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Link to original content: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Zealand_grapefruit
New Zealand grapefruit - Wikipedia Jump to content

New Zealand grapefruit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

New Zealand grapefruit
A cut and uncut New Zealand Grapefruit (poorman "orange")
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Sapindales
Family: Rutaceae
Genus: Citrus
Parentage unknown
Species:
C. paradisi
Binomial name
Citrus paradisi
Macfad.

The New Zealand grapefruit, also known as the Poorman, Poorman orange,[1] poorman's orange, poor man's orange, and goldfruit,[2] is a type of citrus fruit grown in New Zealand. Despite its name, it is not genetically a true grapefruit, but rather is believed to be a hybrid between a pomelo and a mandarin or tangelo.

Origin

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The New Zealand grapefruit is thought to have originated in East Asia,[1][3] and is said to have been brought to Australia from Shanghai by a Captain Simpson,[when?] though at least one early-19th-century report described this original import as a shaddock (pomelo), leaving open the possibility that the founding poorman hybridisation may have occurred in Australia.[1] It was introduced into New Zealand from Australia around 1855 by Sir George Grey,[1][3] and provided by Grey in 1861 to John Morrison of Warkworth, namesake of what became the most widely grown New Zealand clone.[1]

Description

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The tree is large and vigorous, with rough greyish-brown bark. The petioles of its dark green leaves are more similar to mandarin orange and bitter orange than the true grapefruit.[1] The ovate to globose fruit has a wrinkled, medium-thick, pale orange-yellow rind when mature. The juicy, yellowish-orange, coarse-textured flesh has a subacidic, pleasant flavour with a trace of bitterness.[1] The fruit contain numerous monoembryonic seeds, although the important variant, 'Morrison Seedless' (or Morrison's Seedless), produces seedless fruit when not cross-pollinated.[1]

It does not require temperatures as high as other similar citrus, growing in New Zealand and cooler regions of southern California where other commercial grapefruits are not viable. This explains its dominance in New Zealand, while in Australia it cannot compete in popularity with locally grown cultivars.[1]

Strains

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The long-dominant strain of the New Zealand grapefruit was the Morrison Seedless, but in the 1980s this was surpassed by a bud sport called the 'Golden Special' developed in a commercial orchard in Tauranga. In the 1970s, a grapefruit identical to the latter but with a deep orange rind, the 'Cutler Red’, was selected at Kerikeri.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Hodgson, Robert William (1967). "Chapter 4: Horticultural Varieties of Citrus". In Reuther, Walter; Webber, Herbert John; Batchelor, Leon Dexter (eds.). The Citrus Industry. Vol. 1. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011.
  2. ^ Wratt, G. S.; Smith, H. C. (2015). Plant Breeding in New Zealand. Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 9781483103488. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  3. ^ a b "New Zealand grapefruit / Poor man's Orange". Citrus Variety Collection. University of California Riverside. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
  4. ^ Mooney, Pauline, ed. (2001). Growing Citrus in New Zealand: A Practical Guide. Wellington: New Zealand Citrus Growers Incorporated. p. 12. ISBN 0-478-06829-8.