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Tomato

The tomato (/təmt/ or /təmɑːt/) is the edible berry of the plant Solanum lycopersicum,[1][2] commonly known as the tomato plant. The species originated in western South America, Mexico, and Central America.[2][3] The Nahuatl word tomatl gave rise to the Spanish word tomate, from which the English word tomato derived.[3][4] Its domestication and use as a cultivated food may have originated with the indigenous peoples of Mexico.[2][5] The Aztecs used tomatoes in their cooking at the time of the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire, and after the Spanish encountered the tomato for the first time after their contact with the Aztecs, they brought the plant to Europe, in a widespread transfer of plants known as the Columbian exchange. From there, the tomato was introduced to other parts of the European-colonized world during the 16th century.[2]

Tomato
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Solanales
Family: Solanaceae
Genus: Solanum
Species:
S. lycopersicum
Binomial name
Solanum lycopersicum
Synonyms[1]
  • Lycopersicon lycopersicum (L. H. Karst.)
  • Lycopersicon esculentum (Mill.)
Tomatoes: whole, halved vertically and halved horizontally

Tomatoes are a significant source of umami flavor.[6] They are consumed in diverse ways: raw or cooked, and in many dishes, sauces, salads, and drinks. While tomatoes are fruitsbotanically classified as berries—they are commonly used culinarily as a vegetable ingredient or side dish.[3]

Numerous varieties of the tomato plant are widely grown in temperate climates across the world, with greenhouses allowing for the production of tomatoes throughout all seasons of the year. Tomato plants typically grow to 1–3 meters (3–10 ft) in height. They are vines that have a weak stem that sprawls and typically needs support.[2] Indeterminate tomato plants are perennials in their native habitat, but are cultivated as annuals. (Determinate, or bush, plants are annuals that stop growing at a certain height and produce a crop all at once.) The size of the tomato varies according to the cultivar, with a range of 1–10 cm (12–4 in) in width.[2]

Grape tomatoes on the vine for sale at a market

History

 
Solanum lycopersicum var. lycopersicum: the oldest surviving tomato fruit and leaves. Page from the En Tibi Herbarium, 1558. Naturalis Leiden.

The wild ancestor of the tomato, Solanum pimpinellifolium, is native to western South America.[7] These wild versions were the size of peas.[7] The first evidence of domestication points to the Aztecs and other peoples in Mesoamerica, who used the fruit fresh and in their cooking. The Spanish first introduced tomatoes to Europe, where they became used in Spanish food. In France, Italy and northern Europe, the tomato was initially grown as an ornamental plant. It was regarded with suspicion as a food because botanists recognized it as a nightshade, a relative of the poisonous belladonna.[3] This was exacerbated by the interaction of the tomato's acidic juice with pewter plates.[8] The leaves and fruit contain tomatine, which in large quantities would be toxic. However, the ripe fruit contains a much lower amount of tomatine than the immature fruit.[9]

Mesoamerica

The exact date of domestication is unknown; by 500 BC, it was already being cultivated in southern Mexico and probably other areas.[10]: 13  The Pueblo people are thought to have believed that those who witnessed the ingestion of tomato seeds were blessed with powers of divination.[11] The large, lumpy variety of tomato, a mutation from a smoother, smaller fruit, originated in Mesoamerica, and may be the direct ancestor of some modern cultivated tomatoes.[10]: 15 

The Aztecs raised several varieties of tomato, with red tomatoes called xitomatl and green tomatoes (physalis) called tomatl (tomatillo).[12] Bernardino de Sahagún reported seeing a great variety of tomatoes in the Aztec market at Tenochtitlán (Mexico City): "large tomatoes, small tomatoes, leaf tomatoes, sweet tomatoes, large serpent tomatoes, nipple-shaped tomatoes", and tomatoes of all colors from the brightest red to the deepest yellow.[13] Bernardino de Sahagún mentioned Aztecs cooking various sauces, some with and without tomatoes of different sizes, serving them in city markets: "foods sauces, hot sauces; fried [food], olla-cooked [food], juices, sauces of juices, shredded [food] with chile, with squash seeds [most likely Cucurbita pepo], with tomatoes, with smoked chile, with hot chile, with yellow chile, with mild red chile sauce, yellow chile sauce, hot chile sauce, with "bird excrement" sauce, sauce of smoked chile, heated [sauces], bean sauce; [he sells] toasted beans, cooked beans, mushroom sauce, sauce of small squash, sauce of large tomatoes, sauce of ordinary tomatoes, sauce of various kinds of sour herbs, avocado sauce."[14]

Spanish distribution

Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés may have been the first to transfer a small yellow tomato to Europe after he captured the Aztec city of Tenochtitlan, now Mexico City, in 1521. The earliest discussion of the tomato in European literature appeared in a herbal written in 1544 by Pietro Andrea Mattioli, an Italian physician and botanist, who suggested that a new type of eggplant had been brought to Italy that was blood red or golden color when mature and could be divided into segments and eaten like an eggplant—that is, cooked and seasoned with salt, black pepper, and oil. It was not until ten years later that tomatoes were named in print by Mattioli as pomi d'oro, or "golden apples".[10]: 13 

After the Spanish colonization of the Americas, the Spanish distributed the tomato throughout their colonies in the Caribbean. They also took it to the Philippines, from where it spread to southeast Asia and then the entire Asian continent. The Spanish also brought the tomato to Europe. It grew easily in Mediterranean climates, and cultivation began in the 1540s. It was probably eaten shortly after it was introduced, and was certainly being used as food by the early 17th century in Spain.

China

The tomato was introduced to China, likely via the Philippines or Macau, in the 1500s. It was given the name 番茄 fānqié (foreign eggplant), as the Chinese named many foodstuffs introduced from abroad, but referring specifically to early introductions.[15]

Italy

 
The San Marzano is a well-known plum tomato highly prized for making pizza.

The recorded history of tomatoes in Italy dates back to at least 31 October 1548, when the house steward of Cosimo de' Medici, the grand duke of Tuscany, wrote to the Medici private secretary informing him that the basket of tomatoes sent from the grand duke's Florentine estate at Torre del Gallo "had arrived safely".[16] Tomatoes were grown mainly as ornamentals early on after their arrival in Italy. For example, the Florentine aristocrat Giovanvettorio Soderini wrote how they "were to be sought only for their beauty", and were grown only in gardens or flower beds. The tomato's ability to mutate and create new and different varieties helped contribute to its success and spread throughout Italy. However, in areas where the climate supported growing tomatoes, their habit of growing to the ground suggested low status. They were not adopted as a staple of the peasant population because they were not as filling as other fruits already available. Additionally, both toxic and inedible varieties discouraged many people from attempting to consume or prepare any other varieties.[17] In certain areas of Italy, such as Florence, the fruit was used solely as a tabletop decoration, until it was incorporated into the local cuisine in the late 17th or early 18th century.[18] The earliest discovered cookbook with tomato recipes was published in Naples in 1692, though the author had apparently obtained these recipes from Spanish sources.[10]: 17 

Unique varieties were developed over the next several hundred years for uses such as dried tomatoes, sauce tomatoes, pizza tomatoes, and tomatoes for long-term storage. These varieties are usually known for their place of origin as much as by a variety name. For example, Pomodorino del Piennolo del Vesuvio is the "hanging tomato of Vesuvius", or the well known and highly prized San Marzano plum tomato grown in that region.[This paragraph needs citation(s)]

Britain

 
Tomatoes for sale in a UK supermarket

Tomatoes were not grown in England until the 1590s. One of the earliest cultivators was John Gerard, a barber-surgeon. Gerard's Herbal, published in 1597, and largely plagiarized from continental sources, is also one of the earliest discussions of the tomato in England. Gerard knew the tomato was eaten in Spain and Italy. Nonetheless, he believed it was poisonous (in fact, the plant and raw fruit do have low levels of tomatine, but are not generally dangerous; see below). Gerard's views were influential, and the tomato was considered unfit for eating (though not necessarily poisonous) for many years in Britain and its North American colonies.[10]: 17 

However, by the mid-18th century, tomatoes were widely eaten in Britain, and before the end of that century, the Encyclopædia Britannica stated the tomato was "in daily use" in soups, broths, and as a garnish. They were not part of the average person's diet, and though by 1820 they were described as "to be seen in great abundance in all our vegetable markets" and to be "used by all our best cooks", reference was made to their cultivation in gardens still "for the singularity of their appearance", while their use in cooking was associated with exotic Italian or Jewish cuisine.[19] For example, in Elizabeth Blackwell's A Curious Herbal, it is described under the name "Love Apple (Amoris Pomum)" as being consumed with oil and vinegar in Italy, similar to consumption of cucumbers in the UK.[20]

Middle East and North Africa

The tomato was introduced to cultivation in the Middle East by John Barker, British consul in Aleppo c. 1799 to 1825.[21][22] Nineteenth century descriptions of its consumption are uniformly as an ingredient in a cooked dish. In 1881, it is described as only eaten in the region "within the last forty years".[23] Today, the tomato is a critical and ubiquitous part of Middle Eastern cuisine, served fresh in salads (e.g., Arab salad, Israeli salad, Shirazi salad and Turkish salad), grilled with kebabs and other dishes, made into sauces, and so on.[citation needed]

United States

 
Plum, cherry, and grape tomato varieties

The earliest reference to tomatoes being grown in British North America is from 1710, when herbalist William Salmon reported seeing them in what is today South Carolina.[10]: 25  They may have been introduced from the Caribbean. By the mid-18th century, they were cultivated on some Carolina plantations, and probably in other parts of the Southeast as well. Thomas Jefferson, who ate tomatoes in Paris, sent some seeds back to America.[10]: 28  Some early American advocates of the culinary use of the tomato included Michele Felice Cornè and Robert Gibbon Johnson.[24] Many Americans considered tomatoes to be poisonous at this time; and in general, they were grown more as ornamental plants than as food. In 1897, W. H. Garrison addressed the Medico-Legal Society of New York stating, "The belief was once transmitted that the tomato was sinisterly dangerous." He recalled in his youth tomatoes were dubbed "love-apples or wolf-apples" and they were shunned as "globes of the devil."[25]

Alexander W. Livingston receives much credit for developing numerous varieties of tomato for both home and commercial gardeners.[26]

Early tomato breeders included Henry Tilden in Iowa and a Dr. Hand in Baltimore.[27] The U.S. Department of Agriculture's 1937 yearbook declared that "half of the major varieties were a result of the abilities of the Livingstons to evaluate and perpetuate superior material in the tomato." Livingston's first breed of tomato, the Paragon, was introduced in 1870, the beginning of a great tomato culture enterprise in the county. In 1875, he introduced the Acme, which was said to be involved in the parentage of most of the tomatoes introduced by him and his competitors for the next twenty-five years.[28][29]

When Livingston began his attempts to develop the tomato as a commercial crop, his aim had been to grow tomatoes smooth in contour, uniform in size, and sweet in flavor. He eventually developed over seventeen different varieties of the tomato plant.[28] Today, the crop is grown in every state in the Union.[30]

Because of the long growing season needed for this heat-loving crop, several states in the US Sun Belt became major tomato-producers, particularly Florida and California. In California, tomatoes are grown under irrigation for both the fresh fruit market and for canning and processing. The University of California, Davis (UC Davis) became a major center for research on the tomato. The C.M. Rick Tomato Genetics Resource Center at UC Davis is a gene bank of wild relatives, monogenic mutants and miscellaneous genetic stocks of tomato.[31] The center is named for the late Dr. Charles M. Rick, a pioneer in tomato genetics research.[32] Research on processing tomatoes is also conducted by the California Tomato Research Institute in Escalon, California.[33]

In California, growers have used a method of cultivation called dry-farming, especially with Early Girl tomatoes. This technique encourages the plant to send roots deep to find existing moisture in soil that retains moisture, such as clayey soil.

Modern commercial varieties

 
Yellow cherry tomatoes

The poor taste and lack of sugar in modern garden and commercial tomato varieties resulted from breeding tomatoes to ripen uniformly red. This change occurred after discovery of a mutant "u" phenotype in the mid-20th century, so named because the fruits ripened uniformly. This was widely cross-bred to produce red fruit without the typical green ring around the stem on uncross-bred varieties. Prior to general introduction of this trait, most tomatoes produced more sugar during ripening, and were sweeter and more flavorful.[34][35]

Evidence has been found that 10–20% of the total carbon fixed in the fruit can be produced by photosynthesis in the developing fruit of the normal U phenotype. The u genetic mutation encodes a factor that produces defective chloroplasts with lower density in developing fruit, resulting in a lighter green colour of unripe fruit, and repression of sugars accumulation in the resulting ripe fruit by 10–15%. Perhaps more important than their role in photosynthesis, the fruit chloroplasts are remodelled during ripening into chlorophyll-free chromoplasts that synthesize and accumulate the carotenoids lycopene, β-carotene, and other metabolites that are sensory and nutritional assets of the ripe fruit. The potent chloroplasts in the dark-green shoulders of the U phenotype are beneficial here, but have the disadvantage of leaving green shoulders near the stems of the ripe fruit, and even cracked yellow shoulders, apparently because of oxidative stress due to overload of the photosynthetic chain in direct sunlight at high temperatures. Hence genetic design of a commercial variety that combines the advantages of types u and U requires fine tuning, but may be feasible.[36]

Furthermore, breeders of modern tomato cultivars typically strive to produce tomato plants exhibiting improved yield, shelf life, size, and tolerance/resistance to various environmental pressures, including disease.[37][38] However, these breeding efforts have yielded unintended negative consequences on various tomato fruit attributes. For instance, linkage drag is a phenomenon that has been responsible for alterations in the metabolism of the tomato fruit. Linkage drag describes the introduction of an undesired trait or allele into a plant during backcrossing. This trait/allele is physically linked (or is very close) to the desired allele along the chromosome. In introducing the beneficial allele, there exists a high likelihood that the poor allele is also incorporated into the plant. Thus, breeding efforts attempting to enhance certain traits (for example: larger fruit size) have unintentionally altered production of chemicals associated with, for instance, nutritional value and flavor.[37]

Breeders have turned to using wild tomato species as a source of alleles for the introduction of beneficial traits into modern tomato varieties. For example, wild tomato relatives may possess higher amounts of fruit solids (which are associated with greater sugar content) or resistance to diseases caused by microbes, such as resistance towards the early blight pathogen Alternaria solani. However, this tactic has limitations, for the incorporation of certain traits, such as pathogen resistance, can negatively impact other favorable phenotypes, such as fruit production.[38][39]

Etymology

The word tomato comes from the Spanish tomate, which in turn comes from the Nahuatl word tomatl [ˈtomat͡ɬ] pronunciation, meaning 'swelling fruit';[4] also 'fat water' or 'fat thing'.[40] The native Mexican tomatillo is tomate. When Aztecs started to cultivate the fruit to be larger, sweeter and red, they called the new variety xitomatl (or jitomates) (pronounced [ʃiːˈtomatɬ]),[2] ('plump with navel' or 'fat water with navel'). The specific name lycopersicum (from the 1753 book Species Plantarum) is of Greek origin (λύκοπερσικων, lykopersikon), meaning 'wolf peach'.[citation needed]

 
Bangladeshi tomato

Pronunciation

The usual pronunciations of tomato are /təˈmt/ tə-MAY-toh (usual in North American English) and /təˈmɑːt/ tə-MAH-toh (usual in British English).[41] The word's dual pronunciations were immortalized in Ira and George Gershwin's 1937 song "Let's Call the Whole Thing Off" ("You like /pəˈtt/ and I like /pəˈtɑːt/ / You like /təˈmt/ and I like /təˈmɑːt/") and have become a symbol for nitpicking pronunciation disputes.[citation needed] In this capacity, it has even become an American and British slang term: saying "/təˈmt təˈmɑːt/" when presented with two choices can mean "What's the difference?" or "It's all the same to me".[citation needed]

Botany

Description

 
Tomato flower

Tomato plants are vines, initially decumbent, typically growing 180 cm (6 ft) or more above the ground if supported, although erect bush varieties have been bred, generally 100 cm (3 ft 3 in) tall or shorter. Indeterminate types are "tender" perennials, dying annually in temperate climates (they are originally native to tropical highlands), although they can live up to three years in a greenhouse in some cases. Determinate types are annual in all climates.[citation needed]

Tomato plants are dicots, and grow as a series of branching stems, with a terminal bud at the tip that does the actual growing. When the tip eventually stops growing, whether because of pruning or flowering, lateral buds take over and grow into other, fully functional, vines.[42]

 
An unripe tomato growing on the vine

Tomato vines are typically pubescent, meaning covered with fine short hairs. The hairs facilitate the vining process, turning into roots wherever the plant is in contact with the ground and moisture, especially if the vine's connection to its original root has been damaged or severed.[citation needed]

Most tomato plants have compound leaves, and are called regular leaf (RL) plants, but some cultivars have simple leaves known as potato leaf (PL) style because of their resemblance to that particular relative. Of RL plants, there are variations, such as rugose leaves, which are deeply grooved, and variegated, angora leaves, which have additional colors where a genetic mutation causes chlorophyll to be excluded from some portions of the leaves.[43][unreliable source?]

The leaves are 10–25 cm (4–10 in) long, odd pinnate, with five to nine leaflets on petioles,[44] each leaflet up to 8 cm (3 in) long, with a serrated margin; both the stem and leaves are densely glandular-hairy.[citation needed]

Their flowers, appearing on the apical meristem, have the anthers fused along the edges, forming a column surrounding the pistil's style. Flowers in domestic cultivars can be self-fertilizing. The flowers are 1–2 cm (1234 in) across, yellow, with five pointed lobes on the corolla; they are borne in a cyme of three to 12 together.[citation needed]

Although in culinary terms, tomato is regarded as a vegetable, its fruit is classified botanically as a berry.[45] As a true fruit, it develops from the ovary of the plant after fertilization, its flesh comprising the pericarp walls. The fruit contains hollow spaces full of seeds and moisture, called locular cavities. These vary, among cultivated species, according to type. Some smaller varieties have two cavities, globe-shaped varieties typically have three to five, beefsteak tomatoes have a great number of smaller cavities, while paste tomatoes have very few, very small cavities.[46][47][48]

For propagation, the seeds need to come from a mature fruit, and must be lightly fermented to remove the gelatinous outer coating and then dried before use.[49]

Classification

In 1753, Linnaeus placed the tomato in the genus Solanum (alongside the potato) as Solanum lycopersicum. In 1768, Philip Miller moved it to its own genus, naming it Lycopersicon esculentum.[50] The name came into wide use, but was technically in breach of the plant naming rules because Linnaeus's species name lycopersicum still had priority. Although the name Lycopersicum lycopersicum was suggested by Karsten (1888), it is not used because it violates the International Code of Nomenclature[51] barring the use of tautonyms in botanical nomenclature. The corrected name Lycopersicon lycopersicum (Nicolson 1974) was technically valid, because Miller's genus name and Linnaeus's species name differ in exact spelling, but since Lycopersicon esculentum has become so well known, it was officially listed as a nomen conservandum in 1983, and would be the correct name for the tomato in classifications which do not place the tomato in the genus Solanum.[citation needed]

Genetic evidence has now shown that Linnaeus was correct to put the tomato in the genus Solanum, making Solanum lycopersicum the correct name.[1][52] Both names, however, will probably be found in the literature for some time. Two of the major reasons for considering the genera separate are the leaf structure (tomato leaves are markedly different from any other Solanum), and the biochemistry (many of the alkaloids common to other Solanum species are conspicuously absent from the tomato). On the other hand, hybrids of tomato and diploid potato can be created in the lab by somatic fusion, and are partially fertile,[53] providing evidence of the close relationship between these species.

Genetics and genetic modification

Genome

An international consortium of researchers from 10 countries, began sequencing the tomato genome in 2004.[54][55] A prerelease version of the genome was made available in December 2009.[56] The complete genome for the cultivar Heinz 1706 was published on 31 May 2012 in Nature.[57] The latest reference genome published in 2021 had 799 MB and encodes 34,384 (predicted) proteins, spread over 12 chromosomes.[58]

Genetic modification

Since many other fruits, like strawberries, apples, melons, and bananas share the same characteristics and genes, researchers stated the published genome could help to improve food quality, food security and reduce costs of all of these fruits.[59]

The first commercially available genetically modified food was a tomato called Flavr Savr, which was engineered to have a longer shelf life.[60] However, it is no longer commercially available. Scientists are continuing to develop tomatoes with new traits not found in natural crops, such as increased resistance to pests or environmental stresses or better flavor.[citation needed]

Breeding

The Tomato Genetic Resource Center, Germplasm Resources Information Network, AVRDC, and numerous seed banks around the world store seed representing genetic variations of value to modern agriculture. These seed stocks are available for legitimate breeding and research efforts. While individual breeding efforts can produce useful results, the bulk of tomato breeding work is at universities and major agriculture-related corporations. These efforts have resulted in significant regionally adapted breeding lines and hybrids, such as the Mountain series from North Carolina. Corporations including Heinz, Monsanto, BHNSeed, and Bejoseed have breeding programs that attempt to improve production, size, shape, color, flavor, disease tolerance, pest tolerance, nutritional value, and numerous other traits.[citation needed]

Fruit versus vegetable

 
Tomatoes are considered a fruit or vegetable depending on context. According to Encyclopedia Britannica, tomatoes are a fruit labeled in grocery stores as a vegetable due to their taste and culinary purposes.[3]

Botanically, a tomato is a fruit—a berry, consisting of the ovary, together with its seeds, of a flowering plant.[61] However, the tomato is considered a "culinary vegetable" because it has a much lower sugar content than culinary fruits; because it is more savoury (umami) than sweet, it is typically served as part of a salad or main course of a meal, rather than as a dessert.[62] Tomatoes are not the only food source with this ambiguity; bell peppers, cucumbers, green beans, aubergines/eggplants, avocados, and squashes of all kinds (such as courgettes/zucchini and pumpkins) are all botanically fruit, yet cooked as vegetables.[63]

The confusion on whether tomatoes are fruits or vegetables has led to legal dispute in the United States. In 1887, U.S. tariff laws that imposed a duty on vegetables, but not on fruit, caused the tomato's status to become a matter of legal importance. In Nix v. Hedden, the U.S. Supreme Court settled the tariff controversy on 10 May 1893, by declaring that the tomato is a vegetable, based on the popular definition that classifies vegetables by use—they are generally served with dinner and not dessert.[64] The holding of this case applies only to the interpretation of the Tariff of 1883, and the court did not purport to reclassify the tomato for botanical or other purposes.

Cultivation

The tomato is grown worldwide for its edible fruits, with thousands of cultivars.[65] A fertilizer with an NPK ratio of 5–10–10 is often sold as tomato fertilizer or vegetable fertilizer,[citation needed] although manure and compost are also used.[citation needed] On average there are 150,000 seeds in a pound of tomato seeds.[66]

Diseases

 
Tomato fruitworm feeding on unripe tomato
 
Tomato bug feeding on tomato plant sap
 
A split heirloom tomato, caused by fluctuation in water availability

Tomato cultivars vary widely in their resistance to disease. Modern hybrids focus on improving disease resistance over the heirloom plants.

Various forms of mildew and blight are common tomato afflictions, which is why tomato cultivars are often marked with a combination of letters that refer to specific disease resistance. The most common letters are:

A common tomato disease is tobacco mosaic virus. Handling cigarettes and other infected tobacco products can transmit the virus to tomato plants.[68]

Another particularly dreaded disease is curly top, carried by the beet leafhopper, which interrupts the lifecycle. As the name implies, it has the symptom of making the top leaves of the plant wrinkle up and grow abnormally.[citation needed]

Bacterial wilt is another common disease impacting yield.[69] Wang et al., 2019 found phage combination therapies to reduce the impact of bacterial wilt, sometimes by reducing bacterial abundance and sometimes by selecting for resistant but slow growing genetics.[69]

Pests

Some common tomato pests are the tomato bug, stink bugs, cutworms, tomato hornworms and tobacco hornworms, aphids, cabbage loopers, whiteflies, tomato fruitworms, flea beetles, red spider mite, slugs,[70] and Colorado potato beetles. The tomato russet mite, Aculops lycopersici, feeds on foliage and young fruit of tomato plants, causing shrivelling and necrosis of leaves, flowers, and fruit, possibly killing the plant.[71]

After an insect attack tomato plants produce systemin, a plant peptide hormone. Systemin activates defensive mechanisms, such as the production of protease inhibitors to slow the growth of insects. The hormone was first identified in tomatoes, but similar proteins have been identified in other species since.[72]

Other disorders

Although not a disease as such, irregular supplies of water can cause growing or ripening fruit to split. Besides cosmetic damage, the splits may allow decay to start, although growing fruits have some ability to heal after a split. In addition, a deformity called cat-facing can be caused by pests, temperature stress, or poor soil conditions. Affected fruit usually remains edible, but its appearance may be unsightly.

Companion plants

Tomatoes serve, or are served by, a large variety of companion plants.

The devastating tomato hornworm has a major predator in various parasitic wasps, whose larvae devour the hornworm, but whose adult form drinks nectar from tiny-flowered plants like umbellifers. Several species of umbellifer are therefore often grown with tomato plants, including parsley, Queen Anne's lace, and occasionally dill. These also attract predatory flies that attack various tomato pests.[73]

Borage is thought to repel the tomato hornworm moth.[74]

Basil is popularly recommended as a companion plant to the tomato. Common claims are that basil may deter pests or improve tomato flavor. However, in double-blind taste tests, basil did not significantly affect the taste of tomatoes when planted adjacent to them.[75][76]

Tomato plants can protect asparagus from asparagus beetles, because they contain solanine that kills this pest,[citation needed] while asparagus plants contain asparagusic acid that repels nematodes known to attack tomato plants.[77] Marigolds also repel nematodes.[78][79][80]

Pollination

 
Tomato flower in full bloom, next to a young, green developing fruit
 
Flowers and ripe fruit can be present simultaneously.

In the wild, original state, tomatoes required cross-pollination; they were much more self-incompatible than domestic cultivars. As a floral device to reduce selfing, the pistil of wild tomatoes extends farther out of the flower than today's cultivars. The stamens were, and remain, entirely within the closed corolla.

As tomatoes were moved from their native areas, their traditional pollinators (probably a species of halictid bee) did not move with them.[81] The trait of self-fertility became an advantage, and domestic cultivars of tomato have been selected to maximize this trait.[81]

This is not the same as self-pollination, despite the common claim that tomatoes do so. That tomatoes pollinate themselves poorly without outside aid is clearly shown in greenhouse situations, where pollination must be aided by artificial wind, vibration of the plants (one brand of vibrator is a wand called an "electric bee" that is used manually), or more often today, by cultured bumblebees.[82] The anther of a tomato flower is shaped like a hollow tube, with the pollen produced within the structure, rather than on the surface, as in most species. The pollen moves through pores in the anther, but very little pollen is shed without some kind of externally-induced motion. The ideal vibratory frequencies to release pollen grains are provided by an insect, such as a bumblebee, or the original wild halictid pollinator, capable of engaging in a behavior known as buzz pollination, which honey bees cannot perform. In an outdoors setting, wind or animals usually provide sufficient motion to produce commercially viable crops.[citation needed]

Fruit formation

Pollination and fruit formation depend on meiosis. Meiosis is central to the processes by which diploid microspore mother cells within the anther give rise to haploid pollen grains, and megaspore mother cells in ovules that are contained within the ovary give rise to haploid nuclei. Union of haploid nuclei from pollen and ovule (fertilization) can occur either by self- or cross-pollination. Fertilization leads to the formation of a diploid zygote that can then develop into an embryo within the emerging seed. Repeated fertilizations within the ovary are accompanied by maturation of the ovary to form the tomato fruit.

Homologs of the recA gene, including rad51, play a key role in homologous recombinational repair of DNA during meiosis. A rad51 homolog is present in the anther of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum),[83] suggesting that recombinational repair occurs during meiosis in tomato.

Hydroponic and greenhouse cultivation

 
Greenhouse cultivation in Andalusia

Tomatoes are often grown in greenhouses in cooler climates, and cultivars such as the British 'Moneymaker' and a number of cultivars grown in Siberia are specifically bred for indoor growing. In more temperate climates, it is not uncommon to start seeds in greenhouses during the late winter for future transplant.

Greenhouse tomato production in large-acreage commercial greenhouses and owner-operator stand-alone or multiple-bay greenhouses is on the increase, providing fruit during those times of the year when field-grown fruit is not readily available. Smaller sized fruit (cherry and grape), or cluster tomatoes (fruit-on-the-vine) are the fruit of choice for the large commercial greenhouse operators while the beefsteak varieties are the choice of owner-operator growers.[84]

Hydroponic technique is often used in hostile growing environments, as well as high-density plantings.

Picking and ripening

To facilitate transportation and storage, tomatoes are often picked unripe (green) and ripened in storage with ethylene.[85]

A machine-harvestable variety of tomato (the "square tomato") was developed in the 1950s by University of California, Davis's Gordie C. Hanna, which, in combination with the development of a suitable harvester, revolutionized the tomato-growing industry. This type of tomato is grown commercially near plants that process and can tomatoes, tomato sauce, and tomato paste. They are harvested when ripe and are flavorful when picked. They are harvested 24 hours a day, seven days a week during a 12- to 14-week season, and immediately transported to packing plants, which operate on the same schedule. California is a center of this sort of commercial tomato production and produces about a third of the processed tomatoes produced in the world.[86]

In 1994, Calgene introduced a genetically modified tomato called the FlavrSavr, which could be vine ripened without compromising shelf life. However, the product was not commercially successful, and was sold only until 1997.[87]

Yield

The world dedicated 4.8 million hectares in 2012 for tomato cultivation and the total production was about 161.8 million tonnes.[88] The average world farm yield for tomato was 33.6 tonnes per hectare in 2012.[88]

Tomato farms in the Netherlands were the most productive in 2012, with a nationwide average of 476 tonnes per hectare, followed by Belgium (463 tonnes per hectare) and Iceland (429 tonnes per hectare).[89]

Records

 
The "tomato tree" as seen by guests on the Living with the Land boat ride at Epcot, Lake Buena Vista, Florida

As of 2008, the heaviest tomato harvested weighed 3.51 kg (7 lb 12 oz), was of the cultivar "Delicious", and was grown by Gordon Graham of Edmond, Oklahoma in 1986.[90][unreliable source?] The largest tomato plant grown was of the cultivar "Sungold" and reached 19.8 m (65 ft) in length, grown by Nutriculture Ltd (UK) of Mawdesley, Lancashire, UK, in 2000.[91]

A massive "tomato tree" growing inside the Walt Disney World Resort's experimental greenhouses in Lake Buena Vista, Florida may have been the largest single tomato plant in the world. The plant has been recognized as a Guinness World Record Holder, with a harvest of more than 32,000 tomatoes and a total weight of 522 kg (1,151 lb).[92] It yielded thousands of tomatoes at one time from a single vine. Yong Huang, Epcot's manager of agricultural science, discovered the unique plant in Beijing, China. Huang brought its seeds to Epcot and created the specialized greenhouse for the fruit to grow. The vine grew golf ball-sized tomatoes, which were served at Walt Disney World restaurants.[93] The tree developed a disease and was removed in April 2010 after about 13 months of life.[original research]

Production

Tomato production – 2021
Producer (Millions
of tonnes)
  China
67.5
  India
21.2
  European Union
17.9
  Turkey
13.1
  United States
10.5
  Egypt
6.3
  Mexico
4.1
  Brazil
3.7
  Nigeria
3.6
  Iran
3.4
World
189.1
Source: FAOSTAT of the United Nations[94]

In 2021, world production of tomatoes was 189 million tonnes, with China accounting for 35% of the total, followed by India, the European Union, Turkey, and the United States as major producers (see table).

Toxicity

The leaves, stem, and green unripe fruit of the tomato plant contain small amounts of the alkaloid tomatine, whose effect on humans has not been studied.[9] They also contain small amounts of solanine, a toxic alkaloid found in potato leaves and other plants in the nightshade family.[95][96] However, solanine concentrations in foliage and green fruit are generally too small to be dangerous unless large amounts are consumed—for example, as greens.

Small amounts of tomato foliage are sometimes used for flavoring without ill effect, and the green fruit of unripe red tomato varieties is sometimes used for cooking, particularly as fried green tomatoes.[9] There are also tomato varieties with fully ripe fruit that is still green. Compared to potatoes, the amount of solanine in unripe green or fully ripe tomatoes is low. However, even in the case of potatoes, while solanine poisoning resulting from dosages several times the normal human consumption has been demonstrated, actual cases of poisoning from excessive consumption of potatoes are rare.[96]

Tomato plants can be toxic to dogs if they eat large amounts of the fruit, or chew plant material.[97]

Salmonella

Tomatoes were linked to seven Salmonella outbreaks between 1990 and 2005,[98] and may have been the cause of a salmonellosis outbreak causing 172 illnesses in 18 US states in 2006.[99] The 2008 United States salmonellosis outbreak caused the temporary removal of tomatoes from stores and restaurants across the United States and parts of Canada,[100] although other foods, including jalapeño and serrano peppers, may have been involved.

Uses

Culinary

 
Tomatoes stuffed with hard-boiled egg and Parmesan cheese.

Though it is botanically a berry, a subset of fruit, the tomato is considered a vegetable for culinary purposes. It has a strong savoury umami flavour, rather than significant sweetness (see above). Chef Heston Blumenthal observed that the inner pulp had more flavour that the flesh; a subsequent academic study in which he participated confirmed that the pulp had up to eleven times more glutamic acid, which carries umami flavour, than the flesh.[101]

Although tomatoes originated in the Americas, the tomato is now grown and eaten around the world. It is used in diverse ways, including raw in salads or in slices, stewed, incorporated into a wide variety of dishes, or processed into ketchup or tomato soup. Unripe green tomatoes can also be breaded and fried, used to make salsa, or pickled. Tomato juice is sold as a drink, and is used in cocktails such as the Bloody Mary.

Tomatoes have become extensively used in Mediterranean cuisine as a key ingredient in pizza and many pasta sauces.[6] Tomatoes are also used in Spanish and Catalan dishes, such as gazpacho and pa amb tomàquet.

Storage

Tomatoes keep best unwashed at room temperature and out of direct sunlight. It is not recommended to refrigerate them as they take a mealy texture and lose flavour.[102][103]

Storing stem down can prolong shelf life,[104] as it may keep from rotting too quickly.[105]

Unripe tomatoes can be kept in a paper bag to ripen.[106]

Tomatoes are easy to preserve whole, chopped, or as tomato sauce or concentrated paste by home canning. The fruit can also be preserved by drying, sometimes in the sun where climate permits, and sold either in bags or in jars with oil.

Nutrition

Red tomatoes, raw
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy74 kJ (18 kcal)
3.9 g
Sugars2.6 g
Dietary fiber1.2 g
0.2 g
0.9 g
VitaminsQuantity
%DV
Vitamin A equiv.
5%
42 μg
4%
449 μg
123 μg
Thiamine (B1)
3%
0.037 mg
Riboflavin (B2)
2%
0.019 mg
Niacin (B3)
4%
0.594 mg
Pantothenic acid (B5)
2%
0.089 mg
Vitamin B6
6%
0.08 mg
Folate (B9)
4%
15 μg
Vitamin C
17%
14 mg
Vitamin E
4%
0.54 mg
Vitamin K
8%
7.9 μg
MineralsQuantity
%DV
Calcium
1%
10 mg
Iron
2%
0.27 mg
Magnesium
3%
11 mg
Manganese
5%
0.114 mg
Phosphorus
3%
24 mg
Potassium
5%
237 mg
Sodium
0%
5 mg
Zinc
2%
0.17 mg
Other constituentsQuantity
Water94.5 g
Lycopene2573 μg

Link to USDA Database entry
Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA FoodData Central

A raw tomato is 95% water, contains 4% carbohydrates, and has less than 1% each of fat and protein (see table). 100 grams (3.5 oz) of raw tomatoes supply 18 kilocalories and are a moderate source of vitamin C (17% of the Daily Value), but otherwise have low micronutrient content (table).

Research

An extensive review in 2022 found and specified many health benefits associated with eating tomatoes, and some risks, due both to external factors (pesticides, microbial contamination, heavy metals from contaminated soil), and intrinsic; for example, lycopene, at least as a supplement, has anti-platelet effect undesirable for patients on blood thinners and similar medications. The review concludes that "the synergistic effects of all tomato constituents are likely to outweigh the benefits of tomato's individual constituents, such as lycopene".[107]

Studies in 2014 and 2015 did not find conclusive evidence to indicate that the lycopene in tomatoes or in supplements affects the onset of cardiovascular diseases or cancer.[108][109]

In the United States, supposed health benefits of consuming tomatoes, tomato products or lycopene to affect cancer cannot be mentioned on packaged food products without a qualified health claim statement.[110] In a scientific review of potential claims for lycopene favorably affecting DNA, skin exposed to ultraviolet radiation, heart function and vision, the European Food Safety Authority concluded in 2011 that the evidence for lycopene having any of these effects was inconclusive.[111]

Host plant

The potato tuber moth (Phthorimaea operculella) is an oligophagous insect that prefers to feed on plants of the family Solanaceae such as tomato plants. Female P. operculella use the leaves to lay their eggs and the hatched larvae will eat away at the mesophyll of the leaf.[112]

Tomato forms a mutually beneficial symbiosis with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi such as Rhizophagus irregularis. Scientists use tomato as a model species for investigating this symbiosis.[113]

In popular culture

The town of Buñol, Spain, annually celebrates La Tomatina, a festival centered on an enormous tomato fight. On 30 August 2007, 40,000 Spaniards gathered to throw 115,000 kg (254,000 lb) of tomatoes at each other in the festival.[114]

 
Tomatoes thrown from a truck during the Spanish Tomatina festival

Several US states have adopted the tomato as a state fruit or vegetable (see above). Tomatoes have been designated the state vegetable of New Jersey. Arkansas took both sides by declaring the South Arkansas Vine Ripe Pink Tomato both the state fruit and the state vegetable in the same law, citing both its culinary and botanical classifications. In 2009, the state of Ohio passed a law making the tomato the state's official fruit. Tomato juice has been the official beverage of Ohio since 1965. Alexander W. Livingston, of Reynoldsburg, Ohio, played a large part in popularizing the tomato in the late 19th century; his efforts are commemorated in Reynoldsburg with an annual Tomato Festival.

Flavr Savr was the first commercially grown genetically engineered food licensed for human consumption.[115]

 
Tomatkarnevalen (The Tomato Festival) in Närpes, Finland, in 1993

Tomatoes are a popular "nonlethal" throwing weapon in mass protests, and there was a common tradition of throwing rotten tomatoes at bad performers on a stage during the 19th century; today this is usually referenced as a metaphor. Embracing it for this protest connotation, the Dutch Socialist party adopted the tomato as their logo.

The US city of Reynoldsburg, Ohio calls itself "The Birthplace of the Tomato", claiming the first commercial variety of tomato was bred there in the 19th century.[28]

"Rotten Tomatoes" is an American review-aggregation website for film and television. The name "Rotten Tomatoes" derives from the practice of audiences throwing rotten tomatoes when disapproving of a poor stage performance.

Gallery

See also

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  107. ^ Collins, Edward J.; Bowyer, Cressida; Tsouza, Audrey; Chopra, Mridula (4 February 2022). "Tomatoes: An Extensive Review of the Associated Health Impacts of Tomatoes and Factors That Can Affect Their Cultivation". Biology. MDPI AG. 11 (2): 239. doi:10.3390/biology11020239. ISSN 2079-7737. PMC 8869745.
  108. ^ Burton-Freeman B, Sesso HD (2014). "Whole food versus supplement: comparing the clinical evidence of tomato intake and lycopene supplementation on cardiovascular risk factors". Adv Nutr. 5 (5): 457–85. doi:10.3945/an.114.005231. PMC 4188219. PMID 25469376.
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  111. ^ European Food Safety Authority (2011). "Scientific Opinion on the substantiation of health claims related to lycopene and protection of DNA, proteins and lipids from oxidative damage (ID 1608, 1609, 1611, 1662, 1663, 1664, 1899, 1942, 2081, 2082, 2142, 2374), protection of the skin from UV-induced (including photo-oxidative) damage (ID 1259, 1607, 1665, 2143, 2262, 2373), contribution to normal cardiac function (ID 1610, 2372), and maintenance of normal vision (ID 1827) pursuant to Article 13(1) of Regulation (EC) No 1924/2006". EFSA Journal. 9 (4): 2031. doi:10.2903/j.efsa.2011.2031.
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  113. ^ Buendia, Luis; Wang, Tongming; Girardin, Ariane; Lefebvre, Benoit (April 2016). "The LysM receptor‐like kinase Sl LYK 10 regulates the arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis in tomato". New Phytologist. 210 (1): 184–195. doi:10.1111/nph.13753. PMID 26612325.
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Further reading

  • David Gentilcore. Pomodoro! A History of the Tomato in Italy (Columbia University Press, 2010), scholarly history
  • Tieman, D; Bliss, P; McIntyre, LM; Blandon-Ubeda, A; Bies, D; Odabasi, AZ; Rodríguez, GR; van der Knaap, E; Taylor, MG; Goulet, C; Mageroy, MH; Snyder, DJ; Colquhoun, T; Moskowitz, H; Clark, DG; Sims, C; Bartoshuk, L; Klee, HJ (5 June 2012). "The Chemical Interactions Underlying Tomato Flavor Preferences". Current Biology. 22 (11): 1035–1039. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2012.04.016. PMID 22633806.

External links

  • Tomato Genome Sequencing Project – Sequencing of the twelve tomato chromosomes.
  • Tomato core collection database – Phenotypes and images of 7,000 tomato cultivars

tomato, other, uses, disambiguation, tomato, ɑː, edible, berry, plant, solanum, lycopersicum, commonly, known, tomato, plant, species, originated, western, south, america, mexico, central, america, nahuatl, word, tomatl, gave, rise, spanish, word, tomate, from. For other uses see Tomato disambiguation The tomato t e m eɪ t oʊ or t e m ɑː t oʊ is the edible berry of the plant Solanum lycopersicum 1 2 commonly known as the tomato plant The species originated in western South America Mexico and Central America 2 3 The Nahuatl word tomatl gave rise to the Spanish word tomate from which the English word tomato derived 3 4 Its domestication and use as a cultivated food may have originated with the indigenous peoples of Mexico 2 5 The Aztecs used tomatoes in their cooking at the time of the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire and after the Spanish encountered the tomato for the first time after their contact with the Aztecs they brought the plant to Europe in a widespread transfer of plants known as the Columbian exchange From there the tomato was introduced to other parts of the European colonized world during the 16th century 2 TomatoScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade AsteridsOrder SolanalesFamily SolanaceaeGenus SolanumSpecies S lycopersicumBinomial nameSolanum lycopersicumL Synonyms 1 Lycopersicon lycopersicum L H Karst Lycopersicon esculentum Mill Tomatoes whole halved vertically and halved horizontallyTomatoes are a significant source of umami flavor 6 They are consumed in diverse ways raw or cooked and in many dishes sauces salads and drinks While tomatoes are fruits botanically classified as berries they are commonly used culinarily as a vegetable ingredient or side dish 3 Numerous varieties of the tomato plant are widely grown in temperate climates across the world with greenhouses allowing for the production of tomatoes throughout all seasons of the year Tomato plants typically grow to 1 3 meters 3 10 ft in height They are vines that have a weak stem that sprawls and typically needs support 2 Indeterminate tomato plants are perennials in their native habitat but are cultivated as annuals Determinate or bush plants are annuals that stop growing at a certain height and produce a crop all at once The size of the tomato varies according to the cultivar with a range of 1 10 cm 1 2 4 in in width 2 Grape tomatoes on the vine for sale at a marketContents 1 History 1 1 Mesoamerica 1 2 Spanish distribution 1 3 China 1 4 Italy 1 5 Britain 1 6 Middle East and North Africa 1 7 United States 1 8 Modern commercial varieties 1 9 Etymology 1 9 1 Pronunciation 2 Botany 2 1 Description 2 2 Classification 2 3 Genetics and genetic modification 2 3 1 Genome 2 3 2 Genetic modification 2 4 Breeding 2 5 Fruit versus vegetable 3 Cultivation 3 1 Diseases 3 2 Pests 3 3 Other disorders 3 4 Companion plants 3 5 Pollination 3 6 Fruit formation 3 7 Hydroponic and greenhouse cultivation 3 8 Picking and ripening 3 9 Yield 3 10 Records 4 Production 5 Toxicity 5 1 Salmonella 6 Uses 6 1 Culinary 6 2 Storage 7 Nutrition 7 1 Research 8 Host plant 9 In popular culture 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory nbsp Solanum lycopersicum var lycopersicum the oldest surviving tomato fruit and leaves Page from the En Tibi Herbarium 1558 Naturalis Leiden The wild ancestor of the tomato Solanum pimpinellifolium is native to western South America 7 These wild versions were the size of peas 7 The first evidence of domestication points to the Aztecs and other peoples in Mesoamerica who used the fruit fresh and in their cooking The Spanish first introduced tomatoes to Europe where they became used in Spanish food In France Italy and northern Europe the tomato was initially grown as an ornamental plant It was regarded with suspicion as a food because botanists recognized it as a nightshade a relative of the poisonous belladonna 3 This was exacerbated by the interaction of the tomato s acidic juice with pewter plates 8 The leaves and fruit contain tomatine which in large quantities would be toxic However the ripe fruit contains a much lower amount of tomatine than the immature fruit 9 Mesoamerica The exact date of domestication is unknown by 500 BC it was already being cultivated in southern Mexico and probably other areas 10 13 The Pueblo people are thought to have believed that those who witnessed the ingestion of tomato seeds were blessed with powers of divination 11 The large lumpy variety of tomato a mutation from a smoother smaller fruit originated in Mesoamerica and may be the direct ancestor of some modern cultivated tomatoes 10 15 The Aztecs raised several varieties of tomato with red tomatoes called xitomatl and green tomatoes physalis called tomatl tomatillo 12 Bernardino de Sahagun reported seeing a great variety of tomatoes in the Aztec market at Tenochtitlan Mexico City large tomatoes small tomatoes leaf tomatoes sweet tomatoes large serpent tomatoes nipple shaped tomatoes and tomatoes of all colors from the brightest red to the deepest yellow 13 Bernardino de Sahagun mentioned Aztecs cooking various sauces some with and without tomatoes of different sizes serving them in city markets foods sauces hot sauces fried food olla cooked food juices sauces of juices shredded food with chile with squash seeds most likely Cucurbita pepo with tomatoes with smoked chile with hot chile with yellow chile with mild red chile sauce yellow chile sauce hot chile sauce with bird excrement sauce sauce of smoked chile heated sauces bean sauce he sells toasted beans cooked beans mushroom sauce sauce of small squash sauce of large tomatoes sauce of ordinary tomatoes sauce of various kinds of sour herbs avocado sauce 14 Spanish distribution Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortes may have been the first to transfer a small yellow tomato to Europe after he captured the Aztec city of Tenochtitlan now Mexico City in 1521 The earliest discussion of the tomato in European literature appeared in a herbal written in 1544 by Pietro Andrea Mattioli an Italian physician and botanist who suggested that a new type of eggplant had been brought to Italy that was blood red or golden color when mature and could be divided into segments and eaten like an eggplant that is cooked and seasoned with salt black pepper and oil It was not until ten years later that tomatoes were named in print by Mattioli as pomi d oro or golden apples 10 13 After the Spanish colonization of the Americas the Spanish distributed the tomato throughout their colonies in the Caribbean They also took it to the Philippines from where it spread to southeast Asia and then the entire Asian continent The Spanish also brought the tomato to Europe It grew easily in Mediterranean climates and cultivation began in the 1540s It was probably eaten shortly after it was introduced and was certainly being used as food by the early 17th century in Spain China The tomato was introduced to China likely via the Philippines or Macau in the 1500s It was given the name 番茄 fanqie foreign eggplant as the Chinese named many foodstuffs introduced from abroad but referring specifically to early introductions 15 Italy nbsp The San Marzano is a well known plum tomato highly prized for making pizza The recorded history of tomatoes in Italy dates back to at least 31 October 1548 when the house steward of Cosimo de Medici the grand duke of Tuscany wrote to the Medici private secretary informing him that the basket of tomatoes sent from the grand duke s Florentine estate at Torre del Gallo had arrived safely 16 Tomatoes were grown mainly as ornamentals early on after their arrival in Italy For example the Florentine aristocrat Giovanvettorio Soderini wrote how they were to be sought only for their beauty and were grown only in gardens or flower beds The tomato s ability to mutate and create new and different varieties helped contribute to its success and spread throughout Italy However in areas where the climate supported growing tomatoes their habit of growing to the ground suggested low status They were not adopted as a staple of the peasant population because they were not as filling as other fruits already available Additionally both toxic and inedible varieties discouraged many people from attempting to consume or prepare any other varieties 17 In certain areas of Italy such as Florence the fruit was used solely as a tabletop decoration until it was incorporated into the local cuisine in the late 17th or early 18th century 18 The earliest discovered cookbook with tomato recipes was published in Naples in 1692 though the author had apparently obtained these recipes from Spanish sources 10 17 Unique varieties were developed over the next several hundred years for uses such as dried tomatoes sauce tomatoes pizza tomatoes and tomatoes for long term storage These varieties are usually known for their place of origin as much as by a variety name For example Pomodorino del Piennolo del Vesuvio is the hanging tomato of Vesuvius or the well known and highly prized San Marzano plum tomato grown in that region This paragraph needs citation s Britain nbsp Tomatoes for sale in a UK supermarketTomatoes were not grown in England until the 1590s One of the earliest cultivators was John Gerard a barber surgeon Gerard s Herbal published in 1597 and largely plagiarized from continental sources is also one of the earliest discussions of the tomato in England Gerard knew the tomato was eaten in Spain and Italy Nonetheless he believed it was poisonous in fact the plant and raw fruit do have low levels of tomatine but are not generally dangerous see below Gerard s views were influential and the tomato was considered unfit for eating though not necessarily poisonous for many years in Britain and its North American colonies 10 17 However by the mid 18th century tomatoes were widely eaten in Britain and before the end of that century the Encyclopaedia Britannica stated the tomato was in daily use in soups broths and as a garnish They were not part of the average person s diet and though by 1820 they were described as to be seen in great abundance in all our vegetable markets and to be used by all our best cooks reference was made to their cultivation in gardens still for the singularity of their appearance while their use in cooking was associated with exotic Italian or Jewish cuisine 19 For example in Elizabeth Blackwell s A Curious Herbal it is described under the name Love Apple Amoris Pomum as being consumed with oil and vinegar in Italy similar to consumption of cucumbers in the UK 20 Middle East and North Africa The tomato was introduced to cultivation in the Middle East by John Barker British consul in Aleppo c 1799 to 1825 21 22 Nineteenth century descriptions of its consumption are uniformly as an ingredient in a cooked dish In 1881 it is described as only eaten in the region within the last forty years 23 Today the tomato is a critical and ubiquitous part of Middle Eastern cuisine served fresh in salads e g Arab salad Israeli salad Shirazi salad and Turkish salad grilled with kebabs and other dishes made into sauces and so on citation needed United States nbsp Plum cherry and grape tomato varietiesThe earliest reference to tomatoes being grown in British North America is from 1710 when herbalist William Salmon reported seeing them in what is today South Carolina 10 25 They may have been introduced from the Caribbean By the mid 18th century they were cultivated on some Carolina plantations and probably in other parts of the Southeast as well Thomas Jefferson who ate tomatoes in Paris sent some seeds back to America 10 28 Some early American advocates of the culinary use of the tomato included Michele Felice Corne and Robert Gibbon Johnson 24 Many Americans considered tomatoes to be poisonous at this time and in general they were grown more as ornamental plants than as food In 1897 W H Garrison addressed the Medico Legal Society of New York stating The belief was once transmitted that the tomato was sinisterly dangerous He recalled in his youth tomatoes were dubbed love apples or wolf apples and they were shunned as globes of the devil 25 Alexander W Livingston receives much credit for developing numerous varieties of tomato for both home and commercial gardeners 26 Early tomato breeders included Henry Tilden in Iowa and a Dr Hand in Baltimore 27 The U S Department of Agriculture s 1937 yearbook declared that half of the major varieties were a result of the abilities of the Livingstons to evaluate and perpetuate superior material in the tomato Livingston s first breed of tomato the Paragon was introduced in 1870 the beginning of a great tomato culture enterprise in the county In 1875 he introduced the Acme which was said to be involved in the parentage of most of the tomatoes introduced by him and his competitors for the next twenty five years 28 29 When Livingston began his attempts to develop the tomato as a commercial crop his aim had been to grow tomatoes smooth in contour uniform in size and sweet in flavor He eventually developed over seventeen different varieties of the tomato plant 28 Today the crop is grown in every state in the Union 30 Because of the long growing season needed for this heat loving crop several states in the US Sun Belt became major tomato producers particularly Florida and California In California tomatoes are grown under irrigation for both the fresh fruit market and for canning and processing The University of California Davis UC Davis became a major center for research on the tomato The C M Rick Tomato Genetics Resource Center at UC Davis is a gene bank of wild relatives monogenic mutants and miscellaneous genetic stocks of tomato 31 The center is named for the late Dr Charles M Rick a pioneer in tomato genetics research 32 Research on processing tomatoes is also conducted by the California Tomato Research Institute in Escalon California 33 In California growers have used a method of cultivation called dry farming especially with Early Girl tomatoes This technique encourages the plant to send roots deep to find existing moisture in soil that retains moisture such as clayey soil Modern commercial varieties nbsp Yellow cherry tomatoesThe poor taste and lack of sugar in modern garden and commercial tomato varieties resulted from breeding tomatoes to ripen uniformly red This change occurred after discovery of a mutant u phenotype in the mid 20th century so named because the fruits ripened uniformly This was widely cross bred to produce red fruit without the typical green ring around the stem on uncross bred varieties Prior to general introduction of this trait most tomatoes produced more sugar during ripening and were sweeter and more flavorful 34 35 Evidence has been found that 10 20 of the total carbon fixed in the fruit can be produced by photosynthesis in the developing fruit of the normal U phenotype The u genetic mutation encodes a factor that produces defective chloroplasts with lower density in developing fruit resulting in a lighter green colour of unripe fruit and repression of sugars accumulation in the resulting ripe fruit by 10 15 Perhaps more important than their role in photosynthesis the fruit chloroplasts are remodelled during ripening into chlorophyll free chromoplasts that synthesize and accumulate the carotenoids lycopene b carotene and other metabolites that are sensory and nutritional assets of the ripe fruit The potent chloroplasts in the dark green shoulders of the U phenotype are beneficial here but have the disadvantage of leaving green shoulders near the stems of the ripe fruit and even cracked yellow shoulders apparently because of oxidative stress due to overload of the photosynthetic chain in direct sunlight at high temperatures Hence genetic design of a commercial variety that combines the advantages of types u and U requires fine tuning but may be feasible 36 Furthermore breeders of modern tomato cultivars typically strive to produce tomato plants exhibiting improved yield shelf life size and tolerance resistance to various environmental pressures including disease 37 38 However these breeding efforts have yielded unintended negative consequences on various tomato fruit attributes For instance linkage drag is a phenomenon that has been responsible for alterations in the metabolism of the tomato fruit Linkage drag describes the introduction of an undesired trait or allele into a plant during backcrossing This trait allele is physically linked or is very close to the desired allele along the chromosome In introducing the beneficial allele there exists a high likelihood that the poor allele is also incorporated into the plant Thus breeding efforts attempting to enhance certain traits for example larger fruit size have unintentionally altered production of chemicals associated with for instance nutritional value and flavor 37 Breeders have turned to using wild tomato species as a source of alleles for the introduction of beneficial traits into modern tomato varieties For example wild tomato relatives may possess higher amounts of fruit solids which are associated with greater sugar content or resistance to diseases caused by microbes such as resistance towards the early blight pathogen Alternaria solani However this tactic has limitations for the incorporation of certain traits such as pathogen resistance can negatively impact other favorable phenotypes such as fruit production 38 39 Etymology The word tomato comes from the Spanish tomate which in turn comes from the Nahuatl word tomatl ˈtomat ɬ pronunciation meaning swelling fruit 4 also fat water or fat thing 40 The native Mexican tomatillo is tomate When Aztecs started to cultivate the fruit to be larger sweeter and red they called the new variety xitomatl or jitomates pronounced ʃiːˈtomatɬ 2 plump with navel or fat water with navel The specific name lycopersicum from the 1753 book Species Plantarum is of Greek origin lykopersikwn lykopersikon meaning wolf peach citation needed nbsp Bangladeshi tomatoPronunciation The usual pronunciations of tomato are t e ˈ m eɪ t oʊ te MAY toh usual in North American English and t e ˈ m ɑː t oʊ te MAH toh usual in British English 41 The word s dual pronunciations were immortalized in Ira and George Gershwin s 1937 song Let s Call the Whole Thing Off You like p e ˈ t eɪ t oʊ and I like p e ˈ t ɑː t oʊ You like t e ˈ m eɪ t oʊ and I like t e ˈ m ɑː t oʊ and have become a symbol for nitpicking pronunciation disputes citation needed In this capacity it has even become an American and British slang term saying t e ˈ m eɪ t oʊ t e ˈ m ɑː t oʊ when presented with two choices can mean What s the difference or It s all the same to me citation needed BotanyDescription This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Tomato flowerTomato plants are vines initially decumbent typically growing 180 cm 6 ft or more above the ground if supported although erect bush varieties have been bred generally 100 cm 3 ft 3 in tall or shorter Indeterminate types are tender perennials dying annually in temperate climates they are originally native to tropical highlands although they can live up to three years in a greenhouse in some cases Determinate types are annual in all climates citation needed Tomato plants are dicots and grow as a series of branching stems with a terminal bud at the tip that does the actual growing When the tip eventually stops growing whether because of pruning or flowering lateral buds take over and grow into other fully functional vines 42 nbsp An unripe tomato growing on the vineTomato vines are typically pubescent meaning covered with fine short hairs The hairs facilitate the vining process turning into roots wherever the plant is in contact with the ground and moisture especially if the vine s connection to its original root has been damaged or severed citation needed Most tomato plants have compound leaves and are called regular leaf RL plants but some cultivars have simple leaves known as potato leaf PL style because of their resemblance to that particular relative Of RL plants there are variations such as rugose leaves which are deeply grooved and variegated angora leaves which have additional colors where a genetic mutation causes chlorophyll to be excluded from some portions of the leaves 43 unreliable source The leaves are 10 25 cm 4 10 in long odd pinnate with five to nine leaflets on petioles 44 each leaflet up to 8 cm 3 in long with a serrated margin both the stem and leaves are densely glandular hairy citation needed Their flowers appearing on the apical meristem have the anthers fused along the edges forming a column surrounding the pistil s style Flowers in domestic cultivars can be self fertilizing The flowers are 1 2 cm 1 2 3 4 in across yellow with five pointed lobes on the corolla they are borne in a cyme of three to 12 together citation needed Although in culinary terms tomato is regarded as a vegetable its fruit is classified botanically as a berry 45 As a true fruit it develops from the ovary of the plant after fertilization its flesh comprising the pericarp walls The fruit contains hollow spaces full of seeds and moisture called locular cavities These vary among cultivated species according to type Some smaller varieties have two cavities globe shaped varieties typically have three to five beefsteak tomatoes have a great number of smaller cavities while paste tomatoes have very few very small cavities 46 47 48 For propagation the seeds need to come from a mature fruit and must be lightly fermented to remove the gelatinous outer coating and then dried before use 49 Classification In 1753 Linnaeus placed the tomato in the genus Solanum alongside the potato as Solanum lycopersicum In 1768 Philip Miller moved it to its own genus naming it Lycopersicon esculentum 50 The name came into wide use but was technically in breach of the plant naming rules because Linnaeus s species name lycopersicum still had priority Although the name Lycopersicum lycopersicum was suggested by Karsten 1888 it is not used because it violates the International Code of Nomenclature 51 barring the use of tautonyms in botanical nomenclature The corrected name Lycopersicon lycopersicum Nicolson 1974 was technically valid because Miller s genus name and Linnaeus s species name differ in exact spelling but since Lycopersicon esculentum has become so well known it was officially listed as a nomen conservandum in 1983 and would be the correct name for the tomato in classifications which do not place the tomato in the genus Solanum citation needed Genetic evidence has now shown that Linnaeus was correct to put the tomato in the genus Solanum making Solanum lycopersicum the correct name 1 52 Both names however will probably be found in the literature for some time Two of the major reasons for considering the genera separate are the leaf structure tomato leaves are markedly different from any other Solanum and the biochemistry many of the alkaloids common to other Solanum species are conspicuously absent from the tomato On the other hand hybrids of tomato and diploid potato can be created in the lab by somatic fusion and are partially fertile 53 providing evidence of the close relationship between these species Genetics and genetic modification Genome An international consortium of researchers from 10 countries began sequencing the tomato genome in 2004 54 55 A prerelease version of the genome was made available in December 2009 56 The complete genome for the cultivar Heinz 1706 was published on 31 May 2012 in Nature 57 The latest reference genome published in 2021 had 799 MB and encodes 34 384 predicted proteins spread over 12 chromosomes 58 Genetic modification Main article Genetically modified tomato Since many other fruits like strawberries apples melons and bananas share the same characteristics and genes researchers stated the published genome could help to improve food quality food security and reduce costs of all of these fruits 59 The first commercially available genetically modified food was a tomato called Flavr Savr which was engineered to have a longer shelf life 60 However it is no longer commercially available Scientists are continuing to develop tomatoes with new traits not found in natural crops such as increased resistance to pests or environmental stresses or better flavor citation needed Breeding This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Tomato Genetic Resource Center Germplasm Resources Information Network AVRDC and numerous seed banks around the world store seed representing genetic variations of value to modern agriculture These seed stocks are available for legitimate breeding and research efforts While individual breeding efforts can produce useful results the bulk of tomato breeding work is at universities and major agriculture related corporations These efforts have resulted in significant regionally adapted breeding lines and hybrids such as the Mountain series from North Carolina Corporations including Heinz Monsanto BHNSeed and Bejoseed have breeding programs that attempt to improve production size shape color flavor disease tolerance pest tolerance nutritional value and numerous other traits citation needed Fruit versus vegetable See also Vegetable Terminology nbsp Tomatoes are considered a fruit or vegetable depending on context According to Encyclopedia Britannica tomatoes are a fruit labeled in grocery stores as a vegetable due to their taste and culinary purposes 3 Botanically a tomato is a fruit a berry consisting of the ovary together with its seeds of a flowering plant 61 However the tomato is considered a culinary vegetable because it has a much lower sugar content than culinary fruits because it is more savoury umami than sweet it is typically served as part of a salad or main course of a meal rather than as a dessert 62 Tomatoes are not the only food source with this ambiguity bell peppers cucumbers green beans aubergines eggplants avocados and squashes of all kinds such as courgettes zucchini and pumpkins are all botanically fruit yet cooked as vegetables 63 The confusion on whether tomatoes are fruits or vegetables has led to legal dispute in the United States In 1887 U S tariff laws that imposed a duty on vegetables but not on fruit caused the tomato s status to become a matter of legal importance In Nix v Hedden the U S Supreme Court settled the tariff controversy on 10 May 1893 by declaring that the tomato is a vegetable based on the popular definition that classifies vegetables by use they are generally served with dinner and not dessert 64 The holding of this case applies only to the interpretation of the Tariff of 1883 and the court did not purport to reclassify the tomato for botanical or other purposes CultivationThe tomato is grown worldwide for its edible fruits with thousands of cultivars 65 A fertilizer with an NPK ratio of 5 10 10 is often sold as tomato fertilizer or vegetable fertilizer citation needed although manure and compost are also used citation needed On average there are 150 000 seeds in a pound of tomato seeds 66 Diseases For a more comprehensive list see List of tomato diseases nbsp Tomato fruitworm feeding on unripe tomato nbsp Tomato bug feeding on tomato plant sap nbsp A split heirloom tomato caused by fluctuation in water availabilityTomato cultivars vary widely in their resistance to disease Modern hybrids focus on improving disease resistance over the heirloom plants Various forms of mildew and blight are common tomato afflictions which is why tomato cultivars are often marked with a combination of letters that refer to specific disease resistance The most common letters are LB late blight 67 V verticillium wilt F fusarium wilt strain I FF fusarium wilt strain I and II N nematodes T tobacco mosaic virus and A alternaria A common tomato disease is tobacco mosaic virus Handling cigarettes and other infected tobacco products can transmit the virus to tomato plants 68 Another particularly dreaded disease is curly top carried by the beet leafhopper which interrupts the lifecycle As the name implies it has the symptom of making the top leaves of the plant wrinkle up and grow abnormally citation needed Bacterial wilt is another common disease impacting yield 69 Wang et al 2019 found phage combination therapies to reduce the impact of bacterial wilt sometimes by reducing bacterial abundance and sometimes by selecting for resistant but slow growing genetics 69 Pests Some common tomato pests are the tomato bug stink bugs cutworms tomato hornworms and tobacco hornworms aphids cabbage loopers whiteflies tomato fruitworms flea beetles red spider mite slugs 70 and Colorado potato beetles The tomato russet mite Aculops lycopersici feeds on foliage and young fruit of tomato plants causing shrivelling and necrosis of leaves flowers and fruit possibly killing the plant 71 After an insect attack tomato plants produce systemin a plant peptide hormone Systemin activates defensive mechanisms such as the production of protease inhibitors to slow the growth of insects The hormone was first identified in tomatoes but similar proteins have been identified in other species since 72 Other disorders Although not a disease as such irregular supplies of water can cause growing or ripening fruit to split Besides cosmetic damage the splits may allow decay to start although growing fruits have some ability to heal after a split In addition a deformity called cat facing can be caused by pests temperature stress or poor soil conditions Affected fruit usually remains edible but its appearance may be unsightly Companion plants See also List of companion plants and List of beneficial weeds Tomatoes serve or are served by a large variety of companion plants The devastating tomato hornworm has a major predator in various parasitic wasps whose larvae devour the hornworm but whose adult form drinks nectar from tiny flowered plants like umbellifers Several species of umbellifer are therefore often grown with tomato plants including parsley Queen Anne s lace and occasionally dill These also attract predatory flies that attack various tomato pests 73 Borage is thought to repel the tomato hornworm moth 74 Basil is popularly recommended as a companion plant to the tomato Common claims are that basil may deter pests or improve tomato flavor However in double blind taste tests basil did not significantly affect the taste of tomatoes when planted adjacent to them 75 76 Tomato plants can protect asparagus from asparagus beetles because they contain solanine that kills this pest citation needed while asparagus plants contain asparagusic acid that repels nematodes known to attack tomato plants 77 Marigolds also repel nematodes 78 79 80 Pollination nbsp Tomato flower in full bloom next to a young green developing fruit nbsp Flowers and ripe fruit can be present simultaneously In the wild original state tomatoes required cross pollination they were much more self incompatible than domestic cultivars As a floral device to reduce selfing the pistil of wild tomatoes extends farther out of the flower than today s cultivars The stamens were and remain entirely within the closed corolla As tomatoes were moved from their native areas their traditional pollinators probably a species of halictid bee did not move with them 81 The trait of self fertility became an advantage and domestic cultivars of tomato have been selected to maximize this trait 81 This is not the same as self pollination despite the common claim that tomatoes do so That tomatoes pollinate themselves poorly without outside aid is clearly shown in greenhouse situations where pollination must be aided by artificial wind vibration of the plants one brand of vibrator is a wand called an electric bee that is used manually or more often today by cultured bumblebees 82 The anther of a tomato flower is shaped like a hollow tube with the pollen produced within the structure rather than on the surface as in most species The pollen moves through pores in the anther but very little pollen is shed without some kind of externally induced motion The ideal vibratory frequencies to release pollen grains are provided by an insect such as a bumblebee or the original wild halictid pollinator capable of engaging in a behavior known as buzz pollination which honey bees cannot perform In an outdoors setting wind or animals usually provide sufficient motion to produce commercially viable crops citation needed Fruit formation Pollination and fruit formation depend on meiosis Meiosis is central to the processes by which diploid microspore mother cells within the anther give rise to haploid pollen grains and megaspore mother cells in ovules that are contained within the ovary give rise to haploid nuclei Union of haploid nuclei from pollen and ovule fertilization can occur either by self or cross pollination Fertilization leads to the formation of a diploid zygote that can then develop into an embryo within the emerging seed Repeated fertilizations within the ovary are accompanied by maturation of the ovary to form the tomato fruit Homologs of the recA gene including rad51 play a key role in homologous recombinational repair of DNA during meiosis A rad51 homolog is present in the anther of tomato Lycopersicon esculentum 83 suggesting that recombinational repair occurs during meiosis in tomato Hydroponic and greenhouse cultivation nbsp Greenhouse cultivation in AndalusiaTomatoes are often grown in greenhouses in cooler climates and cultivars such as the British Moneymaker and a number of cultivars grown in Siberia are specifically bred for indoor growing In more temperate climates it is not uncommon to start seeds in greenhouses during the late winter for future transplant Greenhouse tomato production in large acreage commercial greenhouses and owner operator stand alone or multiple bay greenhouses is on the increase providing fruit during those times of the year when field grown fruit is not readily available Smaller sized fruit cherry and grape or cluster tomatoes fruit on the vine are the fruit of choice for the large commercial greenhouse operators while the beefsteak varieties are the choice of owner operator growers 84 Hydroponic technique is often used in hostile growing environments as well as high density plantings Picking and ripening To facilitate transportation and storage tomatoes are often picked unripe green and ripened in storage with ethylene 85 A machine harvestable variety of tomato the square tomato was developed in the 1950s by University of California Davis s Gordie C Hanna which in combination with the development of a suitable harvester revolutionized the tomato growing industry This type of tomato is grown commercially near plants that process and can tomatoes tomato sauce and tomato paste They are harvested when ripe and are flavorful when picked They are harvested 24 hours a day seven days a week during a 12 to 14 week season and immediately transported to packing plants which operate on the same schedule California is a center of this sort of commercial tomato production and produces about a third of the processed tomatoes produced in the world 86 In 1994 Calgene introduced a genetically modified tomato called the FlavrSavr which could be vine ripened without compromising shelf life However the product was not commercially successful and was sold only until 1997 87 Yield The world dedicated 4 8 million hectares in 2012 for tomato cultivation and the total production was about 161 8 million tonnes 88 The average world farm yield for tomato was 33 6 tonnes per hectare in 2012 88 Tomato farms in the Netherlands were the most productive in 2012 with a nationwide average of 476 tonnes per hectare followed by Belgium 463 tonnes per hectare and Iceland 429 tonnes per hectare 89 Records nbsp The tomato tree as seen by guests on the Living with the Land boat ride at Epcot Lake Buena Vista FloridaAs of 2008 update the heaviest tomato harvested weighed 3 51 kg 7 lb 12 oz was of the cultivar Delicious and was grown by Gordon Graham of Edmond Oklahoma in 1986 90 unreliable source The largest tomato plant grown was of the cultivar Sungold and reached 19 8 m 65 ft in length grown by Nutriculture Ltd UK of Mawdesley Lancashire UK in 2000 91 A massive tomato tree growing inside the Walt Disney World Resort s experimental greenhouses in Lake Buena Vista Florida may have been the largest single tomato plant in the world The plant has been recognized as a Guinness World Record Holder with a harvest of more than 32 000 tomatoes and a total weight of 522 kg 1 151 lb 92 It yielded thousands of tomatoes at one time from a single vine Yong Huang Epcot s manager of agricultural science discovered the unique plant in Beijing China Huang brought its seeds to Epcot and created the specialized greenhouse for the fruit to grow The vine grew golf ball sized tomatoes which were served at Walt Disney World restaurants 93 The tree developed a disease and was removed in April 2010 after about 13 months of life original research nbsp Tomato plants 7 days after planting nbsp Tomato seedlings growing indoors nbsp 27 days after planting nbsp 52 day old plant first fruits nbsp Tomatoes being collected from the field Maharashtra IndiaProductionTomato production 2021Producer Millions of tonnes nbsp China 67 5 nbsp India 21 2 nbsp European Union 17 9 nbsp Turkey 13 1 nbsp United States 10 5 nbsp Egypt 6 3 nbsp Mexico 4 1 nbsp Brazil 3 7 nbsp Nigeria 3 6 nbsp Iran 3 4World 189 1Source FAOSTAT of the United Nations 94 In 2021 world production of tomatoes was 189 million tonnes with China accounting for 35 of the total followed by India the European Union Turkey and the United States as major producers see table ToxicityThe leaves stem and green unripe fruit of the tomato plant contain small amounts of the alkaloid tomatine whose effect on humans has not been studied 9 They also contain small amounts of solanine a toxic alkaloid found in potato leaves and other plants in the nightshade family 95 96 However solanine concentrations in foliage and green fruit are generally too small to be dangerous unless large amounts are consumed for example as greens Small amounts of tomato foliage are sometimes used for flavoring without ill effect and the green fruit of unripe red tomato varieties is sometimes used for cooking particularly as fried green tomatoes 9 There are also tomato varieties with fully ripe fruit that is still green Compared to potatoes the amount of solanine in unripe green or fully ripe tomatoes is low However even in the case of potatoes while solanine poisoning resulting from dosages several times the normal human consumption has been demonstrated actual cases of poisoning from excessive consumption of potatoes are rare 96 Tomato plants can be toxic to dogs if they eat large amounts of the fruit or chew plant material 97 Salmonella Tomatoes were linked to seven Salmonella outbreaks between 1990 and 2005 98 and may have been the cause of a salmonellosis outbreak causing 172 illnesses in 18 US states in 2006 99 The 2008 United States salmonellosis outbreak caused the temporary removal of tomatoes from stores and restaurants across the United States and parts of Canada 100 although other foods including jalapeno and serrano peppers may have been involved UsesCulinary nbsp Tomatoes stuffed with hard boiled egg and Parmesan cheese Though it is botanically a berry a subset of fruit the tomato is considered a vegetable for culinary purposes It has a strong savoury umami flavour rather than significant sweetness see above Chef Heston Blumenthal observed that the inner pulp had more flavour that the flesh a subsequent academic study in which he participated confirmed that the pulp had up to eleven times more glutamic acid which carries umami flavour than the flesh 101 Although tomatoes originated in the Americas the tomato is now grown and eaten around the world It is used in diverse ways including raw in salads or in slices stewed incorporated into a wide variety of dishes or processed into ketchup or tomato soup Unripe green tomatoes can also be breaded and fried used to make salsa or pickled Tomato juice is sold as a drink and is used in cocktails such as the Bloody Mary Tomatoes have become extensively used in Mediterranean cuisine as a key ingredient in pizza and many pasta sauces 6 Tomatoes are also used in Spanish and Catalan dishes such as gazpacho and pa amb tomaquet Storage Tomatoes keep best unwashed at room temperature and out of direct sunlight It is not recommended to refrigerate them as they take a mealy texture and lose flavour 102 103 Storing stem down can prolong shelf life 104 as it may keep from rotting too quickly 105 Unripe tomatoes can be kept in a paper bag to ripen 106 Tomatoes are easy to preserve whole chopped or as tomato sauce or concentrated paste by home canning The fruit can also be preserved by drying sometimes in the sun where climate permits and sold either in bags or in jars with oil NutritionRed tomatoes rawNutritional value per 100 g 3 5 oz Energy74 kJ 18 kcal Carbohydrates3 9 gSugars2 6 gDietary fiber1 2 gFat0 2 gProtein0 9 gVitaminsQuantity DV Vitamin A equiv beta Carotenelutein zeaxanthin5 42 mg4 449 mg123 mgThiamine B1 3 0 037 mgRiboflavin B2 2 0 019 mgNiacin B3 4 0 594 mgPantothenic acid B5 2 0 089 mgVitamin B66 0 08 mgFolate B9 4 15 mgVitamin C17 14 mgVitamin E4 0 54 mgVitamin K8 7 9 mgMineralsQuantity DV Calcium1 10 mgIron2 0 27 mgMagnesium3 11 mgManganese5 0 114 mgPhosphorus3 24 mgPotassium5 237 mgSodium0 5 mgZinc2 0 17 mgOther constituentsQuantityWater94 5 gLycopene2573 mgLink to USDA Database entryUnits mg micrograms mg milligrams IU International units Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults Source USDA FoodData CentralA raw tomato is 95 water contains 4 carbohydrates and has less than 1 each of fat and protein see table 100 grams 3 5 oz of raw tomatoes supply 18 kilocalories and are a moderate source of vitamin C 17 of the Daily Value but otherwise have low micronutrient content table Research An extensive review in 2022 found and specified many health benefits associated with eating tomatoes and some risks due both to external factors pesticides microbial contamination heavy metals from contaminated soil and intrinsic for example lycopene at least as a supplement has anti platelet effect undesirable for patients on blood thinners and similar medications The review concludes that the synergistic effects of all tomato constituents are likely to outweigh the benefits of tomato s individual constituents such as lycopene 107 Studies in 2014 and 2015 did not find conclusive evidence to indicate that the lycopene in tomatoes or in supplements affects the onset of cardiovascular diseases or cancer 108 109 In the United States supposed health benefits of consuming tomatoes tomato products or lycopene to affect cancer cannot be mentioned on packaged food products without a qualified health claim statement 110 In a scientific review of potential claims for lycopene favorably affecting DNA skin exposed to ultraviolet radiation heart function and vision the European Food Safety Authority concluded in 2011 that the evidence for lycopene having any of these effects was inconclusive 111 Host plantThe potato tuber moth Phthorimaea operculella is an oligophagous insect that prefers to feed on plants of the family Solanaceae such as tomato plants Female P operculella use the leaves to lay their eggs and the hatched larvae will eat away at the mesophyll of the leaf 112 Tomato forms a mutually beneficial symbiosis with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi such as Rhizophagus irregularis Scientists use tomato as a model species for investigating this symbiosis 113 In popular cultureThe town of Bunol Spain annually celebrates La Tomatina a festival centered on an enormous tomato fight On 30 August 2007 40 000 Spaniards gathered to throw 115 000 kg 254 000 lb of tomatoes at each other in the festival 114 nbsp Tomatoes thrown from a truck during the Spanish Tomatina festivalSeveral US states have adopted the tomato as a state fruit or vegetable see above Tomatoes have been designated the state vegetable of New Jersey Arkansas took both sides by declaring the South Arkansas Vine Ripe Pink Tomato both the state fruit and the state vegetable in the same law citing both its culinary and botanical classifications In 2009 the state of Ohio passed a law making the tomato the state s official fruit Tomato juice has been the official beverage of Ohio since 1965 Alexander W Livingston of Reynoldsburg Ohio played a large part in popularizing the tomato in the late 19th century his efforts are commemorated in Reynoldsburg with an annual Tomato Festival Flavr Savr was the first commercially grown genetically engineered food licensed for human consumption 115 nbsp Tomatkarnevalen The Tomato Festival in Narpes Finland in 1993Tomatoes are a popular nonlethal throwing weapon in mass protests and there was a common tradition of throwing rotten tomatoes at bad performers on a stage during the 19th century today this is usually referenced as a metaphor Embracing it for this protest connotation the Dutch Socialist party adopted the tomato as their logo The US city of Reynoldsburg Ohio calls itself The Birthplace of the Tomato claiming the first commercial variety of tomato was bred there in the 19th century 28 Rotten Tomatoes is an American review aggregation website for film and television The name Rotten Tomatoes derives from the practice of audiences throwing rotten tomatoes when disapproving of a poor stage performance GalleryFor a more comprehensive list see List of tomato cultivars nbsp Various heirloom tomato heritage tomato in British English cultivars nbsp Homegrown multicolored tomatoes nbsp A variety of cultivars including Brandywine biggest red Black Krim lower left and Green Zebra top left nbsp Red tomatoes with PLU code in a supermarketSee also nbsp Food portalList of countries by tomato production List of tomato dishes Marglobe an early attempt at breeding a disease resistant tomato Ring culture Physalis a similar fruit also used in cooking Tomato effect Tomato jam Nightshades Potato Eggplant Tomatillo a similar fruit from the related genusReferences a b c Phylogeny Molecular phylogenetic analyses have established that the formerly segregate genera Lycopersicon Cyphomandra Normania and Triguera are nested within Solanum and all species of these four genera have been transferred to Solanum a b c d e f g Garden Tomato Solanum lycopersicum L Encyclopedia of Life Retrieved 1 January 2014 a b c d e Tomato 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Concha Maria Jose Methven Lisa Blumenthal Heston Young Christopher Mottram Donald 11 July 2007 Differences in Glutamic Acid and 5 Ribonucleotide Contents between Flesh and Pulp of Tomatoes and the Relationship with Umami Taste Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 55 14 5776 80 doi 10 1021 jf070791p PMID 17567148 Parnell Tracy L Suslow Trevor V Harris Linda J March 2004 Tomatoes Safe Methods to Store Preserve and Enjoy PDF ANR Catalog University of California Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources Archived from the original PDF on 14 February 2013 Retrieved 18 February 2013 Selecting Storing and Serving Ohio Tomatoes HYG 5532 93 PDF Ohio State University Retrieved 27 October 2008 How To Cook Cooks Illustrated 1 July 2008 Retrieved on 5 September 2013 Store Tomatoes Stem End Down to Keep Them from Rotting Too Quickly Lifehacker com Retrieved on 5 September 2013 Vegetables Canadian Produce Marketing Association Website Canadian Produce Marketing Association Archived from the original on 5 April 2013 Retrieved 18 February 2013 Collins Edward J Bowyer Cressida Tsouza Audrey Chopra Mridula 4 February 2022 Tomatoes An Extensive Review of the Associated Health Impacts of Tomatoes and Factors That Can Affect Their Cultivation Biology MDPI AG 11 2 239 doi 10 3390 biology11020239 ISSN 2079 7737 PMC 8869745 Burton Freeman B Sesso HD 2014 Whole food versus supplement comparing the clinical evidence of tomato intake and lycopene supplementation on cardiovascular risk factors Adv Nutr 5 5 457 85 doi 10 3945 an 114 005231 PMC 4188219 PMID 25469376 Hackshaw McGeagh LE Perry RE Leach VA Qandil S Jeffreys M Martin RM Lane JA 2015 A systematic review of dietary nutritional and physical activity interventions for the prevention of prostate cancer progression and mortality Cancer Causes Control 26 11 1521 50 doi 10 1007 s10552 015 0659 4 PMC 4596907 PMID 26354897 Schneeman Barbara O 8 November 2005 Qualified Health Claims Letter Regarding Tomatoes and Prostate Ovarian Gastric and Pancreatic Cancers American Longevity Petition Docket No 2004Q 0201 Labeling and Nutrition Letter to Jonathan W Emord Esq Emord amp Associates P C US Food and Drug Administration Archived from the original on 14 November 2017 European Food Safety Authority 2011 Scientific Opinion on the substantiation of health claims related to lycopene and protection of DNA proteins and lipids from oxidative damage ID 1608 1609 1611 1662 1663 1664 1899 1942 2081 2082 2142 2374 protection of the skin from UV induced including photo oxidative damage ID 1259 1607 1665 2143 2262 2373 contribution to normal cardiac function ID 1610 2372 and maintenance of normal vision ID 1827 pursuant to Article 13 1 of Regulation EC No 1924 2006 EFSA Journal 9 4 2031 doi 10 2903 j efsa 2011 2031 Varela L G Bernays E A 1 July 1988 Behavior of newly hatched potato tuber moth larvae Phthorimaea operculella Zell Lepidoptera Gelechiidae in relation to their host plants Journal of Insect Behavior 1 3 261 275 doi 10 1007 BF01054525 S2CID 19062069 Buendia Luis Wang Tongming Girardin Ariane Lefebvre Benoit April 2016 The LysM receptor like kinase Sl LYK 10 regulates the arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis in tomato New Phytologist 210 1 184 195 doi 10 1111 nph 13753 PMID 26612325 Spain s tomato fighters see red ITV 30 August 2007 Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Retrieved 2 April 2009 Morin XK 2008 Genetically modified food from crops progress pawns and possibilities Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 392 3 333 40 doi 10 1007 s00216 008 2313 4 PMC 2556401 PMID 18704376 Further readingDavid Gentilcore Pomodoro A History of the Tomato in Italy Columbia University Press 2010 scholarly history Tieman D Bliss P McIntyre LM Blandon Ubeda A Bies D Odabasi AZ Rodriguez GR van der Knaap E Taylor MG Goulet C Mageroy MH Snyder DJ Colquhoun T Moskowitz H Clark DG Sims C Bartoshuk L Klee HJ 5 June 2012 The Chemical Interactions Underlying Tomato Flavor Preferences Current Biology 22 11 1035 1039 doi 10 1016 j cub 2012 04 016 PMID 22633806 External links nbsp Wikibooks Cookbook has a recipe module on Tomato nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Horticulture nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Tomato nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Solanum lycopersicum nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to wbr Solanum lycopersicum and wbr Tomatoes nbsp Look up tomato in Wiktionary the free dictionary Tomato Genome Sequencing Project Sequencing of the twelve tomato chromosomes Tomato core collection database Phenotypes and images of 7 000 tomato cultivars Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tomato amp oldid 1193686569, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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