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Wikipedia

Citrus

Citrus is a genus of flowering trees and shrubs in the rue family, Rutaceae. Plants in the genus produce citrus fruits, including important crops such as oranges, lemons, grapefruits, pomelos, and limes. The genus Citrus is native to South Asia, East Asia, Southeast Asia, Melanesia, and Australia. Various citrus species have been used and domesticated by indigenous cultures in these areas since ancient times. From there its cultivation spread into Micronesia and Polynesia by the Austronesian expansion (c. 3000–1500 BCE); and to the Middle East and the Mediterranean (c. 1200 BCE) via the incense trade route, and onwards to Europe and the Americas.[3][4][5][6]

Citrus
Temporal range: Tortonian–Present, 8–0 Ma[1]
Sweet orange (Citrus × sinensis cultivar)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Sapindales
Family: Rutaceae
Subfamily: Aurantioideae
Genus: Citrus
L.
Species and hybrids

Ancestral species:
Citrus maximaPomelo
Citrus medicaCitron
Citrus reticulataMandarin orange
Citrus micrantha – a papeda
Citrus hystrixKaffir lime
Citrus cavalerieiIchang papeda
Citrus japonicaKumquat


Important hybrids:
Citrus × aurantiifoliaKey lime
Citrus × aurantiumBitter orange
Citrus × latifoliaPersian lime
Citrus × limonLemon
Citrus × limoniaRangpur
Citrus × paradisiGrapefruit
Citrus × sinensisSweet orange
Citrus × tangerinaTangerine
See also below for other species and hybrids.

Synonyms[2]
  • Aurantium Mill.
  • Citreum Mill.
  • ×Citrofortunella J.W.Ingram & H.E.Moore
  • ×Citroncirus J.W.Ingram & H.E.Moore
  • Citrophorum Neck.
  • Eremocitrus Swingle
  • Feroniella Swingle
  • Fortunella Swingle
  • Limon Mill.
  • Microcitrus Swingle
  • Oxanthera Montrouz.
  • Papeda Hassk.
  • Pleurocitrus Tanaka
  • Poncirus Raf.
  • Pseudaegle Miq.
  • Sarcodactilis C.F.Gaertn.

History

Citrus plants are native to subtropical and tropical regions of Asia, Island Southeast Asia, Near Oceania, and northeastern Australia. Domestication of citrus species involved much hybridization and introgression, leaving much uncertainty about when and where domestication first happened.[3] A genomic, phylogenic, and biogeographical analysis by Wu et al. (2018) has shown that the center of origin of the genus Citrus is likely the southeast foothills of the Himalayas, in a region stretching from eastern Assam, northern Myanmar, to western Yunnan. It diverged from a common ancestor with Poncirus trifoliata. A change in climate conditions during the Late Miocene (11.63 to 5.33 mya) resulted in a sudden speciation event. The species resulting from this event include the citrons (Citrus medica) of South Asia; the pomelos (C. maxima) of Mainland Southeast Asia; the mandarins (C. reticulata), kumquats (C. japonica), mangshanyegan (C. mangshanensis), and ichang papedas (C. cavaleriei) of southeastern China; the kaffir limes (C. hystrix) of Island Southeast Asia; and the biasong and samuyao (C. micrantha) of the Philippines.[3][4]

 
Map of inferred original wild ranges of the main Citrus cultivars, and selected relevant wild taxa[4]

This was later followed by the spread of citrus species into Taiwan and Japan in the Early Pliocene (5.33 to 3.6 mya), resulting in the tachibana orange (C. tachibana); and beyond the Wallace Line into Papua New Guinea and Australia during the Early Pleistocene (2.5 million to 800,000 years ago), where further speciation events occurred resulting in the Australian limes.[3][4]

The earliest introductions of citrus species by human migrations was during the Austronesian expansion (c. 3000–1500 BCE), where Citrus hystrix, Citrus macroptera, and Citrus maxima were among the canoe plants carried by Austronesian voyagers eastwards into Micronesia and Polynesia.[7]

The citron (Citrus medica) was also introduced early into the Mediterranean basin from India and Southeast Asia. It was introduced via two ancient trade routes: an overland route through Persia, the Levant and the Mediterranean islands; and a maritime route through the Arabian Peninsula and Ptolemaic Egypt into North Africa. Although the exact date of the original introduction is unknown due to the sparseness of archaeobotanical remains, the earliest evidence are seeds recovered from the Hala Sultan Tekke site of Cyprus, dated to around 1200 BCE. Other archaeobotanical evidence include pollen from Carthage dating back to the 4th century BCE; and carbonized seeds from Pompeii dated to around the 3rd to 2nd century BCE. The earliest complete description of the citron was first attested from Theophrastus, c. 310 BCE.[5][6][8] The agronomists of classical Rome made many references to the cultivation of citrus fruits within the limits of their empire.[9]

Lemons, pomelos, and sour oranges are believed to have been introduced to the Mediterranean later by Arab traders at around the 10th century CE; and sweet oranges by the Genoese and Portuguese from Asia during the 15th to 16th century. Mandarins were not introduced until the 19th century.[5][6][8][9] This group of species has reached great importance in some of the Mediterranean countries, and in the case of orange, mandarin, and lemon trees, they found here soil and climatic conditions which allow them to achieve a high level of fruit quality, even better than in the regions from where they came.[9]

Oranges were introduced to Florida by Spanish colonists.[10][11]

In cooler parts of Europe, citrus fruit was grown in orangeries starting in the 17th century; many were as much status symbols as functional agricultural structures.[12]

Etymology

The generic name originated from Latin, where it referred to either the plant now known as citron (C. medica) or a conifer tree (Thuja). It is related to the ancient Greek word for cedar, κέδρος (kédros). This may be due to perceived similarities in the smell of citrus leaves and fruit with that of cedar.[13] Collectively, Citrus fruits and plants are also known by the Romance loanword agrumes (literally "sour fruits").

Evolution

The large citrus fruit of today evolved originally from small, edible berries over millions of years. Citrus species began to diverge from a common ancestor about 15 million years ago, at about the same time that Severinia (such as the Chinese box orange) diverged from the same ancestor. About 7 million years ago, the ancestors of Citrus split into the main genus, Citrus, and the genus Poncirus (such as the trifoliate orange), which is closely enough related that it can still be hybridized with all other citrus and used as rootstock. These estimates are made using genetic mapping of plant chloroplasts.[14] A DNA study published in Nature in 2018 concludes that the genus Citrus first evolved in the foothills of the Himalayas, in the area of Assam (India), western Yunnan (China), and northern Myanmar.[15]

The three ancestral (sometimes characterized as "original" or "fundamental") species in the genus Citrus associated with modern Citrus cultivars are the mandarin orange, pomelo, and citron. Almost all of the common commercially important citrus fruits (sweet oranges, lemons, grapefruit, limes, and so on) are hybrids involving these three species with each other, their main progenies, and other wild Citrus species within the last few thousand years.[3][16][17]

Fossil record

A fossil leaf from the Pliocene of Valdarno (Italy) is described as †Citrus meletensis.[18] In China, fossil leaf specimens of †Citrus linczangensis have been collected from coal-bearing strata of the Bangmai Formation in the Bangmai village, about 10 km (6 miles) northwest of Lincang City, Yunnan. The Bangmai Formation contains abundant fossil plants and is considered to be of late Miocene age. Citrus linczangensis and C. meletensis share some important characters, such as an intramarginal vein, an entire margin, and an articulated and distinctly winged petiole.[19]

Taxonomy

 
Citrus fruits clustered by genetic similarity, ternary diagram based on data from Curk, et al. (2016)[20]
 
Three-dimensional projection of a principal component analysis of citrus hybrids, with citron (yellow), pomelo (blue), mandarin (red), and micrantha (green) defining the axes. Hybrids are expected to plot between their parents. ML: ‘Mexican’ lime; A: ‘Alemow’; V: ‘Volkamer’ lemon; M: ‘Meyer’ lemon; L: Regular and ‘Sweet’ lemons; B: Bergamot orange; H: Haploid clementine; C: Clementines; S: Sour oranges; O: Sweet oranges; G: Grapefruits. Figure from Curk, et al. (2014).[21]

The taxonomy and systematics of the genus are complex and the precise number of natural species is unclear, as many of the named species are hybrids clonally propagated through seeds (by apomixis), and genetic evidence indicates that even some wild, true-breeding species are of hybrid origin.

Most cultivated Citrus spp. seem to be natural or artificial hybrids of a small number of core ancestral species, including the citron, pomelo, mandarin, and papeda (see image).[22] Natural and cultivated citrus hybrids include commercially important fruit such as oranges, grapefruit, lemons, limes, and some tangerines.

Apart from these core citrus species, Australian limes and the recently discovered mangshanyegan are grown. Kumquats and Clymenia spp. are now generally considered to belong within the genus Citrus.[23] Trifoliate orange, which is often used as commercial rootstock, is an outgroup and may or may not be categorized as a citrus.

Phylogenetic analysis suggested the species of Oxanthera from New Caledonia, commonly known as false oranges, should be transferred to the genus Citrus.[24] The transfer has been accepted.[25]

Description

 
Slices of various citrus fruits

Tree

These plants are large shrubs or small to moderate-sized trees, reaching 5–15 m (16–49 ft) tall, with spiny shoots and alternately arranged evergreen leaves with an entire margin.[26] The flowers are solitary or in small corymbs, each flower 2–4 cm (0.79–1.57 in) diameter, with five (rarely four) white petals and numerous stamens; they are often very strongly scented, due to the presence of essential oil glands.[27]

Fruit

The fruit is a hesperidium, a specialised berry, globose to elongated,[28] 4–30 cm (1.6–11.8 in) long and 4–20 cm (1.6–7.9 in) diameter, with a leathery rind or "peel" called a pericarp. The outermost layer of the pericarp is an "exocarp" called the flavedo, commonly referred to as the zest. The middle layer of the pericarp is the mesocarp, which in citrus fruits consists of the white, spongy "albedo", or "pith". The innermost layer of the pericarp is the endocarp. The space inside each segment is a locule filled with juice vesicles, or "pulp". From the endocarp, string-like "hairs" extend into the locules, which provide nourishment to the fruit as it develops.[29][30] Many citrus cultivars have been developed to be seedless (see nucellar embryony and parthenocarpy) and easy to peel.[28]

Citrus fruits are notable for their fragrance, partly due to flavonoids and limonoids (which in turn are terpenes) contained in the rind, and most are juice-laden. The juice contains a high quantity of citric acid and other organic acids[31] giving them their characteristic sharp flavour. The genus is commercially important as many species are cultivated for their fruit, which is eaten fresh, pressed for juice, or preserved in marmalades and pickles.

They are also good sources of vitamin C. The content of vitamin C in the fruit depends on the species, variety, and mode of cultivation.[32] The flavonoids include various flavanones and flavones.[33]

Cultivation

 
Lemons are a citrus fruit native to Asia, but now common worldwide.

Citrus trees hybridise very readily – depending on the pollen source, plants grown from a Persian lime's seeds can produce fruit similar to grapefruit. Thus, all commercial citrus cultivation uses trees produced by grafting the desired fruiting cultivars onto rootstocks selected for disease resistance and hardiness.

 
Limes in a grocery store

The colour of citrus fruits only develops in climates with a (diurnal) cool winter.[34] In tropical regions with no winter at all, citrus fruits remain green until maturity, hence the tropical "green oranges".[35] The Persian lime in particular is extremely sensitive to cool conditions, thus it is not usually exposed to cool enough conditions to develop a mature colour.[citation needed] If they are left in a cool place over winter, the fruits will change colour to yellow.

The terms "ripe" and "mature" are usually used synonymously, but they mean different things. A mature fruit is one that has completed its growth phase. Ripening is the changes that occur within the fruit after it is mature to the beginning of decay. These changes usually involve starches converting to sugars, a decrease in acids, softening, and change in the fruit's colour.[36]

Citrus fruits are nonclimacteric and respiration slowly declines and the production and release of ethylene is gradual.[37] The fruits do not go through a ripening process in the sense that they become "tree ripe". Some fruits, for example cherries, physically mature and then continue to ripen on the tree. Other fruits, such as pears, are picked when mature, but before they ripen, then continue to ripen off the tree. Citrus fruits pass from immaturity to maturity to overmaturity while still on the tree. Once they are separated from the tree, they do not increase in sweetness or continue to ripen. The only way change may happen after being picked is that they eventually start to decay.

With oranges, colour cannot be used as an indicator of ripeness because sometimes the rinds turn orange long before the oranges are ready to eat. Tasting them is the only way to know whether they are ready to eat.

 
Mediterranean Mandarin (Citrus ×deliciosa plantation, Son Carrió (Mallorca)

Citrus trees are not generally frost hardy. Mandarin oranges (C. reticulata) tend to be the hardiest of the common Citrus species and can withstand short periods down to as cold as −10 °C (14 °F), but realistically temperatures not falling below −2 °C (28 °F) are required for successful cultivation. Tangerines, tangors and yuzu can be grown outside even in regions with more marked subfreezing temperatures in winter, although this may affect fruit quality. A few hardy hybrids can withstand temperatures well below freezing, but do not produce quality fruit. Lemons can be commercially grown in cooler-summer/moderate-winter, coastal Southern California, because sweetness is neither attained nor expected in retail lemon fruit. The related trifoliate orange (C. trifoliata) can survive below −20 °C (−4 °F); its fruit are astringent and inedible unless cooked, but a few better-tasting cultivars and hybrids have been developed (see citranges).

 
Leaf of Citrus tree

The trees thrive in a consistently sunny, humid environment with fertile soil and adequate rainfall or irrigation. Abandoned trees in valleys may suffer, yet survive, the dry summer of Central California's Inner Coast Ranges. At any age, citrus grows well enough with infrequent irrigation in partial shade, but the fruit crop is smaller. Being of tropical and subtropical origin, oranges, like all citrus, are broadleaved and evergreen. They do not drop leaves except when stressed. The stems of many varieties have large sharp thorns. The trees flower in the spring, and fruit is set shortly afterward. Fruit begins to ripen in fall or early winter, depending on cultivar, and develops increasing sweetness afterward. Some cultivars of tangerines ripen by winter. Some, such as the grapefruit, may take up to 18 months to ripen.

Production

 
Major producer regions

According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, world production of all citrus fruits in 2016 was 124 million metric tons (122,000,000 long tons; 137,000,000 short tons), with about half of this production as oranges.[38] At US $15.2 billion equivalent in 2018, citrus trade[39] makes up nearly half of the world fruit trade, which was US $32.1 billion for the same year.[40] According to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), citrus production grew during the early 21st century mainly by the increase in cultivation areas, improvements in transportation and packaging, rising incomes and consumer preference for healthy foods.[38] In 2019–20, world production of oranges was estimated to be 47.5 million metric tons (46,700,000 long tons; 52,400,000 short tons), led by Brazil, Mexico, the European Union, and China as the largest producers.[41]

As ornamental plants

Citrus trees grown in tubs and wintered under cover were a feature of Renaissance gardens, once glass-making technology enabled sufficient expanses of clear glass to be produced. An orangery was a feature of royal and aristocratic residences through the 17th and 18th centuries. The Orangerie at the Palace of the Louvre, 1617, inspired imitations that were not eclipsed until the development of the modern greenhouse in the 1840s. In the United States, the earliest surviving orangery is at the Tayloe House, Mount Airy, Virginia. George Washington had an orangery at Mount Vernon.

Some modern hobbyists still grow dwarf citrus in containers or greenhouses in areas where the weather is too cold to grow it outdoors. Consistent climate, sufficient sunlight, and proper watering are crucial if the trees are to thrive and produce fruit. Compared to many of the usual "green shrubs", citrus trees better tolerate poor container care. For cooler winter areas, limes and lemons should not be grown, since they are more sensitive to winter cold than other citrus fruits. Hybrids with kumquats (× Citrofortunella) have good cold resistance. A citrus tree in a container may have to be repotted every 5 years or so, since the roots may form a thick "root-ball" on the bottom of the pot.[42]

Pests and diseases

 
Citrus canker is caused by the gammaproteobacterium Xanthomonas axonopodis

Citrus plants are very liable to infestation by aphids, whitefly, and scale insects (e.g. California red scale). Also rather important are the viral infections to which some of these ectoparasites serve as vectors such as the aphid-transmitted Citrus tristeza virus, which when unchecked by proper methods of control is devastating to citrine plantations. The newest threat to citrus groves in the United States is the Asian citrus psyllid.

The Asian citrus psyllid is an aphid-like insect that feeds on the leaves and stems of citrus trees and other citrus-like plants. The real danger lies in the fact that the psyllid can carry a deadly, bacterial tree disease called Huanglongbing (HLB), also known as citrus greening disease.[43][44] Because as of 2021 the causative bacteria are not culturable, evaluation of resistant cultivars and vectors is slow.[43] There are some HLB-resistant and vector-resistant citrus strains known, and genetic engineering and new chemical controls have been proven in laboratory use and show promise for field use.[43]

In August 2005, citrus greening disease was discovered in the south Florida region around Homestead and Florida City. The disease has since spread to every commercial citrus grove in Florida. In 2004–2005, USDA statistics reported the total Florida citrus production to be 169.1 million boxes of fruit. The estimate for all Florida citrus production in the 2015–2016 season is 94.2 million boxes, a 44.3% drop.[45] Carolyn Slupsky, a professor of nutrition and food science at the University of California, Davis has said that "we could lose all fresh citrus within 10 to 15 years".[46]

In June 2008, the psyllid was spotted dangerously close to California – right across the international border in Tijuana, Mexico. Only a few months later, it was detected in San Diego and Imperial Counties, and has since spread to Riverside, San Bernardino, Orange, Los Angeles and Ventura Counties, sparking quarantines in those areas. The Asian citrus psyllid has also been intercepted coming into California in packages of fruit and plants, including citrus, ornamentals, herbs and bouquets of cut flowers, shipped from other states and countries.[44]

The foliage is also used as a food plant by the larvae of Lepidoptera (butterfly and moth) species such as the Geometridae common emerald (Hemithea aestivaria) and double-striped pug (Gymnoscelis rufifasciata), the Arctiidae giant leopard moth (Hypercompe scribonia), H. eridanus, H. icasia and H. indecisa, many species in the family Papilionidae (swallowtail butterflies), and the black-lyre leafroller moth ("Cnephasia" jactatana), a tortrix moth.

Since 2000, the citrus leafminer (Phyllocnistis citrella) has been a pest in California,[47] boring meandering patterns through leaves.

In eastern Australia, the bronze-orange bug (Musgraveia sulciventris) can be a major pest of citrus trees, particularly grapefruit. In heavy infestations it can cause flower and fruit drop and general tree stress.

European brown snails (Cornu aspersum) can be a problem in California, though laying female Khaki Campbell and other mallard-related ducks can be used for control.

Deficiency diseases

Citrus plants can also develop a deficiency condition called chlorosis, characterized by yellowing leaves[48] highlighted by contrasting leaf veins. The shriveling leaves eventually fall, and if the plant loses too many, it will slowly die. This condition is often caused by an excessively high pH (alkaline soil), which prevents the plant from absorbing iron, magnesium, zinc, or other nutrients it needs to produce chlorophyll. This condition can be cured by adding an appropriate acidic fertilizer formulated for citrus, which can sometimes revive a plant to produce new leaves and even flower buds within a few weeks under optimum conditions. A soil which is too acidic can also cause problems; citrus prefers neutral soil (pH between 6 and 8). Citrus plants are also sensitive to excessive salt in the soil. Soil testing may be necessary to properly diagnose nutrient-deficiency diseases.[49]

Uses

Culinary

Many citrus fruits, such as oranges, tangerines, grapefruits, and clementines, are generally eaten fresh.[28] They are typically peeled and can be easily split into segments.[28] Grapefruit is more commonly halved and eaten out of the skin with a spoon.[50] Special spoons (grapefruit spoons) with serrated tips are designed for this purpose. Orange and grapefruit juices are also popular breakfast beverages. More acidic citrus, such as lemons and limes, are generally not eaten on their own. Meyer lemons can be eaten out of hand with the fragrant skin; they are both sweet and sour. Lemonade or limeade are popular beverages prepared by diluting the juices of these fruits and adding sugar. Lemons and limes are also used in cooked dishes, or sliced and used as garnishes. Their juice is used as an ingredient in a variety of dishes; it can commonly be found in salad dressings and squeezed over cooked fish, meat, or vegetables.

A variety of flavours can be derived from different parts and treatments of citrus fruits.[28] The rind and oil of the fruit is generally bitter, especially when cooked, so is often combined with sugar. The fruit pulp can vary from sweet to extremely sour. Marmalade, a condiment derived from cooked orange and lemon, can be especially bitter, but is usually sweetened with sugar to cut the bitterness and produce a jam-like result. Lemon or lime is commonly used as a garnish for water, soft drinks, or cocktails. Citrus juices, rinds, or slices are used in a variety of mixed drinks. The colourful outer skin of some citrus fruits, known as zest, is used as a flavouring in cooking; the white inner portion of the peel, the pith, is usually avoided due to its bitterness. The zest of a citrus fruit, typically lemon or an orange, can also be soaked in water in a coffee filter, and drunk.

Phytochemicals and research

Some Citrus species contain significant amounts of the phytochemical class called furanocoumarins, a diverse family of naturally occurring organic chemical compounds.[51][52] In humans, some (not all) of these chemical compounds act as strong photosensitizers when applied topically to the skin, while other furanocoumarins interact with medications when taken orally. The latter is called the "grapefruit juice effect", a common name for a related group of grapefruit-drug interactions.[51]

Due to the photosensitizing effects of certain furanocoumarins, some Citrus species are known to cause phytophotodermatitis,[53] a potentially severe skin inflammation resulting from contact with a light-sensitizing botanical agent followed by exposure to ultraviolet light. In Citrus species, the primary photosensitizing agent appears to be bergapten,[54] a linear furanocoumarin derived from psoralen. This claim has been confirmed for lime[55][56] and bergamot. In particular, bergamot essential oil has a higher concentration of bergapten (3000–3600 mg/kg) than any other Citrus-based essential oil.[57]

In general, three Citrus ancestral species (pomelos, citrons, and papedas) synthesize relatively high quantities of furanocoumarins, whereas a fourth ancestral species (mandarins) is practically devoid of these compounds.[54] Since the production of furanocoumarins in plants is believed to be heritable, the descendants of mandarins (such as sweet oranges, tangerines, and other small mandarin hybrids) are expected to have low quantities of furanocoumarins, whereas other hybrids (such as limes, grapefruit, and sour oranges) are expected to have relatively high quantities of these compounds.

In most Citrus species, the peel contains a greater diversity and a higher concentration of furanocoumarins than the pulp of the same fruit.[55][56][54] An exception is bergamottin, a furanocoumarin implicated in grapefruit-drug interactions, which is more concentrated in the pulp of certain varieties of pomelo, grapefruit, and sour orange.

One review of preliminary research on diets indicated that consuming citrus fruits was associated with a 10% reduction of risk for developing breast cancer.[58]

List of citrus fruits

 
Citrons (Citrus medica) for sale in Germany
 
Red finger Lime (Citrus australasica), a rare delicacy from Australia

The genus Citrus has been suggested to originate in the eastern Himalayan foothills. Prior to human cultivation, it consisted of just a few species, though the status of some as distinct species has yet to be confirmed:

Hybrids and cultivars

 
Sweetie or oroblanco is a pomelo-grapefruit hybrid.
 
The etrog, or citron, is central to the ritual of the Jewish Sukkot festival. Many varieties are used for this purpose (including the Yemenite variety pictured).
 
Clementines (Citrus ×clementina) have thinner skins than oranges.
 
Mikan (Citrus ×unshiu), also known as satsumas
 
Sweet oranges (Citrus ×sinensis) are used in many foods. Their ancestors were pomelos and mandarin oranges.
 
Cross-section of Odichukuthi lime
 
Odichukuthi fruit
 
A pompia fruit

Sorted by parentage. As each hybrid is the product of (at least) two parent species, they are listed multiple times.

Citrus maxima-based

  • Amanatsu, natsumikan – Citrus ×natsudaidai (C. maxima × unknown)
  • Cam sành – (C. reticulata × C. ×sinensis)
  • Dangyuja – (Citrus grandis Osbeck)
  • GrapefruitCitrus ×paradisi (C. maxima × C. ×sinensis)
  • HarukaCitrus tamurana x natsudaidai
  • Hassaku orange – (Citrus hassaku)
  • Ichang lemon – (Citrus wilsonii)
  • Imperial lemon – (C. ×limon × C. ×paradisi)
  • Kawachi Bankan – (Citrus kawachiensis)
  • Kinnow – (C. ×nobilis × C. ×deliciosa)
  • Kiyomi – (C. ×sinensis × C. ×unshiu)
  • Minneola tangelo – (C. reticulata × C. ×paradisi)
  • Orangelo, Chironja – (C. ×paradisi × C. ×sinensis)
  • Oroblanco, Sweetie – (C. maxima × C. ×paradisi)
  • Sweet orangeCitrus ×sinensis (probably C. maxima × C. reticulata)
  • TangeloCitrus ×tangelo (C. reticulata × C. maxima or C. ×paradisi)
  • TangorCitrus ×nobilis (C. reticulata × C. ×sinensis)
  • Ugli – (C. reticulata × C. maxima or C. ×paradisi)

Citrus medica-based

  • Alemow, Colo – Citrus ×macrophylla (C. medica × C. micrantha)
  • Buddha's handCitrus medica var. sarcodactylus, a fingered citron.
  • Citron varieties with sour pulpDiamante citron, Florentine citron, Greek citron and Balady citron
  • Citron varieties with sweet pulp – Corsican citron and Moroccan citron.
  • Etrog, a group of citron cultivars that are traditionally used for a Jewish ritual. Etrog is Hebrew for citron in general.
  • FernandinaCitrus ×limonimedica (probably (C. medica × C. maxima) × C. medica)
  • Ponderosa lemon – (probably (C. medica × C. maxima) × C. medica)
  • LemonCitrus ×limon (C. medica × C. ×aurantium)
  • Key lime, Mexican lime, Omani lime – Citrus ×aurantiifolia (C. medica × C. micrantha)
  • Persian lime, Tahiti lime – C. ×latifolia (C. ×aurantiifolia × C. ×limon)
  • Limetta, Sweet Lemon, Sweet Lime, mosambi – Citrus ×limetta (C. medica × C. ×aurantium)
  • Lumia – several distinct pear shaped lemon-like hybrids
  • PompiaCitrus medica tuberosa Risso & Poiteau, 1818 (C. medica × C. ×aurantium), native to Sardinia, genetically synonymous with Rhobs el Arsa.
  • Rhobs el Arsa – 'bread of the garden', C. medica × C. ×aurantium, from Morocco.
  • Yemenite citron – a pulpless true citron.

Citrus reticulata–based

  • Bergamot orangeCitrus ×bergamia (C. ×limon × C. ×aurantium)
  • Bitter orange, Seville Orange – Citrus ×aurantium (C. maxima × C. reticulata)
  • Blood orangeCitrus ×sinensis cultivars
  • Calamansi, Calamondin – (Citrus reticulata × Citrus japonica)
  • Cam sành – (C. reticulata × C. ×sinensis)
  • ChinottoCitrus ×aurantium var. myrtifolia or Citrus ×myrtifolia
  • ChungGyunCitrus reticulata cultivar[verification needed]
  • ClementineCitrus ×clementina
  • Cleopatra MandarinCitrus ×reshni
  • SiranuiCitrus reticulata cv. 'Dekopon' (ChungGyun × Ponkan)
  • DaidaiCitrus ×aurantium var. daidai or Citrus ×daidai
  • Encore – ((Citrus reticulata x sinensis) x C. deliciosa)
  • GrapefruitCitrus ×paradisi (C. maxima × C. ×sinensis)
  • Hermandina – Citrus reticulata cv. 'Hermandina'
  • Imperial lemon – ((C. maxima × C. medica) × C. ×paradisi)
  • Iyokan, anadomikanCitrus ×iyo
  • Jabara – (Citrus jabara)
  • Kanpei – (Citrus reticulata 'Kanpei')
  • Kinkoji unshiu – (Citrus obovoidea x unshiu)
  • Kinnow, Wilking – (C. ×nobilis × C. ×deliciosa)
  • Kishumikan – (Citrus kinokuni)
  • Kiyomi – (C. sinensis × C. ×unshiu)
  • Kobayashi mikan – (Citrus natsudaidai x unshiu)
  • Koji orange – (Citrus leiocarpa)
  • Kuchinotsu No.37 – ('Kiyomi' x 'Encore')
  • Laraha – ''C. ×aurantium ssp. currassuviencis
  • Mediterranean mandarin, Willow Leaf – Citrus ×deliciosa
  • Meyer lemon, Valley Lemon – Citrus ×meyeri (C. medica × C. ×sinensis)
  • Michal mandarin – Citrus reticulata cv. 'Michal'
  • Mikan, Satsuma – Citrus ×unshiu
  • Murcott – (C. reticulata x sinensis)
  • Naartjie – (C. reticulata × C. nobilis)
  • Nova mandarin, Clemenvilla
  • Orangelo, Chironja – (C. ×paradisi × C. ×sinensis)
  • Oroblanco, Sweetie – (C. maxima × C. ×paradisi)
  • Palestine sweet lime [fr]Citrus ×limettioides Tanaka (C. medica × C. ×sinensis)
  • PonkanCitrus reticulata cv. 'Ponkan'
  • Rangpur, Lemanderin, Mandarin Lime – Citrus ×limonia (C. reticulata × C. medica)
  • Reikou – (Kuchinotsu No.37 x 'Murcott')
  • Rough lemonCitrus ×jambhiri Lush. (C. reticulata × C. medica)
  • SanbokanCitrus sulcata
  • Setoka – (Kuchinotsu No.37 x 'Murcott')
  • Shekwasha, Hirami Lemon, Taiwan Tangerine – Citrus ×depressa
  • Sunki, Suenkat – Citrus sunki or C. reticulata var. sunki
  • Sweet orangeCitrus ×sinensis (C. maxima × C. reticulata)
  • Tachibana orangeCitrus tachibana (Mak.) Tanaka or C. reticulata var. tachibana
  • TangeloCitrus ×tangelo (C. reticulata × C. maxima or C. ×paradisi)
  • TangerineCitrus ×tangerina
  • TangorCitrus ×nobilis (C. reticulata × C. ×sinensis)
  • Ugli – (C. reticulata × C. maxima or C. ×paradisi)
  • Volkamer lemonCitrus ×volkameriana (C. reticulata × C. medica)
  • Yukou – (Citrus yuko)
  • YuzuCitrus ×junos (C. reticulata × C. ×cavaleriei)

Other/Unresolved

  • Djeruk limauCitrus ×amblycarpa
  • Gajanimma, Carabao Lime – Citrus ×pennivesiculata
  • Hyuganatsu, Hyuganatsu pumelo – Citrus tamurana
  • Ichang lemon – (C. cavaleriei × C. maxima)
  • KabosuCitrus ×sphaerocarpa
  • Odichukuthi – Citrus Odichukuthi from Malayalam
  • OugonkanCitrus flaviculpus hort ex. Tanaka
  • Sakurajima komikan orange
  • Shonan gold – (Ougonkan) Citrus flaviculpus hort ex. Tanaka × (Imamura unshiu), Citrus unshiu Marc
  • SudachiCitrus ×sudachi

For hybrids with kumquats, see citrofortunella. For hybrids with the trifoliate orange, see citrange.

See also

References

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External links

  • Effects of pollination on Citrus plants 25 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Pollination of Citrus by Honey Bees
  • Citrus Research and Education Center of IFAS (largest citrus research center in world)
  • (Mark Rieger, Professor of Horticulture, University of Georgia)
  • is an organization of citrus Brazilian producers and processors.
  • fruit anatomy at GeoChemBio
  • Porcher Michel H.; et al. (1995). "Multilingual Multiscript Plant Name Database (M.M.P.N.D)  – A Work in Progress". School of Agriculture and Food Systems, Faculty of Land & Food Resources, The University of Melbourne. Australia.

citrus, this, article, about, fruit, other, uses, disambiguation, genus, flowering, trees, shrubs, family, rutaceae, plants, genus, produce, citrus, fruits, including, important, crops, such, oranges, lemons, grapefruits, pomelos, limes, genus, native, south, . This article is about the fruit For other uses see Citrus disambiguation Citrus is a genus of flowering trees and shrubs in the rue family Rutaceae Plants in the genus produce citrus fruits including important crops such as oranges lemons grapefruits pomelos and limes The genus Citrus is native to South Asia East Asia Southeast Asia Melanesia and Australia Various citrus species have been used and domesticated by indigenous cultures in these areas since ancient times From there its cultivation spread into Micronesia and Polynesia by the Austronesian expansion c 3000 1500 BCE and to the Middle East and the Mediterranean c 1200 BCE via the incense trade route and onwards to Europe and the Americas 3 4 5 6 CitrusTemporal range Tortonian Present 8 0 Ma 1 PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NSweet orange Citrus sinensis cultivar Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade RosidsOrder SapindalesFamily RutaceaeSubfamily AurantioideaeGenus CitrusL Species and hybridsAncestral species Citrus maxima PomeloCitrus medica CitronCitrus reticulata Mandarin orangeCitrus micrantha a papedaCitrus hystrix Kaffir limeCitrus cavaleriei Ichang papedaCitrus japonica Kumquat Important hybrids Citrus aurantiifolia Key limeCitrus aurantium Bitter orangeCitrus latifolia Persian limeCitrus limon LemonCitrus limonia RangpurCitrus paradisi GrapefruitCitrus sinensis Sweet orangeCitrus tangerina Tangerine See also below for other species and hybrids Synonyms 2 Aurantium Mill Citreum Mill Citrofortunella J W Ingram amp H E Moore Citroncirus J W Ingram amp H E MooreCitrophorum Neck Eremocitrus SwingleFeroniella SwingleFortunella SwingleLimon Mill Microcitrus SwingleOxanthera Montrouz Papeda Hassk Pleurocitrus TanakaPoncirus Raf Pseudaegle Miq Sarcodactilis C F Gaertn Contents 1 History 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Evolution 1 3 Fossil record 2 Taxonomy 3 Description 3 1 Tree 3 2 Fruit 4 Cultivation 4 1 Production 4 2 As ornamental plants 4 3 Pests and diseases 4 3 1 Deficiency diseases 5 Uses 5 1 Culinary 5 2 Phytochemicals and research 6 List of citrus fruits 6 1 Hybrids and cultivars 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditCitrus plants are native to subtropical and tropical regions of Asia Island Southeast Asia Near Oceania and northeastern Australia Domestication of citrus species involved much hybridization and introgression leaving much uncertainty about when and where domestication first happened 3 A genomic phylogenic and biogeographical analysis by Wu et al 2018 has shown that the center of origin of the genus Citrus is likely the southeast foothills of the Himalayas in a region stretching from eastern Assam northern Myanmar to western Yunnan It diverged from a common ancestor with Poncirus trifoliata A change in climate conditions during the Late Miocene 11 63 to 5 33 mya resulted in a sudden speciation event The species resulting from this event include the citrons Citrus medica of South Asia the pomelos C maxima of Mainland Southeast Asia the mandarins C reticulata kumquats C japonica mangshanyegan C mangshanensis and ichang papedas C cavaleriei of southeastern China the kaffir limes C hystrix of Island Southeast Asia and the biasong and samuyao C micrantha of the Philippines 3 4 Map of inferred original wild ranges of the main Citrus cultivars and selected relevant wild taxa 4 This was later followed by the spread of citrus species into Taiwan and Japan in the Early Pliocene 5 33 to 3 6 mya resulting in the tachibana orange C tachibana and beyond the Wallace Line into Papua New Guinea and Australia during the Early Pleistocene 2 5 million to 800 000 years ago where further speciation events occurred resulting in the Australian limes 3 4 The earliest introductions of citrus species by human migrations was during the Austronesian expansion c 3000 1500 BCE where Citrus hystrix Citrus macroptera and Citrus maxima were among the canoe plants carried by Austronesian voyagers eastwards into Micronesia and Polynesia 7 The citron Citrus medica was also introduced early into the Mediterranean basin from India and Southeast Asia It was introduced via two ancient trade routes an overland route through Persia the Levant and the Mediterranean islands and a maritime route through the Arabian Peninsula and Ptolemaic Egypt into North Africa Although the exact date of the original introduction is unknown due to the sparseness of archaeobotanical remains the earliest evidence are seeds recovered from the Hala Sultan Tekke site of Cyprus dated to around 1200 BCE Other archaeobotanical evidence include pollen from Carthage dating back to the 4th century BCE and carbonized seeds from Pompeii dated to around the 3rd to 2nd century BCE The earliest complete description of the citron was first attested from Theophrastus c 310 BCE 5 6 8 The agronomists of classical Rome made many references to the cultivation of citrus fruits within the limits of their empire 9 Lemons pomelos and sour oranges are believed to have been introduced to the Mediterranean later by Arab traders at around the 10th century CE and sweet oranges by the Genoese and Portuguese from Asia during the 15th to 16th century Mandarins were not introduced until the 19th century 5 6 8 9 This group of species has reached great importance in some of the Mediterranean countries and in the case of orange mandarin and lemon trees they found here soil and climatic conditions which allow them to achieve a high level of fruit quality even better than in the regions from where they came 9 Oranges were introduced to Florida by Spanish colonists 10 11 In cooler parts of Europe citrus fruit was grown in orangeries starting in the 17th century many were as much status symbols as functional agricultural structures 12 Etymology Edit The generic name originated from Latin where it referred to either the plant now known as citron C medica or a conifer tree Thuja It is related to the ancient Greek word for cedar kedros kedros This may be due to perceived similarities in the smell of citrus leaves and fruit with that of cedar 13 Collectively Citrus fruits and plants are also known by the Romance loanword agrumes literally sour fruits Evolution Edit The large citrus fruit of today evolved originally from small edible berries over millions of years Citrus species began to diverge from a common ancestor about 15 million years ago at about the same time that Severinia such as the Chinese box orange diverged from the same ancestor About 7 million years ago the ancestors of Citrus split into the main genus Citrus and the genus Poncirus such as the trifoliate orange which is closely enough related that it can still be hybridized with all other citrus and used as rootstock These estimates are made using genetic mapping of plant chloroplasts 14 A DNA study published in Nature in 2018 concludes that the genus Citrus first evolved in the foothills of the Himalayas in the area of Assam India western Yunnan China and northern Myanmar 15 The three ancestral sometimes characterized as original or fundamental species in the genus Citrus associated with modern Citrus cultivars are the mandarin orange pomelo and citron Almost all of the common commercially important citrus fruits sweet oranges lemons grapefruit limes and so on are hybrids involving these three species with each other their main progenies and other wild Citrus species within the last few thousand years 3 16 17 Fossil record Edit A fossil leaf from the Pliocene of Valdarno Italy is described as Citrus meletensis 18 In China fossil leaf specimens of Citrus linczangensis have been collected from coal bearing strata of the Bangmai Formation in the Bangmai village about 10 km 6 miles northwest of Lincang City Yunnan The Bangmai Formation contains abundant fossil plants and is considered to be of late Miocene age Citrus linczangensis and C meletensis share some important characters such as an intramarginal vein an entire margin and an articulated and distinctly winged petiole 19 Taxonomy EditMain article Citrus taxonomy Citrus fruits clustered by genetic similarity ternary diagram based on data from Curk et al 2016 20 Three dimensional projection of a principal component analysis of citrus hybrids with citron yellow pomelo blue mandarin red and micrantha green defining the axes Hybrids are expected to plot between their parents ML Mexican lime A Alemow V Volkamer lemon M Meyer lemon L Regular and Sweet lemons B Bergamot orange H Haploid clementine C Clementines S Sour oranges O Sweet oranges G Grapefruits Figure from Curk et al 2014 21 The taxonomy and systematics of the genus are complex and the precise number of natural species is unclear as many of the named species are hybrids clonally propagated through seeds by apomixis and genetic evidence indicates that even some wild true breeding species are of hybrid origin Most cultivated Citrus spp seem to be natural or artificial hybrids of a small number of core ancestral species including the citron pomelo mandarin and papeda see image 22 Natural and cultivated citrus hybrids include commercially important fruit such as oranges grapefruit lemons limes and some tangerines Apart from these core citrus species Australian limes and the recently discovered mangshanyegan are grown Kumquats and Clymenia spp are now generally considered to belong within the genus Citrus 23 Trifoliate orange which is often used as commercial rootstock is an outgroup and may or may not be categorized as a citrus Phylogenetic analysis suggested the species of Oxanthera from New Caledonia commonly known as false oranges should be transferred to the genus Citrus 24 The transfer has been accepted 25 Description Edit Slices of various citrus fruits Tree Edit These plants are large shrubs or small to moderate sized trees reaching 5 15 m 16 49 ft tall with spiny shoots and alternately arranged evergreen leaves with an entire margin 26 The flowers are solitary or in small corymbs each flower 2 4 cm 0 79 1 57 in diameter with five rarely four white petals and numerous stamens they are often very strongly scented due to the presence of essential oil glands 27 Fruit Edit The fruit is a hesperidium a specialised berry globose to elongated 28 4 30 cm 1 6 11 8 in long and 4 20 cm 1 6 7 9 in diameter with a leathery rind or peel called a pericarp The outermost layer of the pericarp is an exocarp called the flavedo commonly referred to as the zest The middle layer of the pericarp is the mesocarp which in citrus fruits consists of the white spongy albedo or pith The innermost layer of the pericarp is the endocarp The space inside each segment is a locule filled with juice vesicles or pulp From the endocarp string like hairs extend into the locules which provide nourishment to the fruit as it develops 29 30 Many citrus cultivars have been developed to be seedless see nucellar embryony and parthenocarpy and easy to peel 28 Citrus fruits are notable for their fragrance partly due to flavonoids and limonoids which in turn are terpenes contained in the rind and most are juice laden The juice contains a high quantity of citric acid and other organic acids 31 giving them their characteristic sharp flavour The genus is commercially important as many species are cultivated for their fruit which is eaten fresh pressed for juice or preserved in marmalades and pickles They are also good sources of vitamin C The content of vitamin C in the fruit depends on the species variety and mode of cultivation 32 The flavonoids include various flavanones and flavones 33 Cultivation EditFurther information Citrus production Lemons are a citrus fruit native to Asia but now common worldwide Citrus trees hybridise very readily depending on the pollen source plants grown from a Persian lime s seeds can produce fruit similar to grapefruit Thus all commercial citrus cultivation uses trees produced by grafting the desired fruiting cultivars onto rootstocks selected for disease resistance and hardiness Limes in a grocery store The colour of citrus fruits only develops in climates with a diurnal cool winter 34 In tropical regions with no winter at all citrus fruits remain green until maturity hence the tropical green oranges 35 The Persian lime in particular is extremely sensitive to cool conditions thus it is not usually exposed to cool enough conditions to develop a mature colour citation needed If they are left in a cool place over winter the fruits will change colour to yellow The terms ripe and mature are usually used synonymously but they mean different things A mature fruit is one that has completed its growth phase Ripening is the changes that occur within the fruit after it is mature to the beginning of decay These changes usually involve starches converting to sugars a decrease in acids softening and change in the fruit s colour 36 Citrus fruits are nonclimacteric and respiration slowly declines and the production and release of ethylene is gradual 37 The fruits do not go through a ripening process in the sense that they become tree ripe Some fruits for example cherries physically mature and then continue to ripen on the tree Other fruits such as pears are picked when mature but before they ripen then continue to ripen off the tree Citrus fruits pass from immaturity to maturity to overmaturity while still on the tree Once they are separated from the tree they do not increase in sweetness or continue to ripen The only way change may happen after being picked is that they eventually start to decay With oranges colour cannot be used as an indicator of ripeness because sometimes the rinds turn orange long before the oranges are ready to eat Tasting them is the only way to know whether they are ready to eat Mediterranean Mandarin Citrus deliciosa plantation Son Carrio Mallorca Citrus trees are not generally frost hardy Mandarin oranges C reticulata tend to be the hardiest of the common Citrus species and can withstand short periods down to as cold as 10 C 14 F but realistically temperatures not falling below 2 C 28 F are required for successful cultivation Tangerines tangors and yuzu can be grown outside even in regions with more marked subfreezing temperatures in winter although this may affect fruit quality A few hardy hybrids can withstand temperatures well below freezing but do not produce quality fruit Lemons can be commercially grown in cooler summer moderate winter coastal Southern California because sweetness is neither attained nor expected in retail lemon fruit The related trifoliate orange C trifoliata can survive below 20 C 4 F its fruit are astringent and inedible unless cooked but a few better tasting cultivars and hybrids have been developed see citranges Leaf of Citrus tree The trees thrive in a consistently sunny humid environment with fertile soil and adequate rainfall or irrigation Abandoned trees in valleys may suffer yet survive the dry summer of Central California s Inner Coast Ranges At any age citrus grows well enough with infrequent irrigation in partial shade but the fruit crop is smaller Being of tropical and subtropical origin oranges like all citrus are broadleaved and evergreen They do not drop leaves except when stressed The stems of many varieties have large sharp thorns The trees flower in the spring and fruit is set shortly afterward Fruit begins to ripen in fall or early winter depending on cultivar and develops increasing sweetness afterward Some cultivars of tangerines ripen by winter Some such as the grapefruit may take up to 18 months to ripen Production Edit See also Citrus production Major producer regions According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization world production of all citrus fruits in 2016 was 124 million metric tons 122 000 000 long tons 137 000 000 short tons with about half of this production as oranges 38 At US 15 2 billion equivalent in 2018 citrus trade 39 makes up nearly half of the world fruit trade which was US 32 1 billion for the same year 40 According to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development UNCTAD citrus production grew during the early 21st century mainly by the increase in cultivation areas improvements in transportation and packaging rising incomes and consumer preference for healthy foods 38 In 2019 20 world production of oranges was estimated to be 47 5 million metric tons 46 700 000 long tons 52 400 000 short tons led by Brazil Mexico the European Union and China as the largest producers 41 As ornamental plants Edit Orangery of the Botanical Garden in Leuven Belgium Citrus trees grown in tubs and wintered under cover were a feature of Renaissance gardens once glass making technology enabled sufficient expanses of clear glass to be produced An orangery was a feature of royal and aristocratic residences through the 17th and 18th centuries The Orangerie at the Palace of the Louvre 1617 inspired imitations that were not eclipsed until the development of the modern greenhouse in the 1840s In the United States the earliest surviving orangery is at the Tayloe House Mount Airy Virginia George Washington had an orangery at Mount Vernon Some modern hobbyists still grow dwarf citrus in containers or greenhouses in areas where the weather is too cold to grow it outdoors Consistent climate sufficient sunlight and proper watering are crucial if the trees are to thrive and produce fruit Compared to many of the usual green shrubs citrus trees better tolerate poor container care For cooler winter areas limes and lemons should not be grown since they are more sensitive to winter cold than other citrus fruits Hybrids with kumquats Citrofortunella have good cold resistance A citrus tree in a container may have to be repotted every 5 years or so since the roots may form a thick root ball on the bottom of the pot 42 Pests and diseases Edit Main article List of citrus diseases Citrus canker is caused by the gammaproteobacterium Xanthomonas axonopodis Citrus plants are very liable to infestation by aphids whitefly and scale insects e g California red scale Also rather important are the viral infections to which some of these ectoparasites serve as vectors such as the aphid transmitted Citrus tristeza virus which when unchecked by proper methods of control is devastating to citrine plantations The newest threat to citrus groves in the United States is the Asian citrus psyllid The Asian citrus psyllid is an aphid like insect that feeds on the leaves and stems of citrus trees and other citrus like plants The real danger lies in the fact that the psyllid can carry a deadly bacterial tree disease called Huanglongbing HLB also known as citrus greening disease 43 44 Because as of 2021 update the causative bacteria are not culturable evaluation of resistant cultivars and vectors is slow 43 There are some HLB resistant and vector resistant citrus strains known and genetic engineering and new chemical controls have been proven in laboratory use and show promise for field use 43 In August 2005 citrus greening disease was discovered in the south Florida region around Homestead and Florida City The disease has since spread to every commercial citrus grove in Florida In 2004 2005 USDA statistics reported the total Florida citrus production to be 169 1 million boxes of fruit The estimate for all Florida citrus production in the 2015 2016 season is 94 2 million boxes a 44 3 drop 45 Carolyn Slupsky a professor of nutrition and food science at the University of California Davis has said that we could lose all fresh citrus within 10 to 15 years 46 In June 2008 the psyllid was spotted dangerously close to California right across the international border in Tijuana Mexico Only a few months later it was detected in San Diego and Imperial Counties and has since spread to Riverside San Bernardino Orange Los Angeles and Ventura Counties sparking quarantines in those areas The Asian citrus psyllid has also been intercepted coming into California in packages of fruit and plants including citrus ornamentals herbs and bouquets of cut flowers shipped from other states and countries 44 The foliage is also used as a food plant by the larvae of Lepidoptera butterfly and moth species such as the Geometridae common emerald Hemithea aestivaria and double striped pug Gymnoscelis rufifasciata the Arctiidae giant leopard moth Hypercompe scribonia H eridanus H icasia and H indecisa many species in the family Papilionidae swallowtail butterflies and the black lyre leafroller moth Cnephasia jactatana a tortrix moth Since 2000 the citrus leafminer Phyllocnistis citrella has been a pest in California 47 boring meandering patterns through leaves In eastern Australia the bronze orange bug Musgraveia sulciventris can be a major pest of citrus trees particularly grapefruit In heavy infestations it can cause flower and fruit drop and general tree stress European brown snails Cornu aspersum can be a problem in California though laying female Khaki Campbell and other mallard related ducks can be used for control Deficiency diseases Edit Citrus plants can also develop a deficiency condition called chlorosis characterized by yellowing leaves 48 highlighted by contrasting leaf veins The shriveling leaves eventually fall and if the plant loses too many it will slowly die This condition is often caused by an excessively high pH alkaline soil which prevents the plant from absorbing iron magnesium zinc or other nutrients it needs to produce chlorophyll This condition can be cured by adding an appropriate acidic fertilizer formulated for citrus which can sometimes revive a plant to produce new leaves and even flower buds within a few weeks under optimum conditions A soil which is too acidic can also cause problems citrus prefers neutral soil pH between 6 and 8 Citrus plants are also sensitive to excessive salt in the soil Soil testing may be necessary to properly diagnose nutrient deficiency diseases 49 Uses EditCulinary Edit Many citrus fruits such as oranges tangerines grapefruits and clementines are generally eaten fresh 28 They are typically peeled and can be easily split into segments 28 Grapefruit is more commonly halved and eaten out of the skin with a spoon 50 Special spoons grapefruit spoons with serrated tips are designed for this purpose Orange and grapefruit juices are also popular breakfast beverages More acidic citrus such as lemons and limes are generally not eaten on their own Meyer lemons can be eaten out of hand with the fragrant skin they are both sweet and sour Lemonade or limeade are popular beverages prepared by diluting the juices of these fruits and adding sugar Lemons and limes are also used in cooked dishes or sliced and used as garnishes Their juice is used as an ingredient in a variety of dishes it can commonly be found in salad dressings and squeezed over cooked fish meat or vegetables A variety of flavours can be derived from different parts and treatments of citrus fruits 28 The rind and oil of the fruit is generally bitter especially when cooked so is often combined with sugar The fruit pulp can vary from sweet to extremely sour Marmalade a condiment derived from cooked orange and lemon can be especially bitter but is usually sweetened with sugar to cut the bitterness and produce a jam like result Lemon or lime is commonly used as a garnish for water soft drinks or cocktails Citrus juices rinds or slices are used in a variety of mixed drinks The colourful outer skin of some citrus fruits known as zest is used as a flavouring in cooking the white inner portion of the peel the pith is usually avoided due to its bitterness The zest of a citrus fruit typically lemon or an orange can also be soaked in water in a coffee filter and drunk Wedges of pink grapefruit lime and lemon and a half orange clockwise from top Calamansi a ubiquitous part of traditional dipping sauces and condiments in Philippine cuisine Citrus aurantifolia in Kerala Ripe bitter oranges Citrus aurantium from AsprovaltaPhytochemicals and research Edit Some Citrus species contain significant amounts of the phytochemical class called furanocoumarins a diverse family of naturally occurring organic chemical compounds 51 52 In humans some not all of these chemical compounds act as strong photosensitizers when applied topically to the skin while other furanocoumarins interact with medications when taken orally The latter is called the grapefruit juice effect a common name for a related group of grapefruit drug interactions 51 Due to the photosensitizing effects of certain furanocoumarins some Citrus species are known to cause phytophotodermatitis 53 a potentially severe skin inflammation resulting from contact with a light sensitizing botanical agent followed by exposure to ultraviolet light In Citrus species the primary photosensitizing agent appears to be bergapten 54 a linear furanocoumarin derived from psoralen This claim has been confirmed for lime 55 56 and bergamot In particular bergamot essential oil has a higher concentration of bergapten 3000 3600 mg kg than any other Citrus based essential oil 57 In general three Citrus ancestral species pomelos citrons and papedas synthesize relatively high quantities of furanocoumarins whereas a fourth ancestral species mandarins is practically devoid of these compounds 54 Since the production of furanocoumarins in plants is believed to be heritable the descendants of mandarins such as sweet oranges tangerines and other small mandarin hybrids are expected to have low quantities of furanocoumarins whereas other hybrids such as limes grapefruit and sour oranges are expected to have relatively high quantities of these compounds In most Citrus species the peel contains a greater diversity and a higher concentration of furanocoumarins than the pulp of the same fruit 55 56 54 An exception is bergamottin a furanocoumarin implicated in grapefruit drug interactions which is more concentrated in the pulp of certain varieties of pomelo grapefruit and sour orange One review of preliminary research on diets indicated that consuming citrus fruits was associated with a 10 reduction of risk for developing breast cancer 58 List of citrus fruits EditMain article List of citrus fruits Grapefruit Citrons Citrus medica for sale in Germany Red finger Lime Citrus australasica a rare delicacy from Australia The genus Citrus has been suggested to originate in the eastern Himalayan foothills Prior to human cultivation it consisted of just a few species though the status of some as distinct species has yet to be confirmed Citrus assamensis ginger lime from Assam and Bangladesh Citrus crenatifolia species name is unresolved from Sri Lanka Citrus japonica kumquats from East Asia ranging into Southeast Asia sometimes separated into four five Fortunella species Citrus mangshanensis species name is unresolved from Hunan China Citrus maxima pomelo pummelo shaddock from the Island Southeast Asia Citrus medica citron from India Citrus platymamma byeonggyul from Jeju Island Korea Citrus reticulata mandarin orange from China Citrus trifoliata trifoliate orange from Korea and adjacent China often separated as Poncirus Australian limes Citrus australasica Australian finger lime Citrus australis Australian round lime Citrus garrawayi Mount White lime Citrus glauca Australian desert lime Citrus gracilis Kakadu lime or Humpty Doo lime Citrus inodora Russel River lime and Maiden s Australian lime Citrus warburgiana New Guinea wild lime Citrus wintersii Brown River finger lime Papedas including Citrus halimii limau kadangsa limau kedut kera from Thailand and Malaya Citrus hystrix Kaffir lime makrut from Mainland Southeast Asia to Island Southeast Asia Citrus cavaleriei Ichang papeda from southern China Citrus celebica Celebes papeda Citrus indica Indian wild orange from the Indian subcontinent 59 Citrus latipes Khasi papeda from Assam Meghalaya Burma 59 Citrus longispina Megacarpa papeda winged lime blacktwig lime Citrus macrophylla Alemow Citrus macroptera Melanesian papeda from Indochina to Melanesia 59 Citrus micrantha Citrus westeri biasong or samuyao from the southern Philippines 60 Citrus webberi Kalpi Malayan lemonHybrids and cultivars Edit Sweetie or oroblanco is a pomelo grapefruit hybrid The etrog or citron is central to the ritual of the Jewish Sukkot festival Many varieties are used for this purpose including the Yemenite variety pictured Clementines Citrus clementina have thinner skins than oranges Mikan Citrus unshiu also known as satsumas Sweet oranges Citrus sinensis are used in many foods Their ancestors were pomelos and mandarin oranges Cross section of Odichukuthi lime Odichukuthi fruit A pompia fruit Sorted by parentage As each hybrid is the product of at least two parent species they are listed multiple times Citrus maxima based Amanatsu natsumikan Citrus natsudaidai C maxima unknown Cam sanh C reticulata C sinensis Dangyuja Citrus grandis Osbeck Grapefruit Citrus paradisi C maxima C sinensis Haruka Citrus tamurana x natsudaidai Hassaku orange Citrus hassaku Ichang lemon Citrus wilsonii Imperial lemon C limon C paradisi Kawachi Bankan Citrus kawachiensis Kinnow C nobilis C deliciosa Kiyomi C sinensis C unshiu Minneola tangelo C reticulata C paradisi Orangelo Chironja C paradisi C sinensis Oroblanco Sweetie C maxima C paradisi Sweet orange Citrus sinensis probably C maxima C reticulata Tangelo Citrus tangelo C reticulata C maxima or C paradisi Tangor Citrus nobilis C reticulata C sinensis Ugli C reticulata C maxima or C paradisi Citrus medica based Alemow Colo Citrus macrophylla C medica C micrantha Buddha s hand Citrus medica var sarcodactylus a fingered citron Citron varieties with sour pulp Diamante citron Florentine citron Greek citron and Balady citron Citron varieties with sweet pulp Corsican citron and Moroccan citron Etrog a group of citron cultivars that are traditionally used for a Jewish ritual Etrog is Hebrew for citron in general Fernandina Citrus limonimedica probably C medica C maxima C medica Ponderosa lemon probably C medica C maxima C medica Lemon Citrus limon C medica C aurantium Key lime Mexican lime Omani lime Citrus aurantiifolia C medica C micrantha Persian lime Tahiti lime C latifolia C aurantiifolia C limon Limetta Sweet Lemon Sweet Lime mosambi Citrus limetta C medica C aurantium Lumia several distinct pear shaped lemon like hybrids Pompia Citrus medica tuberosa Risso amp Poiteau 1818 C medica C aurantium native to Sardinia genetically synonymous with Rhobs el Arsa Rhobs el Arsa bread of the garden C medica C aurantium from Morocco Yemenite citron a pulpless true citron Citrus reticulata based Bergamot orange Citrus bergamia C limon C aurantium Bitter orange Seville Orange Citrus aurantium C maxima C reticulata Blood orange Citrus sinensis cultivars Calamansi Calamondin Citrus reticulata Citrus japonica Cam sanh C reticulata C sinensis Chinotto Citrus aurantium var myrtifolia or Citrus myrtifolia ChungGyun Citrus reticulata cultivar verification needed Clementine Citrus clementina Cleopatra Mandarin Citrus reshni Siranui Citrus reticulata cv Dekopon ChungGyun Ponkan Daidai Citrus aurantium var daidai or Citrus daidai Encore Citrus reticulata x sinensis x C deliciosa Grapefruit Citrus paradisi C maxima C sinensis Hermandina Citrus reticulata cv Hermandina Imperial lemon C maxima C medica C paradisi Iyokan anadomikan Citrus iyo Jabara Citrus jabara Kanpei Citrus reticulata Kanpei Kinkoji unshiu Citrus obovoidea x unshiu Kinnow Wilking C nobilis C deliciosa Kishumikan Citrus kinokuni Kiyomi C sinensis C unshiu Kobayashi mikan Citrus natsudaidai x unshiu Koji orange Citrus leiocarpa Kuchinotsu No 37 Kiyomi x Encore Laraha C aurantium ssp currassuviencis Mediterranean mandarin Willow Leaf Citrus deliciosa Meyer lemon Valley Lemon Citrus meyeri C medica C sinensis Michal mandarin Citrus reticulata cv Michal Mikan Satsuma Citrus unshiu Murcott C reticulata x sinensis Naartjie C reticulata C nobilis Nova mandarin Clemenvilla Orangelo Chironja C paradisi C sinensis Oroblanco Sweetie C maxima C paradisi Palestine sweet lime fr Citrus limettioides Tanaka C medica C sinensis Ponkan Citrus reticulata cv Ponkan Rangpur Lemanderin Mandarin Lime Citrus limonia C reticulata C medica Reikou Kuchinotsu No 37 x Murcott Rough lemon Citrus jambhiri Lush C reticulata C medica Sanbokan Citrus sulcata Setoka Kuchinotsu No 37 x Murcott Shekwasha Hirami Lemon Taiwan Tangerine Citrus depressa Sunki Suenkat Citrus sunki or C reticulata var sunki Sweet orange Citrus sinensis C maxima C reticulata Tachibana orange Citrus tachibana Mak Tanaka or C reticulata var tachibana Tangelo Citrus tangelo C reticulata C maxima or C paradisi Tangerine Citrus tangerina Tangor Citrus nobilis C reticulata C sinensis Ugli C reticulata C maxima or C paradisi Volkamer lemon Citrus volkameriana C reticulata C medica Yukou Citrus yuko Yuzu Citrus junos C reticulata C cavaleriei Other Unresolved Djeruk limau Citrus amblycarpa Gajanimma Carabao Lime Citrus pennivesiculata Hyuganatsu Hyuganatsu pumelo Citrus tamurana Ichang lemon C cavaleriei C maxima Kabosu Citrus sphaerocarpa Odichukuthi Citrus Odichukuthi from Malayalam Ougonkan Citrus flaviculpus hort ex Tanaka Sakurajima komikan orange Shonan gold Ougonkan Citrus flaviculpus hort ex Tanaka Imamura unshiu Citrus unshiu Marc Sudachi Citrus sudachiFor hybrids with kumquats see citrofortunella For hybrids with the trifoliate orange see citrange See also Edit Food portalCitrus taxonomy Japanese citrus List of lemon dishes and beveragesReferences Edit Wu Guohong Albert 7 February 2017 Genomics of the origin and evolution of Citrus Nature 554 7692 311 316 Bibcode 2018Natur 554 311W doi 10 1038 nature25447 PMID 29414943 S2CID 205263645 Citrus L Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 10 September 2021 a b c d e Wu GA Terol J Ibanez V Lopez Garcia A Perez Roman E Borreda C Domingo C Tadeo FR Carbonell Caballero J Alonso R Curk F Du D Ollitrault P Roose ML Dopazo J Gmitter FG Rokhsar DS Talon M February 2018 Genomics of the origin and evolution of Citrus Nature 554 7692 311 316 Bibcode 2018Natur 554 311W doi 10 1038 nature25447 PMID 29414943 a b c d Fuller Dorian Q Castillo Cristina Kingwell Banham Eleanor Qin Ling Weisskopf Alison 2017 Charred pomelo peel historical linguistics and other tree crops approaches to framing the historical context of early Citrus cultivation in East South and Southeast Asia In Zech Matterne Veronique Fiorentino Girolamo eds AGRUMED Archaeology and history of citrus fruit in the Mediterranean PDF Publications du Centre Jean Berard pp 29 48 doi 10 4000 books pcjb 2107 ISBN 9782918887775 a b c Zech Matterne Veronique Fiorentino Girolamo Coubray Sylvie Luro Francois 2017 Introduction In Zech Matterne Veronique Fiorentino Girolamo eds AGRUMED Archaeology and history of citrus fruit in the Mediterranean Acclimatization diversification uses Publications du Centre Jean Berard ISBN 9782918887775 a b c Langgut Dafna June 2017 The Citrus Route Revealed From Southeast Asia into the Mediterranean HortScience 52 6 814 822 doi 10 21273 HORTSCI11023 16 Blench R M 2005 Fruits and arboriculture in the Indo Pacific region Bulletin of the Indo Pacific Prehistory Association 24 31 50 a b Langgut Dafna 2017 The history of Citrus medica citron in the Near East Botanical remains and ancient art and texts In Zech Matterne Veronique Fiorentino Girolamo eds AGRUMED Archaeology and history of citrus fruit in the Mediterranean Publications du Centre Jean Berard ISBN 9782918887775 a b c Duarte A Fernandes J Bernardes J Miguel G 2016 Citrus as a Component of the Mediterranean Diet Journal of Spatial and Organizational Dynamics 4 289 304 University of South Florida Fruit History of the Citrus and Citrus Tree Growing in America Billie S Britz Environmental Provisions for Plants in Seventeenth Century Northern Europe The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 33 2 May 1974 133 144 p 133 Spiegel Roy Pinchas Eliezer E Goldschmidt 1996 Biology of Citrus Cambridge University Press p 4 ISBN 978 0 521 33321 4 A phylogenetic analysis of 34 chloroplast genomes elucidates the relationships between wild and domestic species within the genus Citrus Briggs Helen 8 February 2018 DNA Story of when life first gave us lemons BBC News Retrieved 19 July 2022 Velasco Riccardo Licciardello Concetta 2014 A genealogy of the citrus family Nature Biotechnology 32 7 640 642 doi 10 1038 nbt 2954 PMID 25004231 S2CID 9357494 Inglese Paolo Sortino Giuseppe 2019 Citrus History Taxonomy Breeding and Fruit Quality Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Environmental Science doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199389414 013 221 ISBN 9780199389414 Citrus meletensis Rutaceae a new species from the Pliocene of Valdarno Italy Fischer T C amp Butzmann Plant Systematics and Evolution March 1998 Volume 210 Issue 1 pp 51 55 doi 10 1007 BF00984727 Citrus linczangensis sp n a Leaf Fossil of Rutaceae from the Late Miocene of Yunnan China by Sanping Xie Steven R Manchester Kenan Liu and Bainian Sun International Journal of Plant Sciences 174 8 1201 1207 October 2013 Curk Franck Ollitrault Frederique Garcia Lor Andres Luro Francois Navarro Luis Ollitrault Patrick 2016 Phylogenetic origin of limes and lemons revealed by cytoplasmic and nuclear markers Annals of Botany 11 4 565 583 doi 10 1093 aob mcw005 PMC 4817432 PMID 26944784 Curk Franck Ancillo Gema Garcia Lor Andres Luro Francois Perrier Xavier Jacquemoud Collet Jean Pierre Navarro Luis Ollitrault Patrick December 2014 Next generation haplotyping to decipher nuclear genomic interspecific admixture in Citrusspecies analysis of chromosome 2 BMC Genetics 15 1 152 doi 10 1186 s12863 014 0152 1 ISSN 1471 2156 PMC 4302129 PMID 25544367 Klein Joshua D 2014 Citron Cultivation Production and Uses in the Mediterranean Region Medicinal and Aromatic Plants of the Middle East Medicinal and Aromatic Plants of the World Vol 2 pp 199 214 doi 10 1007 978 94 017 9276 9 10 ISBN 978 94 017 9275 2 Andres Garcia Lor 2013 Organizacion de la diversidad genetica de los citricos PDF Thesis p 79 Bayer R J et al 2009 A molecular phylogeny of the orange subfamily Rutaceae Aurantioideae using nine cpDNA sequences American Journal of Botany 96 3 668 85 Oxanthera Montrouz Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 10 September 2021 Del Hotal Tom CITRUS PRUNING PDF California Rare Fruit Growers Miguel M G Dandlen S Figueiredo A C Barroso J G Pedro L G Duarte A Faisca J 2008 Essential oils of flowers of Citrus sinensis and Citrus clementina cultivated in Algarve Portugal Acta Horticulturae 773 773 89 94 doi 10 17660 ActaHortic 2008 773 12 hdl 10400 1 2788 a b c d e Janick Jules 2005 Citrus Purdue University Tropical Horticulture Lecture 32 Archived from the original on 24 June 2005 Retrieved 28 February 2020 Citrus fruit diagram ucla edu Archived from the original on 3 October 2012 Lith TheFreeDictionary com Duarte A Caixeirinho D Miguel M Sustelo V Nunes C Fernandes M Marreiros A 2012 Organic Acids Concentration in Citrus Juice from Conventional versus Organic Farming Acta Horticulturae 933 933 601 606 doi 10 17660 ActaHortic 2012 933 78 hdl 10400 1 2790 Duarte A Caixeirinho D Miguel G Nunes C Mendes M Marreiros A 2010 Vitamin C Content of Citrus from Conventional versus Organic Farming Systems Acta Horticulturae 868 868 389 394 doi 10 17660 ActaHortic 2010 868 52 hdl 10400 1 1158 Flavonoid Composition of Fruit Tissues of Citrus Species Archived from the original on 28 May 2007 Retrieved 5 July 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The relation of climate conditions to color development in citrus fruit PDF Retrieved 3 July 2019 permanent dead link Shailes Sarah 4 December 2014 Why is my orange green Plant Scientist Helgi Opik Stephen A Rolfe Arthur John Willis Herbert Edward Street 2005 The physiology of flowering plants Cambridge University Press pp 309 ISBN 978 0 521 66251 2 Retrieved 31 July 2010 Pinchas Spiegel Roy Eliezer E Goldschmidt 1996 Biology of citrus Cambridge University Press pp 101 ISBN 978 0 521 33321 4 Retrieved 31 July 2010 a b Citrus fruit fresh and processed Statistical Bulletin PDF UN Food and Agriculture Organization 2016 Retrieved 28 February 2020 https oec world en profile hs citrus disaggregationYearSelector tradeYear3 OEC The Observer of Economic Complexity Citrus https oec world en profile sitc fruit OEC The Observer of Economic Complexity Fruit Citrus World Markets and Trade PDF US Department of Agriculture 1 January 2020 Retrieved 28 February 2020 Lance Walheim 1996 Citrus complete guide to selecting amp growing more than 100 varieties for California Arizona Texas the Gulf Coast and Florida Tucson Ariz Ironwood Press ISBN 978 0 9628236 4 0 OCLC 34116821 a b c Alquezar Berta Carmona Lourdes Bennici Stefania Pena Leandro 2021 Engineering of citrus to obtain huanglongbing resistance Current Opinion in Biotechnology Elsevier 70 196 203 doi 10 1016 j copbio 2021 06 003 ISSN 0958 1669 PMID 34198205 S2CID 235712334 a b About the Asian Citrus Psyllid and Huanglongbing californiacitrusthreat org Archived from the original on 13 December 2012 Retrieved 30 November 2012 Florida Citrus Statistics 2015 2016 PDF United States Department of Agriculture National Agricultural Statistics Service 3 October 2017 Retrieved 3 October 2017 Farmers researchers try to hold off deadly citrus greening long enough to find cure Retrieved 20 September 2019 Citrus Leafminer UC Pest Management University of California Agriculture amp Natural Resources January 2019 Online at SumoGardener How to Avoid Yellow Leaves on Citrus Trees 9 July 2016 Mauk Peggy A Tom Shea Questions and Answers to Citrus Management 3rd ed PDF University of California Cooperative Extension Retrieved 24 May 2014 Sheu Scott Foods Indigenous to the Western Hemisphere Grapefruit American Indian Health and Diet Project Aihd ku edu Archived from the original on 18 August 2010 a b Chen Meng Zhou Shu yi Fabriaga Erlinda Zhang Pian hong Zhou Quan 2018 Food drug interactions precipitated by fruit juices other than grapefruit juice An update review Journal of Food and Drug Analysis 26 2 S61 S71 doi 10 1016 j jfda 2018 01 009 ISSN 1021 9498 PMID 29703387 Hung Wei Lun Suh Joon Hyuk Wang Yu 2017 Chemistry and health effects of furanocoumarins in grapefruit Journal of Food and Drug Analysis 25 1 71 83 doi 10 1016 j jfda 2016 11 008 ISSN 1021 9498 PMID 28911545 McGovern Thomas W Barkley Theodore M 2000 Botanical Dermatology The Electronic Textbook of Dermatology Internet Dermatology Society 37 5 Section Phytophotodermatitis doi 10 1046 j 1365 4362 1998 00385 x PMID 9620476 S2CID 221810453 Retrieved 29 November 2018 a b c Dugrand Judek Audray Olry Alexandre Hehn Alain Costantino Gilles Ollitrault Patrick Froelicher Yann Bourgaud Frederic November 2015 The Distribution of Coumarins and Furanocoumarins in Citrus Species Closely Matches Citrus Phylogeny and Reflects the Organization of Biosynthetic Pathways PLOS ONE 10 11 e0142757 Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1042757D doi 10 1371 journal pone 0142757 PMC 4641707 PMID 26558757 a b Nigg H N Nordby H E Beier R C Dillman A Macias C Hansen R C 1993 Phototoxic coumarins in limes PDF Food Chem Toxicol 31 5 331 35 doi 10 1016 0278 6915 93 90187 4 PMID 8505017 a b Wagner A M Wu J J Hansen R C Nigg H N Beiere R C 2002 Bullous phytophotodermatitis associated with high natural concentrations of furanocoumarins in limes Am J Contact Dermat 13 1 10 14 doi 10 1053 ajcd 2002 29948 ISSN 0891 5849 PMID 11887098 Toxicological Assessment of Furocoumarins in Foodstuffs PDF The German Research Foundation DFG DFG Senate Commission on Food Safety SKLM 2004 Retrieved 1 November 2018 Song Jung Kook Bae Jong Myon 1 March 2013 Citrus fruit intake and breast cancer risk a quantitative systematic review Journal of Breast Cancer 16 1 72 76 doi 10 4048 jbc 2013 16 1 72 ISSN 1738 6756 PMC 3625773 PMID 23593085 a b c GRIN Species list in GRIN for genus Citrus Taxonomy for Plants National Germplasm Resources Laboratory Beltsville Maryland USDA ARS National Genetic Resources Program Archived from the original on 20 January 2009 Retrieved 6 January 2011 P J Wester 1915 Citrus Fruits In The Philippines Philippine Agricultural Review 8External links EditEffects of pollination on Citrus plants Archived 25 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Pollination of Citrus by Honey Bees Citrus Research and Education Center of IFAS largest citrus research center in world Citrus Variety Collection by the University of California Citrus Mark Rieger Professor of Horticulture University of Georgia Fundecitrus Fund for Citrus Plant Protection is an organization of citrus Brazilian producers and processors Citrus taxonomy fruit anatomy at GeoChemBio Porcher Michel H et al 1995 Multilingual Multiscript Plant Name Database M M P N D A Work in Progress School of Agriculture and Food Systems Faculty of Land amp Food Resources The University of Melbourne Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Citrus amp oldid 1130981767, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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