seeds Great for containers Flavors drinks, marmalades and jellies Cold hardy
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