fbpx
Wikipedia

Mespilus germanica

Mespilus germanica, known as the medlar or common medlar, is a large shrub or small tree in the rose family Rosaceae. The fruit of this tree, also called medlar, has been cultivated since Roman times, is usually available in winter and eaten when bletted.[2] It may be eaten raw and in a range of cooked dishes. When the genus Mespilus is included in the genus Crataegus, the correct name for this species is Crataegus germanica (Kuntze). In the southwest of England it historically had a number of vulgar nicknames, such as open-arse and monkey's bottom, due to the appearance of its large calyx.[3]

Mespilus germanica
Foliage and fruit
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Rosales
Family: Rosaceae
Genus: Mespilus
Species:
M. germanica
Binomial name
Mespilus germanica

Description

Under ideal circumstances, the deciduous plant grows up to 8 metres (26 feet) tall. Generally, it is shorter and more shrub-like than tree-like. With a lifespan of 30–60 years, the tree is rather short-lived.[4] Its bark is grayish brown with deep vertical cracks forming rectangular plates that tend to lift off.[5]

The wild form of M. germanica is mostly a thorny, more shrub-like than tree-like plant, which is between 1.5 and 4 m (5 and 13 ft) high. In the cultivated forms, the thorns are usually reduced or even completely absent.[6] In general, the medlar is a small, deciduous tree with an overhanging, almost round crown. The trunk is irregularly shaped.[7] The tree has a height between 1 and 6 m (3+12 and 19+12 ft), but can become significantly larger in culture.[8] The diameter at breast height is usually between 20 and 25 cm (8 and 10 in), but in exceptional cases it can be up to 50 cm (20 in). The roots are heavily branched and far-ranging, with a somewhat fibrous root system.[7]

The wood has a fine texture, but is very hard.[6] It has a white, slightly pink-tinted sapwood. The core is brownish. The annual rings are clearly visible.[7]

The winter buds are pointed, ovoid and up to 5 millimetres (14 inch) long.[7] The leaves are dark green and elliptic, 8–15 centimetres (3–6 in) long and 3–5 cm (1–2 in) wide. The leaves are densely hairy (pubescent) below, and turn red in autumn before falling.[9]

Medlar flowers are 2–5 cm (34–2 in) in diameter, have a short stalk and are terminal and single on short side shoots. They have five elongated, narrow sepals and five free, white or pale pink petals.[6] Compared to other fruit trees in the European latitudes, the medlar flowers very late (May or June).[8] The flowers are hermaphrodite and pollinated by bees.[5] Normally, self-pollination occurs in this plant.[7] The flower then develops flattened, reddish-brown, hairy fruits with juicy flesh.[8] The reddish-brown fruit is a pome, 2–3 cm (341+14 in) diameter, with wide-spreading persistent sepals around a central pit, giving a 'hollow' appearance to the fruit.[9] In cultivated forms the diameter is even between 3 and 8 cm (1+14 and 3+14 in).[7]

Sexual reproduction is the norm in wild forms of the medlar. The resulting seeds have a germination capacity lasting from 18 to 20 months. The seeds are distributed by various animals such as birds, squirrels and deer. Some varieties are sterile and can therefore only be propagated vegetatively.[8]

The number of chromosomes is given as 2n = 32 or 2n = 34.[6]

Taxonomy

The flower has long sepals that remain on the fruit.
 
Flower bud
 
Open flower

Until recently, M. germanica was the only known species of medlar. However, in 1990, a new species was discovered in North America, now named M. canescens. The loquat, Eriobotrya japonica, is more distantly related to the medlar than genera such as Crataegus, Amelanchier, Peraphyllum, and Malacomeles,[10] but was once thought to be closely related, and is still sometimes called the 'Chinese medlar' or 'Japanese medlar'.[11]

Systematics

Within the species M. germanica 23 taxa are distinguished, also compromising wild or semi-wild forms, ornamental and of different origin.[12] Among them there are the following varieties:[13]

  • Mespilus germanica var. gigantea Kirchn. with very large fruits
  • Mespilus germanica var. abortiva Kirchn. with fruits without seeds
  • Mespilus germanica var. argenteo-variegata with white variegated leaves as ornamental plant
  • Mespilus germanica var. aureo-variegata with yellow variegated leaves as ornamental plant

Cultivars of M. germanica that are grown for their fruit include 'Hollandia', 'Nottingham', and 'Russian',[13] the large-fruited variety 'Dutch' (also known as 'Giant' or 'Monstrous'), 'Breda giant', 'Large Russian',[14] 'Royal' with very high yield,[15] 'Early medlar' with early ripening and high quality fruits, 'Seedless' with seedless fruits of low quality.

The cultivar 'Nottingham' has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[16][17]

For a time it was assumed that it was a species with narrow genetic resources and therefore subject to high risks of genetic erosion, whereby the limited evolution of M. germanica diversity was ascribed to the lack of economic interest for this fruit species in the last centuries.[18] However, current findings show that natural populations of medlar are diverse with a high genetic potential, which could be used to improve production by using specific genotypes.[19]

Etymology

The Latin name germanica, which means 'German', although the species is indigenous to other areas.[20]

Distribution and habitat

From an extensive study of literature and plant specimens, Kazimierz Browicz[20] concluded that the true homeland of M. germanica is only in the southeastern part of the Balkan peninsula, in Asia Minor, on the Caucasus, Crimea, northern Iran, and possibly also in Turkmenia. It is also found in southeastern Europe, especially the Black Sea coasts of Bulgaria and Turkey.[20]

The species requires temperate and sub-mediterranean climate conditions with warm summers and mild winters.[21] Air temperatures of 18 to 20 °C (64 to 68 °F) are mentioned as favourable for growth, cold of as low as −20 °C (−4 °F) is tolerated and late frosts hardly cause any damage. The wild form was observed in dry areas with annual precipitation of 700 mm (28 in) and at altitudes from 0 to 1,100 m (0 to 3,600 ft). The species grows in a wide range of soil types and prefers fresh, well-drained loamy soils with a pH that is between 6 and 8.[22][23] It is found across southern Europe where it is generally rare. It is reported to be naturalized in some woods in southeast England, but is found in few gardens.[9]

Ecology

Plant disease

M. germanica is only rarely attacked by diseases or harmed by insects.[7]

In plantations, the larvae of the leaf-mining butterfly species Lithocolletis blancardella can cause damage. Furthermore, especially in years with high precipitation, the fungus Monilia fructigena can be a problem.[7] It causes brown blemishes on the fruit and continues to spread until the fruit becomes entirely rotten.[4]

M. germanica can also be infected by Podosphaera clandestina, the pathogen of powdery mildew, which can lead to the wilting of leaves and buds as well as by Entomosporium mespili that causes leaf spots.[7]

The medlar is, like other species of the rosacea family which are used for propagation, susceptible to Erwinia amylovora, the parasitic causative agent of fire blight.[7]

Cultivation

The species may have been cultivated for as long as 3,000 years.[20] The ancient Greek geographer Strabo refers to a μέσπιλον (mespilon) in Geographica, Book 16, Chapter 4.[24] The medlar was introduced to Greece around 700 BC and to Rome about 200 BC. It was an important fruit plant during Roman and medieval times. By the 17th and 18th centuries, however, it had been superseded by other fruits, and is little cultivated today.

M. germanica pomes are one of the few fruits that become edible in winter, making it an important tree for gardeners who wish to have fruit available all year round.[25]

Cultivated forms are propagated by inoculation and by grafting on various substrates such as Crataegus (hawthorn) species, mountain ash, pear or quince to improve the performance in different soils.[7][25] Cultivars reach full fruit set 6 to 7 years after grafting and they keep it for 20 to 25 years. The fruit production varies between 30 and 70 kilograms (70 and 150 pounds) per tree and year, depending on the variety and age.[7]

Grafting on medlar seedlings is not recommended because of the slow growth of the grafts. Irrigation and fertilization can stimulate growth in plantations.[7] If the fruit-bearing shoots are cut back after the harvest, the formation of new fertile short shoots is encouraged.[7]

Uses

 
Bletting begins on one side of the fruit. Bletted flesh is brown; ripe but unbletted flesh is white.

The fruits are hard and acidic even when ripe, but become edible after being softened, "bletted", by frost, or naturally in storage if given sufficient time by reducing tannin content and fruit acids, increasing sugar content, and changes in the content of minerals.[26]

Once softening begins, the skin rapidly takes on a wrinkled texture and turns dark brown, and the inside reduces to the consistency and flavour reminiscent of apple sauce. This process can confuse those new to medlars, as its softened fruit looks as if it has spoiled.[26][27]

Product use

Once bletted, the fruit can be eaten raw, sometimes with sugar and cream—it has been described as being an "acquired taste"[28]—or used to make medlar jelly.[29] It is used in "medlar cheese", which is similar to lemon curd, made with the fruit pulp, eggs, and butter.[28]

Unripe fruits have a relatively high tannin content of about 2.6% and are therefore used for tanning. The tannin causes flocculation of proteins, enabling its use to reduce the turbidity of wine. In Saarland, Germany, a schnapps is made from the fruit of the medlar, which is refined with hawthorn.[30] "Medlar tea" usually is not made from M. germanica, but from wolfberry or goji, which is sometimes inaccurately translated as "red medlar."[31]

Mespilus germanica kernel oil was used for the first time to produce biodiesel, whereby linoleic acid and oleic acid with about 40% are main constituents of the extracted oil. The physical properties of the produced biodiesel allows an alternative for diesel fuels without any modification to the conventional engines.[32] Leaves of medlar fruit were used to produce activated carbon to remove heavy metals like Ni2+ from aqueous solutions.[33]

Phytosynthesized silver nanoparticles could be fabricated from M. germanica extract and show antibacterial, antibiofilm activities against multidrug resistance of Klebsiella pneumoniae clinical strains.[34]

Nutrients and phytochemicals

In general, the medlar fruits were found to be rich in potassium, calcium, phosphorus, magnesium and iron.[35]

M. germanica contains various phytochemicals varying between genotypes,[35] fruit ripeness, harvest time and storage conditions. The fruits are particularly rich in monoterpenes and organic acids.[26][36] Amino acids, sugars, and organic acids affect flavor.[26]

Due to their diuretic and astringent effects, the fruits have been used in traditional medicine.[37][38]

In 1984 and 1985, the following values were given for homogenized fruit:[38]

Time Frame L-ascorbic acid Glucose Fructose Potassium Calcium
Early 1984 1,64 mg/l 53,75 mg/l 37,31 mg/l 47,20 ppm 4,70 ppm
End 1984 1,54 mg/l 61,74 mg/l 70,06 mg/l 43,00 ppm 4,50 ppm
Early 1985 2,64 mg/l 43,50 mg/l 35,70 mg/l 48,90 ppm 5,20 ppm
Late 1985 1,41 mg/l 60,30 mg/l 60,50 mg/l 46,1 ppm 5,00 ppm

Fructose content increases steadily during fruit development, whereas sucrose content increases for 4 months and decreases afterwards. Tannin content and fruit acid content, especially ascorbid acid, decreases during fruit development. In ripe fruit, glutamate and aspartate were the major amino compounds, but also total amino acid composition changed during fruit development.[26]

In literature

 
A basket of medlars

Chaucer

A fruit which is rotten before it is ripe, the medlar is used figuratively in literature as a symbol of prostitution or premature destitution. For example, in the Prologue to The Reeve's Tale, Geoffrey Chaucer's character laments his old age, comparing himself to the medlar, which he names using the Old English term for the fruit, "open-arse":

This white top writeth myne olde yeris;
Myn herte is mowled also as myne heris —
But if I fare as dooth an open-ers.
That ilke fruyt is ever lenger the wers,
Til it be roten in mullok or in stree.
We olde men, I drede, so fare we:
Til we be roten, kan we nat be rype;

Shakespeare

In William Shakespeare's Timon of Athens, Apemantus forces an apple upon Timon: "The middle of humanity thou never knewest, but the extremity of both ends. When thou wast in thy gilt and perfume, they mock'd thee for too much curiosity; in thy rags thou know'st none, but art despised for the contrary. There's a medlar for thee; eat it", perhaps including a pun on "meddler", one who meddles in affairs, as well as on rottenness. (IV.iii.300–305).

In Measure for Measure, Lucio excuses his denial of past fornication because "they would else have married me to the rotten medlar." (IV.iii.171).

In As You Like It, Rosalind makes a complicated pun involving grafting her interlocutor with the trees around her which bear love letters and with a medlar: "I'll graff it with you, and then I shall graff it with a medlar. Then it will be the earliest fruit i' th' country; for you'll be rotten ere you be half ripe, and that's the right virtue of the medlar." (III.ii.116–119).

The most famous reference to medlars, often bowdlerized until modern editions accepted it, appears in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, when Mercutio laughs at Romeo's unrequited love for his mistress Rosaline (II, 1, 34–38):

Now will he sit under a medlar tree,
And wish his mistress were that kind of fruit
As maids call medlars, when they laugh alone.
O Romeo, that she were, O that she were
An open-arse and thou a pop'rin pear!

In the 16th and 17th centuries, medlars were bawdily called "open-arses" because of the shape of the fruits, inspiring boisterous or humorously indecent puns in many Elizabethan and Jacobean plays. The name survived in common use well into the 20th century.[3]

Other 16th- and 17th-century authors

In Miguel de Cervantes' Don Quixote the eponymous hero and Sancho Panza "stretch themselves out in the middle of a field and stuff themselves with acorns or medlars."

In François Rabelais' Gargantua and Pantagruel, medlars play a role in the origin of giants, including the eponymous characters. After Cain killed Abel, the blood of the just saturated the Earth, causing enormous medlars to grow. Humans who ate these medlars grew to great proportions. Those whose bodies grew longer became giants, and were the ancestors of Gargantua and Pantagruel.

Thomas Dekker also draws a comparison in his play The Honest Whore: "I scarce know her, for the beauty of her cheek hath, like the moon, suffered strange eclipses since I beheld it: women are like medlars, no sooner ripe but rotten."

Another reference can be found in Thomas Middleton's A Trick to Catch the Old One in the character of Widow Medler, impersonated by a courtesan, hence the following pun: "Who? Widow Medler? She lies open to much rumour." (II, 2, 59).

In the Memoirs of Glückel of Hameln, Glückel recalls having had a craving for medlars when she was pregnant with her son Joseph, but ignoring the desire. When the baby was born, he was sickly and too weak to be breastfed. Remembering a superstition about the dangers of pregnant women not fulfilling their cravings, Glückel asked for someone to fetch her some medlars for the baby. As soon as the fruit touched the baby's lips, he ate all the pulp given to him, and was then able to be breastfed. (Book 4, Section 14)

Modern literature

In modern literature, some writers have mentioned this fruit:

Saki uses medlars in his short stories, which often play on the decay of Edwardian society. In "The Peace of Mowsle Barton", the outwardly quiet farmstead features a medlar tree and corrosive hatred. In "The Boar Pig", the titular animal, Tarquin Superbus, is the point of contact between society ladies cheating to get into the garden party of the season and a not entirely honest young schoolgirl who lures him away by strategically throwing well-bletted medlars: "Come, Tarquin, dear old boy; you know you can't resist medlars when they're rotten and squashy."

Italian novelist Giovanni Verga's naturalist narrative I Malavoglia is titled The House by the Medlar Tree in the English translation.[citation needed]

H. C. Bailey's detective Reggie Fortune is very fond of medlars.[citation needed]

Philip Pullman describes Sir Charles Latrom's perfume as "rotted like a medlar" in his book The Subtle Knife.

See also

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Petrova, A.; Barstow, M. (2017). "Mespilus germanica". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T79920045A109616278. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-3.RLTS.T79920045A109616278.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ Gorvett, Zaria, The forgotten medieval fruit with a vulgar name, BBC Future, March 25, 2021 lots of images
  3. ^ a b MacMillan, Alexander Stuart (1922). Popular Names of Flowers, Fruits, &C: As Used in the County of Somerset and the Adjacent Parts of Devon, Dorset and Wilts. United Kingdom: Forgotten Books. p. 209. ISBN 1-332-98501-7. OCLC 978686284.
  4. ^ a b "The Essential Guide to probably everything you need to know about Growing Medlar – Mespilus germanica". The Permaculture Research Institute. 2021-05-24. Retrieved 2021-11-14.
  5. ^ a b ""Mespilus germanica Medlar PFAF Plant Database"".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ a b c d Baird, John R.; Thieret, John W. (1989-07-01). "The medlar (Mespilus germanica, Rosaceae) from antiquity to obscurity". Economic Botany. 43 (3): 328–372. doi:10.1007/BF02858732. ISSN 1874-9364. S2CID 40866174.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Minotta, Gianfranco (2014), Stimm, Bernd; Roloff, Andreas; Lang, Ulla M; Weisgerber, Horst (eds.), "Mespilus germanica", Enzyklopädie der Holzgewächse: Handbuch und Atlas der Dendrologie (in German), American Cancer Society, pp. 1–6, doi:10.1002/9783527678518, ISBN 978-3-527-67851-8, retrieved 2021-11-14
  8. ^ a b c d "Erhaltungskonzept Mispel" (PDF).{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ a b c Mitchell, Alan (1978). A Field Guide to the Trees of Britain and Northern Europe (2 ed.). Collins. p. 277.
  10. ^ Campbell, C.S.; Evans, R.C.; Morgan, D.R.; Dickinson, T.A.; Arsenault, M.P. (2007). "Phylogeny of subtribe Pyrinae (formerly the Maloideae, Rosaceae): Limited resolution of a complex evolutionary history" (PDF). Plant Systematics and Evolution. 266 (1–2): 119–145. doi:10.1007/s00606-007-0545-y. S2CID 13639534.
  11. ^ Die Asperl Mespilus germanica L. Georg Schramayr, Verein Regionale Gehölzvermehrung. St. Pölten. 2013. ISBN 978-3-901542-41-1. OCLC 967971863.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  12. ^ Cristofori, V.; Silvestri, C.; Pica, A.L.; Bertazza, G.; Bignami, C. (2019-12-29). "Evaluation of four medlar cultivars: agronomical, pomological and qualitative traits". European Journal of Horticultural Science. 84 (6): 350–358. doi:10.17660/ejhs.2019/84.6.4. ISSN 1611-4426. S2CID 214450102.
  13. ^ a b Schmid, Rudolf; Phipps, James B.; O'Kennon, Robert J.; Lance, Ron W. (November 2003). "Hawthorns and Medlars". Taxon. 52 (4): 884. doi:10.2307/3647377. JSTOR 3647377.
  14. ^ Lothian, Thomas (1991). The complete book of fruit growing in Australia. Port Melbourne, Victoria.
  15. ^ Schütt. Enzyklopädie der Laubbäume. p. 336.
  16. ^ "RHS Plantfinder – Mespilus germanica 'Nottingham'". Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  17. ^ "AGM Plants – Ornamental" (PDF). Royal Horticultural Society. July 2017. p. 64. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  18. ^ Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie e Forestali, Università degli Studi della Tuscia, Viterbo, Italy; Cristofori, V.; Silvestri, C.; Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie e Forestali, Università degli Studi della Tuscia, Viterbo, Italy; Pica, A.L.; Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie e Forestali, Università degli Studi della Tuscia, Viterbo, Italy; Bertazza, G.; Istituto di Biometeorologia, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Bologna, Italy; Bignami, C.; Dipartimento di Scienze della Vita, Università degli Studi di Modena e Reggio Emilia, Reggio Emilia, Italy (2019-12-29). "Evaluation of four medlar cultivars: agronomical, pomological and qualitative traits". European Journal of Horticultural Science. 84 (6): 350–358. doi:10.17660/eJHS.2019/84.6.4. S2CID 214450102.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  19. ^ Baird, John R.; Thieret, John W. (July 1989). "The medlar (Mespilus germanica, Rosaceae) from antiquity to obscurity". Economic Botany. 43 (3): 328–372. doi:10.1007/bf02858732. ISSN 0013-0001. S2CID 40866174.
  20. ^ a b c d Baird, J. R.; Thieret, J. W. (1989). "The Medlar (Mespilus germanica, Rosaceae) from antiquity to obscurity". Economic Botany. 43 (3): 328–372. doi:10.1007/BF02858732. JSTOR 4255177. S2CID 40866174.
  21. ^ Clarke, Richard (October 1982). "The Trees of Britain and Northern Europe, by Alan Mitchell and John Wilkinson Collins Pocket Guides, £6.95 hardback, £3.95 paperback". Oryx. 16 (5): 457. doi:10.1017/S0030605300018226. ISSN 0030-6053. S2CID 84855677.
  22. ^ Khadivi, Ali; Rezaei, Mehdi; Heidari, Parviz; Safari-Khuzani, Amir; Sahebi, Mohammad (June 2019). "Morphological and fruit characterizations of common medlar (Mespilus germanica L.) germplasm". Scientia Horticulturae. 252: 38–47. doi:10.1016/j.scienta.2019.03.014. ISSN 0304-4238. S2CID 146091508.
  23. ^ Enzyklopädie der Laubbäume. Schütt et al. p. 337.
  24. ^ "Perseus Search Results". www.perseus.tufts.edu.
  25. ^ a b "Medlar". Royal Horticultural Society. 2011. Retrieved 8 July 2013.
  26. ^ a b c d e Glew, Robert H.; Ayaz, Faik A.; Sanz, Carlos; VanderJagt, D.J.; Huang, H.-S.; Chuang, L.-T.; Strnad, M. (1 November 2003). "Changes in sugars, organic acids and amino acids in medlar (Mespilus germanica L.) during fruit development and maturation". Food Chemistry. 83 (3): 363–369. doi:10.1016/S0308-8146(03)00097-9.
  27. ^ Rop, Otakar; Sochor, Jiri; Jurikova, Tunde; Zitka, Ondrej; Skutkova, Helena; Mlcek, Jiri; Salas, Petr; Krska, Boris; Babula, Petr; Adam, Vojtech; Kramarova, Daniela (2010-12-28). "Effect of Five Different Stages of Ripening on Chemical Compounds in Medlar (Mespilus germanica L.)". Molecules. 16 (1): 74–91. doi:10.3390/molecules16010074. ISSN 1420-3049. PMC 6259355. PMID 21189456.
  28. ^ a b Martin, James. "Medlars recipes". British Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 8 July 2013.
  29. ^ . Royal Horticultural Society. Archived from the original on 13 October 2012. Retrieved 8 July 2013.
  30. ^ Lehnert, Charly (2014). Das saarländische Geheichnis Bd. 1. Saarbrücken. ISBN 978-3-939286-18-9. OCLC 892065284.
  31. ^ McAdam, Diana (12 October 2007). "Goji berries: The new superfruit". The (Daily) Telegraph. Retrieved 8 July 2013.
  32. ^ Qasemi, Zeinab; Jafari, Dariush; Jafari, Kourosh; Esmaeili, Hossein (2021-08-23). "Heterogeneous aluminum oxide/calcium oxide catalyzed transesterification of Mespilus germanica triglyceride for biodiesel production". Environmental Progress & Sustainable Energy. 41 (2). doi:10.1002/ep.13738. ISSN 1944-7442. S2CID 238740226.
  33. ^ Khedri, Ali; Jafari, Dariush; Esfandyari, Morteza (2021-07-27). "Adsorption of Nickel(II) Ions from Synthetic Wastewater Using Activated Carbon Prepared from Mespilus germanica Leaf". Arabian Journal for Science and Engineering. 47 (5): 6155–6166. doi:10.1007/s13369-021-06014-7. ISSN 2193-567X. S2CID 237723962.
  34. ^ Foroohimanjili, Fatemeh; Mirzaie, Amir; Hamdi, Seyed Mohammad Mehdi; Noorbazargan, Hassan; Hedayati Ch, Mojtaba; Dolatabadi, Aghigh; Rezaie, Hossein; Bishak, Faezeh M. (2020-01-29). "Antibacterial, antibiofilm, and antiquorum sensing activities of phytosynthesized silver nanoparticles fabricated from Mespilus germanica extract against multidrug resistance of Klebsiella pneumoniae clinical strains". Journal of Basic Microbiology. 60 (3): 216–230. doi:10.1002/jobm.201900511. ISSN 0233-111X. PMID 31994223. S2CID 210949728.
  35. ^ a b D., Ercisli, S. Sengul, M. Yildiz, H. Sener, D. Duralija, B. Voca, S. Dujmovic Purgar (2012-10-16). Phytochemical and antioxidant characteristics of medlar fruits (Mespilus germanica L.). Journal of Applied Botany and Food Quality. OCLC 825218272.
  36. ^ G. Bounous, E. Zanini: Variabilità di alcune componenti e caratteri biometrici dei frutti di 6 specie arboree ed arbustive. Proc. workshop „Lampone mirtillo ed altri piccoli frutti“, Trento, 1987, 189–197 (Zitiert nach Schuck et al.: Enzyklopädie der Laubbäume).
  37. ^ Peyre (1945). Les Arbres & Leurs Fruits, Usage Medicaux Pharmaceutiques & Dietetiques.
  38. ^ a b Steffen Guido Fleischhauer, Jürgen Guthmann, Roland Spiegelberger (2015), Essbare Wildpflanzen 200 Arten bestimmen und verwenden (in German) (17. Auflage ed.), AT Verlag, p. 69, ISBN 978-3-03800-886 6{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links

  • Gorvett, Zaria (25 March 2021). "The forgotten medieval fruit with a vulgar name". BBC. Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  • Medlar and the making of Medlar Cheese

mespilus, germanica, medlar, redirects, here, other, uses, medlar, disambiguation, known, medlar, common, medlar, large, shrub, small, tree, rose, family, rosaceae, fruit, this, tree, also, called, medlar, been, cultivated, since, roman, times, usually, availa. Medlar redirects here For other uses see Medlar disambiguation Mespilus germanica known as the medlar or common medlar is a large shrub or small tree in the rose family Rosaceae The fruit of this tree also called medlar has been cultivated since Roman times is usually available in winter and eaten when bletted 2 It may be eaten raw and in a range of cooked dishes When the genus Mespilus is included in the genus Crataegus the correct name for this species is Crataegus germanica Kuntze In the southwest of England it historically had a number of vulgar nicknames such as open arse and monkey s bottom due to the appearance of its large calyx 3 Mespilus germanicaFoliage and fruitConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade RosidsOrder RosalesFamily RosaceaeGenus MespilusSpecies M germanicaBinomial nameMespilus germanicaL Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Systematics 2 2 Etymology 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Ecology 4 1 Plant disease 5 Cultivation 6 Uses 6 1 Product use 6 2 Nutrients and phytochemicals 7 In literature 7 1 Chaucer 7 2 Shakespeare 7 3 Other 16th and 17th century authors 7 4 Modern literature 8 See also 9 Gallery 10 References 11 External linksDescription EditUnder ideal circumstances the deciduous plant grows up to 8 metres 26 feet tall Generally it is shorter and more shrub like than tree like With a lifespan of 30 60 years the tree is rather short lived 4 Its bark is grayish brown with deep vertical cracks forming rectangular plates that tend to lift off 5 The wild form of M germanica is mostly a thorny more shrub like than tree like plant which is between 1 5 and 4 m 5 and 13 ft high In the cultivated forms the thorns are usually reduced or even completely absent 6 In general the medlar is a small deciduous tree with an overhanging almost round crown The trunk is irregularly shaped 7 The tree has a height between 1 and 6 m 3 1 2 and 19 1 2 ft but can become significantly larger in culture 8 The diameter at breast height is usually between 20 and 25 cm 8 and 10 in but in exceptional cases it can be up to 50 cm 20 in The roots are heavily branched and far ranging with a somewhat fibrous root system 7 The wood has a fine texture but is very hard 6 It has a white slightly pink tinted sapwood The core is brownish The annual rings are clearly visible 7 The winter buds are pointed ovoid and up to 5 millimetres 1 4 inch long 7 The leaves are dark green and elliptic 8 15 centimetres 3 6 in long and 3 5 cm 1 2 in wide The leaves are densely hairy pubescent below and turn red in autumn before falling 9 Medlar flowers are 2 5 cm 3 4 2 in in diameter have a short stalk and are terminal and single on short side shoots They have five elongated narrow sepals and five free white or pale pink petals 6 Compared to other fruit trees in the European latitudes the medlar flowers very late May or June 8 The flowers are hermaphrodite and pollinated by bees 5 Normally self pollination occurs in this plant 7 The flower then develops flattened reddish brown hairy fruits with juicy flesh 8 The reddish brown fruit is a pome 2 3 cm 3 4 1 1 4 in diameter with wide spreading persistent sepals around a central pit giving a hollow appearance to the fruit 9 In cultivated forms the diameter is even between 3 and 8 cm 1 1 4 and 3 1 4 in 7 Sexual reproduction is the norm in wild forms of the medlar The resulting seeds have a germination capacity lasting from 18 to 20 months The seeds are distributed by various animals such as birds squirrels and deer Some varieties are sterile and can therefore only be propagated vegetatively 8 The number of chromosomes is given as 2n 32 or 2n 34 6 Taxonomy EditThe flower has long sepals that remain on the fruit Flower bud Open flower Until recently M germanica was the only known species of medlar However in 1990 a new species was discovered in North America now named M canescens The loquat Eriobotrya japonica is more distantly related to the medlar than genera such as Crataegus Amelanchier Peraphyllum and Malacomeles 10 but was once thought to be closely related and is still sometimes called the Chinese medlar or Japanese medlar 11 Systematics Edit Within the species M germanica 23 taxa are distinguished also compromising wild or semi wild forms ornamental and of different origin 12 Among them there are the following varieties 13 Mespilus germanica var gigantea Kirchn with very large fruits Mespilus germanica var abortiva Kirchn with fruits without seeds Mespilus germanica var argenteo variegata with white variegated leaves as ornamental plant Mespilus germanica var aureo variegata with yellow variegated leaves as ornamental plantCultivars of M germanica that are grown for their fruit include Hollandia Nottingham and Russian 13 the large fruited variety Dutch also known as Giant or Monstrous Breda giant Large Russian 14 Royal with very high yield 15 Early medlar with early ripening and high quality fruits Seedless with seedless fruits of low quality The cultivar Nottingham has gained the Royal Horticultural Society s Award of Garden Merit 16 17 For a time it was assumed that it was a species with narrow genetic resources and therefore subject to high risks of genetic erosion whereby the limited evolution of M germanica diversity was ascribed to the lack of economic interest for this fruit species in the last centuries 18 However current findings show that natural populations of medlar are diverse with a high genetic potential which could be used to improve production by using specific genotypes 19 Etymology Edit The Latin name germanica which means German although the species is indigenous to other areas 20 Distribution and habitat EditFrom an extensive study of literature and plant specimens Kazimierz Browicz 20 concluded that the true homeland of M germanica is only in the southeastern part of the Balkan peninsula in Asia Minor on the Caucasus Crimea northern Iran and possibly also in Turkmenia It is also found in southeastern Europe especially the Black Sea coasts of Bulgaria and Turkey 20 The species requires temperate and sub mediterranean climate conditions with warm summers and mild winters 21 Air temperatures of 18 to 20 C 64 to 68 F are mentioned as favourable for growth cold of as low as 20 C 4 F is tolerated and late frosts hardly cause any damage The wild form was observed in dry areas with annual precipitation of 700 mm 28 in and at altitudes from 0 to 1 100 m 0 to 3 600 ft The species grows in a wide range of soil types and prefers fresh well drained loamy soils with a pH that is between 6 and 8 22 23 It is found across southern Europe where it is generally rare It is reported to be naturalized in some woods in southeast England but is found in few gardens 9 Ecology EditPlant disease Edit M germanica is only rarely attacked by diseases or harmed by insects 7 In plantations the larvae of the leaf mining butterfly species Lithocolletis blancardella can cause damage Furthermore especially in years with high precipitation the fungus Monilia fructigena can be a problem 7 It causes brown blemishes on the fruit and continues to spread until the fruit becomes entirely rotten 4 M germanica can also be infected by Podosphaera clandestina the pathogen of powdery mildew which can lead to the wilting of leaves and buds as well as by Entomosporium mespili that causes leaf spots 7 The medlar is like other species of the rosacea family which are used for propagation susceptible to Erwinia amylovora the parasitic causative agent of fire blight 7 Cultivation EditThe species may have been cultivated for as long as 3 000 years 20 The ancient Greek geographer Strabo refers to a mespilon mespilon in Geographica Book 16 Chapter 4 24 The medlar was introduced to Greece around 700 BC and to Rome about 200 BC It was an important fruit plant during Roman and medieval times By the 17th and 18th centuries however it had been superseded by other fruits and is little cultivated today M germanica pomes are one of the few fruits that become edible in winter making it an important tree for gardeners who wish to have fruit available all year round 25 Cultivated forms are propagated by inoculation and by grafting on various substrates such as Crataegus hawthorn species mountain ash pear or quince to improve the performance in different soils 7 25 Cultivars reach full fruit set 6 to 7 years after grafting and they keep it for 20 to 25 years The fruit production varies between 30 and 70 kilograms 70 and 150 pounds per tree and year depending on the variety and age 7 Grafting on medlar seedlings is not recommended because of the slow growth of the grafts Irrigation and fertilization can stimulate growth in plantations 7 If the fruit bearing shoots are cut back after the harvest the formation of new fertile short shoots is encouraged 7 Uses Edit Bletting begins on one side of the fruit Bletted flesh is brown ripe but unbletted flesh is white The fruits are hard and acidic even when ripe but become edible after being softened bletted by frost or naturally in storage if given sufficient time by reducing tannin content and fruit acids increasing sugar content and changes in the content of minerals 26 Once softening begins the skin rapidly takes on a wrinkled texture and turns dark brown and the inside reduces to the consistency and flavour reminiscent of apple sauce This process can confuse those new to medlars as its softened fruit looks as if it has spoiled 26 27 Product use Edit Once bletted the fruit can be eaten raw sometimes with sugar and cream it has been described as being an acquired taste 28 or used to make medlar jelly 29 It is used in medlar cheese which is similar to lemon curd made with the fruit pulp eggs and butter 28 Unripe fruits have a relatively high tannin content of about 2 6 and are therefore used for tanning The tannin causes flocculation of proteins enabling its use to reduce the turbidity of wine In Saarland Germany a schnapps is made from the fruit of the medlar which is refined with hawthorn 30 Medlar tea usually is not made from M germanica but from wolfberry or goji which is sometimes inaccurately translated as red medlar 31 Mespilus germanica kernel oil was used for the first time to produce biodiesel whereby linoleic acid and oleic acid with about 40 are main constituents of the extracted oil The physical properties of the produced biodiesel allows an alternative for diesel fuels without any modification to the conventional engines 32 Leaves of medlar fruit were used to produce activated carbon to remove heavy metals like Ni2 from aqueous solutions 33 Phytosynthesized silver nanoparticles could be fabricated from M germanica extract and show antibacterial antibiofilm activities against multidrug resistance of Klebsiella pneumoniae clinical strains 34 Nutrients and phytochemicals Edit In general the medlar fruits were found to be rich in potassium calcium phosphorus magnesium and iron 35 M germanica contains various phytochemicals varying between genotypes 35 fruit ripeness harvest time and storage conditions The fruits are particularly rich in monoterpenes and organic acids 26 36 Amino acids sugars and organic acids affect flavor 26 Due to their diuretic and astringent effects the fruits have been used in traditional medicine 37 38 In 1984 and 1985 the following values were given for homogenized fruit 38 Time Frame L ascorbic acid Glucose Fructose Potassium CalciumEarly 1984 1 64 mg l 53 75 mg l 37 31 mg l 47 20 ppm 4 70 ppmEnd 1984 1 54 mg l 61 74 mg l 70 06 mg l 43 00 ppm 4 50 ppmEarly 1985 2 64 mg l 43 50 mg l 35 70 mg l 48 90 ppm 5 20 ppmLate 1985 1 41 mg l 60 30 mg l 60 50 mg l 46 1 ppm 5 00 ppmFructose content increases steadily during fruit development whereas sucrose content increases for 4 months and decreases afterwards Tannin content and fruit acid content especially ascorbid acid decreases during fruit development In ripe fruit glutamate and aspartate were the major amino compounds but also total amino acid composition changed during fruit development 26 In literature Edit A basket of medlars Chaucer Edit A fruit which is rotten before it is ripe the medlar is used figuratively in literature as a symbol of prostitution or premature destitution For example in the Prologue to The Reeve s Tale Geoffrey Chaucer s character laments his old age comparing himself to the medlar which he names using the Old English term for the fruit open arse This white top writeth myne olde yeris Myn herte is mowled also as myne heris But if I fare as dooth an open ers That ilke fruyt is ever lenger the wers Til it be roten in mullok or in stree We olde men I drede so fare we Til we be roten kan we nat be rype Shakespeare Edit In William Shakespeare s Timon of Athens Apemantus forces an apple upon Timon The middle of humanity thou never knewest but the extremity of both ends When thou wast in thy gilt and perfume they mock d thee for too much curiosity in thy rags thou know st none but art despised for the contrary There s a medlar for thee eat it perhaps including a pun on meddler one who meddles in affairs as well as on rottenness IV iii 300 305 In Measure for Measure Lucio excuses his denial of past fornication because they would else have married me to the rotten medlar IV iii 171 In As You Like It Rosalind makes a complicated pun involving grafting her interlocutor with the trees around her which bear love letters and with a medlar I ll graff it with you and then I shall graff it with a medlar Then it will be the earliest fruit i th country for you ll be rotten ere you be half ripe and that s the right virtue of the medlar III ii 116 119 The most famous reference to medlars often bowdlerized until modern editions accepted it appears in Shakespeare s Romeo and Juliet when Mercutio laughs at Romeo s unrequited love for his mistress Rosaline II 1 34 38 Now will he sit under a medlar tree And wish his mistress were that kind of fruit As maids call medlars when they laugh alone O Romeo that she were O that she were An open arse and thou a pop rin pear In the 16th and 17th centuries medlars were bawdily called open arses because of the shape of the fruits inspiring boisterous or humorously indecent puns in many Elizabethan and Jacobean plays The name survived in common use well into the 20th century 3 Other 16th and 17th century authors Edit In Miguel de Cervantes Don Quixote the eponymous hero and Sancho Panza stretch themselves out in the middle of a field and stuff themselves with acorns or medlars In Francois Rabelais Gargantua and Pantagruel medlars play a role in the origin of giants including the eponymous characters After Cain killed Abel the blood of the just saturated the Earth causing enormous medlars to grow Humans who ate these medlars grew to great proportions Those whose bodies grew longer became giants and were the ancestors of Gargantua and Pantagruel Thomas Dekker also draws a comparison in his play The Honest Whore I scarce know her for the beauty of her cheek hath like the moon suffered strange eclipses since I beheld it women are like medlars no sooner ripe but rotten Another reference can be found in Thomas Middleton s A Trick to Catch the Old One in the character of Widow Medler impersonated by a courtesan hence the following pun Who Widow Medler She lies open to much rumour II 2 59 In the Memoirs of Gluckel of Hameln Gluckel recalls having had a craving for medlars when she was pregnant with her son Joseph but ignoring the desire When the baby was born he was sickly and too weak to be breastfed Remembering a superstition about the dangers of pregnant women not fulfilling their cravings Gluckel asked for someone to fetch her some medlars for the baby As soon as the fruit touched the baby s lips he ate all the pulp given to him and was then able to be breastfed Book 4 Section 14 Modern literature Edit In modern literature some writers have mentioned this fruit Saki uses medlars in his short stories which often play on the decay of Edwardian society In The Peace of Mowsle Barton the outwardly quiet farmstead features a medlar tree and corrosive hatred In The Boar Pig the titular animal Tarquin Superbus is the point of contact between society ladies cheating to get into the garden party of the season and a not entirely honest young schoolgirl who lures him away by strategically throwing well bletted medlars Come Tarquin dear old boy you know you can t resist medlars when they re rotten and squashy Italian novelist Giovanni Verga s naturalist narrative I Malavoglia is titled The House by the Medlar Tree in the English translation citation needed H C Bailey s detective Reggie Fortune is very fond of medlars citation needed Philip Pullman describes Sir Charles Latrom s perfume as rotted like a medlar in his book The Subtle Knife See also EditChaenomeles speciosa Crabapple Pseudocydonia SorbusGallery Edit Medlar tree Illustration of medlar Medlar growing on Hawthorn rootstock Bark of medlar tree Flower of medlar Bletted left and unbletted right medlar fruit Ripe bletted and unripe medlar fruit Medlar tree in late autumn with ripe fruits Switzerland ETH Zurich References Edit Petrova A Barstow M 2017 Mespilus germanica IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T79920045A109616278 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 3 RLTS T79920045A109616278 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 Gorvett Zaria The forgotten medieval fruit with a vulgar name BBC Future March 25 2021 lots of images a b MacMillan Alexander Stuart 1922 Popular Names of Flowers Fruits amp C As Used in the County of Somerset and the Adjacent Parts of Devon Dorset and Wilts United Kingdom Forgotten Books p 209 ISBN 1 332 98501 7 OCLC 978686284 a b The Essential Guide to probably everything you need to know about Growing Medlar Mespilus germanica The Permaculture Research Institute 2021 05 24 Retrieved 2021 11 14 a b Mespilus germanica Medlar PFAF Plant Database a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c d Baird John R Thieret John W 1989 07 01 The medlar Mespilus germanica Rosaceae from antiquity to obscurity Economic Botany 43 3 328 372 doi 10 1007 BF02858732 ISSN 1874 9364 S2CID 40866174 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Minotta Gianfranco 2014 Stimm Bernd Roloff Andreas Lang Ulla M Weisgerber Horst eds Mespilus germanica Enzyklopadie der Holzgewachse Handbuch und Atlas der Dendrologie in German American Cancer Society pp 1 6 doi 10 1002 9783527678518 ISBN 978 3 527 67851 8 retrieved 2021 11 14 a b c d Erhaltungskonzept Mispel PDF a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c Mitchell Alan 1978 A Field Guide to the Trees of Britain and Northern Europe 2 ed Collins p 277 Campbell C S Evans R C Morgan D R Dickinson T A Arsenault M P 2007 Phylogeny of subtribe Pyrinae formerly the Maloideae Rosaceae Limited resolution of a complex evolutionary history PDF Plant Systematics and Evolution 266 1 2 119 145 doi 10 1007 s00606 007 0545 y S2CID 13639534 Die Asperl Mespilus germanica L Georg Schramayr Verein Regionale Geholzvermehrung St Polten 2013 ISBN 978 3 901542 41 1 OCLC 967971863 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Cristofori V Silvestri C Pica A L Bertazza G Bignami C 2019 12 29 Evaluation of four medlar cultivars agronomical pomological and qualitative traits European Journal of Horticultural Science 84 6 350 358 doi 10 17660 ejhs 2019 84 6 4 ISSN 1611 4426 S2CID 214450102 a b Schmid Rudolf Phipps James B O Kennon Robert J Lance Ron W November 2003 Hawthorns and Medlars Taxon 52 4 884 doi 10 2307 3647377 JSTOR 3647377 Lothian Thomas 1991 The complete book of fruit growing in Australia Port Melbourne Victoria Schutt Enzyklopadie der Laubbaume p 336 RHS Plantfinder Mespilus germanica Nottingham Retrieved 4 April 2018 AGM Plants Ornamental PDF Royal Horticultural Society July 2017 p 64 Retrieved 4 April 2018 Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie e Forestali Universita degli Studi della Tuscia Viterbo Italy Cristofori V Silvestri C Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie e Forestali Universita degli Studi della Tuscia Viterbo Italy Pica A L Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie e Forestali Universita degli Studi della Tuscia Viterbo Italy Bertazza G Istituto di Biometeorologia Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche Bologna Italy Bignami C Dipartimento di Scienze della Vita Universita degli Studi di Modena e Reggio Emilia Reggio Emilia Italy 2019 12 29 Evaluation of four medlar cultivars agronomical pomological and qualitative traits European Journal of Horticultural Science 84 6 350 358 doi 10 17660 eJHS 2019 84 6 4 S2CID 214450102 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Baird John R Thieret John W July 1989 The medlar Mespilus germanica Rosaceae from antiquity to obscurity Economic Botany 43 3 328 372 doi 10 1007 bf02858732 ISSN 0013 0001 S2CID 40866174 a b c d Baird J R Thieret J W 1989 The Medlar Mespilus germanica Rosaceae from antiquity to obscurity Economic Botany 43 3 328 372 doi 10 1007 BF02858732 JSTOR 4255177 S2CID 40866174 Clarke Richard October 1982 The Trees of Britain and Northern Europe by Alan Mitchell and John Wilkinson Collins Pocket Guides 6 95 hardback 3 95 paperback Oryx 16 5 457 doi 10 1017 S0030605300018226 ISSN 0030 6053 S2CID 84855677 Khadivi Ali Rezaei Mehdi Heidari Parviz Safari Khuzani Amir Sahebi Mohammad June 2019 Morphological and fruit characterizations of common medlar Mespilus germanica L germplasm Scientia Horticulturae 252 38 47 doi 10 1016 j scienta 2019 03 014 ISSN 0304 4238 S2CID 146091508 Enzyklopadie der Laubbaume Schutt et al p 337 Perseus Search Results www perseus tufts edu a b Medlar Royal Horticultural Society 2011 Retrieved 8 July 2013 a b c d e Glew Robert H Ayaz Faik A Sanz Carlos VanderJagt D J Huang H S Chuang L T Strnad M 1 November 2003 Changes in sugars organic acids and amino acids in medlar Mespilus germanica L during fruit development and maturation Food Chemistry 83 3 363 369 doi 10 1016 S0308 8146 03 00097 9 Rop Otakar Sochor Jiri Jurikova Tunde Zitka Ondrej Skutkova Helena Mlcek Jiri Salas Petr Krska Boris Babula Petr Adam Vojtech Kramarova Daniela 2010 12 28 Effect of Five Different Stages of Ripening on Chemical Compounds in Medlar Mespilus germanica L Molecules 16 1 74 91 doi 10 3390 molecules16010074 ISSN 1420 3049 PMC 6259355 PMID 21189456 a b Martin James Medlars recipes British Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 8 July 2013 Nigel Slater on medlars Royal Horticultural Society Archived from the original on 13 October 2012 Retrieved 8 July 2013 Lehnert Charly 2014 Das saarlandische Geheichnis Bd 1 Saarbrucken ISBN 978 3 939286 18 9 OCLC 892065284 McAdam Diana 12 October 2007 Goji berries The new superfruit The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 8 July 2013 Qasemi Zeinab Jafari Dariush Jafari Kourosh Esmaeili Hossein 2021 08 23 Heterogeneous aluminum oxide calcium oxide catalyzed transesterification of Mespilus germanica triglyceride for biodiesel production Environmental Progress amp Sustainable Energy 41 2 doi 10 1002 ep 13738 ISSN 1944 7442 S2CID 238740226 Khedri Ali Jafari Dariush Esfandyari Morteza 2021 07 27 Adsorption of Nickel II Ions from Synthetic Wastewater Using Activated Carbon Prepared from Mespilus germanica Leaf Arabian Journal for Science and Engineering 47 5 6155 6166 doi 10 1007 s13369 021 06014 7 ISSN 2193 567X S2CID 237723962 Foroohimanjili Fatemeh Mirzaie Amir Hamdi Seyed Mohammad Mehdi Noorbazargan Hassan Hedayati Ch Mojtaba Dolatabadi Aghigh Rezaie Hossein Bishak Faezeh M 2020 01 29 Antibacterial antibiofilm and antiquorum sensing activities of phytosynthesized silver nanoparticles fabricated from Mespilus germanica extract against multidrug resistance of Klebsiella pneumoniae clinical strains Journal of Basic Microbiology 60 3 216 230 doi 10 1002 jobm 201900511 ISSN 0233 111X PMID 31994223 S2CID 210949728 a b D Ercisli S Sengul M Yildiz H Sener D Duralija B Voca S Dujmovic Purgar 2012 10 16 Phytochemical and antioxidant characteristics of medlar fruits Mespilus germanica L Journal of Applied Botany and Food Quality OCLC 825218272 G Bounous E Zanini Variabilita di alcune componenti e caratteri biometrici dei frutti di 6 specie arboree ed arbustive Proc workshop Lampone mirtillo ed altri piccoli frutti Trento 1987 189 197 Zitiert nach Schuck et al Enzyklopadie der Laubbaume Peyre 1945 Les Arbres amp Leurs Fruits Usage Medicaux Pharmaceutiques amp Dietetiques a b Steffen Guido Fleischhauer Jurgen Guthmann Roland Spiegelberger 2015 Essbare Wildpflanzen 200 Arten bestimmen und verwenden in German 17 Auflage ed AT Verlag p 69 ISBN 978 3 03800 886 6 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Crataegus germanica Gorvett Zaria 25 March 2021 The forgotten medieval fruit with a vulgar name BBC Retrieved 28 March 2021 Medlar and the making of Medlar Cheese Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mespilus germanica amp oldid 1121118401, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.