Production Technology of Fruit Crops
Production Technology of Fruit Crops
Production Technology of Fruit Crops
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Production Technology of Fruit Crops
Index
SN Lecture Page No
1. Scope and importance of fruit cultivation, nutritional, commercial, 6-7
industrial and medicinal importance of fruit crops
2. Fruit production scenario, state and national level, impact and economic 8-12
trend with emphasis to export
3. Classification of fruits based on climatic requirements, horticultural and 13-19
botanical classification
4. Mango – soil, climate, planting, high density planting, nutrient and water 20-27
management, intercropping, off-season production
5. Mango- major problems, physiological disorders, pests and diseases and 28-30
integrated management practices
6. Banana – soil, climate, planting, High Density Planting, nutrient and 31-35
water management, inter cultural special operations
7. Banana – major production constraints – physiological disorders, pests 36-38
and diseases and integrated management practices
8. Citrus - classification, soil, climate, varieties, planting, nutrient and water 39-53
management, intercultural operations
9. Citrus – nutrient deficiencies, corrective measures, physiological 54-56
disorders, pests and diseases and integrated management practices.
10. Grapes – soil, climate, varieties, nutrient and water management, inter 57-59
cultural operations
11. Grapes – nutrient disorders, corrective measures, growth regulators, 60-61
Physiological disorders, pests and diseases and management practices
12. Papaya – soil, climate, water and nutrient management, papain 62-66
extraction, uses, pests and diseases management
13. Sapota – soil, climate, nutrient and water management, specific problems 67-69
and corrective measures
14. Guava – soil, climate, irrigation and nutrient management, nutrient 70-73
deficiencies, physiological disorders, pests and diseases, management
practices
15. Pine apple – soil, climate, planting, High Density Planting, nutrient and 74-75
water management, special cultural operations, pests and diseases and
management practices
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16. Jack - soil, climate, planting, high density planting, nutrient and water 76-81
management, special cultural operations, pests and diseases, management
practices
17. Pomegranate - soil, climate, planting, varieties, nutrient and water 82-89
management, special cultural operations, physiological disorders, pests
and diseases, management practices
18. Custard apple - soil, climate, planting, varieties , nutrient and water 90-94
management, special cultural operations, physiological disorders, pests
and diseases, management practices
19. Ber and Jamun - soil, climate, planting, varieties, nutrient and water 95-102
management, special cultural operations, physiological disorders, pests
and diseases, management practices
20. Amla - soil, climate, planting, varieties, nutrient and water management, 103-107
special cultural operations, physiological disorders, pests and diseases,
management practices
21. Wood apple and Bael - soil, climate, planting, varieties, nutrient and 108-111
water management, special cultural operations, physiological disorders,
pests and diseases, management practices
22. Date palm - soil, climate, planting, varieties, nutrient and water 112-115
management, special cultural operations, physiological disorders, pests
and diseases, management practices
23. Subtropical fruits - Mangosteen - soil, climate, planting, varieties, 116-118
nutrient and water management, special cultural operations,
physiological disorders, pests and diseases, management practices
24. Fig - soil, climate, planting, varieties, nutrient and water management, 119-122
special cultural operations, physiological disorders, pests and diseases,
management practices
25. Litchi - soil, climate, planting, varieties, nutrient and water management, 123-126
special cultural operations, physiological disorders, pests and diseases,
management practices.
26. Avocado - soil, climate, planting, races, varieties, flowering behaviour, 127-131
nutrient and water management, special cultural operations,
physiological disorders, pests and diseases, management practices
27. Durian and Carambola - soil, climate, planting, varieties, nutrient and 132-135
water management, special cultural operations, physiological disorders,
pests and diseases, management practices
28. Rambutan and Longan - soil, climate, planting, varieties, nutrient and 136-141
water management, special cultural operations, physiological disorders,
pests and diseases, management practices
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29. Apple - soil, climate, planting, high density planting, varieties, nutrient 142-146
and water management
30. Apple - special cultural operations, physiological disorders, pests and 147-149
diseases, management practices
31. Pear - soil, climate, planting, varieties, nutrient and water management, 150-154
special cultural operations, physiological disorders, pests and diseases,
management practices
32. Plums and Prunes - soil, climate, planting, varieties, nutrient and water 155-158
management, special cultural operations, physiological disorders, pests
and diseases, management practices
33. Peach and Nectarines - soil, climate, planting, varieties, nutrient and 159-166
water management, special cultural operations, physiological disorders,
pests and diseases, management practices
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LEC. 1
SCOPE AND IMPORTANCE OF FRUIT CULTIVATION, NUTRITIONAL,
COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL AND MEDICINAL IMPORTANCE OF FRUIT CROPS
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Oranges, lemons, limes and grape fruits besides being principal sources of vitamin C and
folate are rich in a class of phytochemicals called limonoids. This antioxidant has been found to
be very effective against cancer.
Sweet orange is the most common food recommended for a patient suffering from very
high fever. It has a cooling effect as well as it is easily assimilated. Peyan, a variety of banana
fruit is administered to patients suffering from chicken pox as it brings down the high
temperature of the body.
The potential of fruit crops in the growth of national economy is noteworthy. The
prosperity of the country lies in building up its foreign exchange reserves. Being a country
having varied climatic conditions ranging from tropical to subtropical and to temperate, India has
very immense potential for the production of different fruits and their export. During 1998-99,
1.18 lakh tonnes of fruits and nuts valued at Rs.24,714 lakhs were exported from India. During
2002 India ranked second in annual production of fruits with 48.57 million tonnes accounting for
about 10.3% of total world fruit production.
Recent policies of the Government of India to encourage export of fruits and their
products by announcing concessions to the fruit industry such as reduced air freight charges and
exemption for storage charges for refrigerated air cargo at international airports have encouraged
a number of private entrepreneurs / corporate bodies and NRIs to go in for planting larger area
under fruit crops with an aim to export fruits and fruit products.
The foregoing account is given with a view to emphasize the growing importance of the
fruit industry. As could be seen from the details given therein, the fruit culture in vital to the
health and economy of the nation, from the stand point of increased food production, nutrition,
trade and fruit based industries.
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India is the second largest producer of fruits after Brazil. The total production of fruits in
the world is around 370 million MT. India ranks first in the world with an annual output of 32
million MT. While there are almost 180 families of fruits that are grown all over the world, citrus
fruits constitute around 20% of world’s total fruit production. India with its current production of
around 32 million MT accounts for about 8% of the world’s fruit production. The major fruits for
export are mango, banana, citrus fruits, apple, guava, papaya, pineapple and grapes. The diverse
agroclimatic zones of the country makes it possible to grow almost all varieties of fruits and
vegetables in India. The fruit production in India has recorded a growth rate of 3.9%, whereas
the fruit processing sector has grown at about 20% per annum. However, the growth rates have
been extensively higher for frozen fruits & vegetables (121%).
Mango production accounts for an estimated 38 percent of total tropical fruit output in
2002, two percent higher than the most recent estimates, again due to increased production in
China and India which offset declines in mango output in Mexico. Area dedicated to mango
production continues to steadily increase in recent years in India, covering an estimated 39
percent of all agricultural area dedicated to fruit crops. Pineapple production is estimated at 14.4
million tonnes 13.7 million tonnes for 2001, or 21 percent of global output, with papaya and
avocado production estimated to reach 8.9 and 2.6 million tonnes, respectively. Total papaya
output registered a slight decline in 2002, although production in Brazil and India, the two
largest producers, increased nearly 3 percent for each country over 2001. The production of
minor tropical fruits, such as lychees, durian, rambuttan, guavas and passionfruit continues to
steadily increase, and are estimated to have reached 15.5 million tonnes, or 23 percent of total
global output.
India has 1655 lakh ha of land and a operational holding of agricultural farming is about
153 lakh ha is under horticulture and yields about 142 million tonnes of fruits and vegetables.
India ranks first in the production of mango, banana, sapota and acid limes in the world. It is
among the first 10 in the production of apples, papaya, oranges, grapes and pineapples. The five
fruits namely Mango, Banana, Citrus, Guava and Apple account for 75% of the total fruit
production.
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Although India is the largest producer of fruits in the world, the production per capital is
only about 100 gms per day. However, it is estimated that more than 20-22% of the total
production of fruits is lost due to spoilage at various post harvest stages. Thus the per capita
availability of fruits is further reduced to around 80 gms per day which is almost half the
requirement for a balanced diet.
Area and production of fruits
Area Production
Year
(Lakh ha) (lakh Mt)
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Statewise area and production of fruits in india (area in lakh ha, output in lakh mt)
State 1993-94 1994-95 1995-96 1996-97 1997-98 1998-99
Area Outpu Area Outpu Area Outpu Area Outpu Area Outpu Area Outpu
t t t t t t
Andhraprades 3.45 50.23 3.72 51.62 3.91 54.70 4.07 56.58 4.15 58.99 3.79 5.90
h
Arunachal 0.25 0.50 0.25 0.50 0.27 0.66 0.29 0.88 0.29 0.88 0.30 0.92
pradesh
Assam 1.10 11.66 1.10 12.39 1.01 12.12 1.03 12.29 1.04 12.20 1.05 12.50
Bihar 2.82 35.83 2.79 33.78 2.86 60.45 2.93 27.52 3.00 37.55 3.04 7.97
Goa 0.11 0.88 0.11 1.21 0.12 0.93 0.12 0.94 0.12 0.85 0.12 0.97
Gujarat 1.04 22.44 1.14 24.48 1.50 20.68 1.38 18.20 1.59 22.68 1.63 22.94
Haryana 0.17 1.23 0.18 1.34 0.20 1.45 0.22 1.51 0.24 1.76 0.24 1.92
Himachal 1.68 3.25 1.90 3.25 1.96 3.72 2.24 3.75 2.31 3.03 2.07 4.48
pradesh
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Jammu and 1.24 8.68 1.27 7.46 1.30 7.90 1.44 9.45 1.47 10.47 1.36 8.81
Kashmir
Karnataka 2.42 41.97 2.59 45.11 2.76 4.73 2.99 51.34 3.15 54.46 3.15 54.46
Kerala 1.94 17.83 1.95 18.10 1.95 18.27 1.96 18.26 1.96 18.26 2.33 16.21
Madhyaprades 0.69 13.20 0.60 11.18 0.62 11.43 0.60 11.27 0.62 11.84 0.63 13.74
h
Maharastra 3.22 51.13 3.67 50.99 3.11 47.99 3.73 63.33 3.80 64.73 4.36 75.22
Manipur 0.21 1.10 0.23 11.10 0.23 11.10 0.23 1.11 0.23 1.11 0.23 1.15
Meghalaya 0.25 2.37 0.24 2.02 0.25 239 0.25 2.39 0.23 1.86 0.23 1.86
Mizoram 0.10 0.46 0.12 0.51 0.15 0.71 0.14 0.66 0.15 0.69 0.16 0.77
Nagaland 0.06 0.56 0.05 0.73 0.05 0.72 0.14 1.69 0.16 1.90 0.11 1.52
Orissa 1.61 11.16 1.76 12.72 1.87 12.42 2.07 13.42 2.27 15.12 2.49 17.18
Punjab 0.82 7.28 0.82 7.37 0.84 7.61 0.90 8.14 0.90 8.14 0.93 8.45
Rajasthan 0.21 0.95 0.20 2.30 0.20 2.38 0.21 2.67 0.20 2.78 0.21 3.10
Sikkim 0.09 0.22 0.09 0.12 0.09 0.12 0.09 0.13 0.10 0.13 0.10 0.08
Tamil Nadu 1.80 36.21 1.86 48.19 1.86 48.19 2.21 38.63 2.34 36.84 2.14 54.48
Tripura 0.47 3.26 0.47 3.25 0.32 4.01 0.32 4.00 0.32 4.01 0.30 .72
U.P (Hills) 1.63 4.60 1.82 4.93 1.84 5.02 1.86 5.10 1.87 5.15 1.88 5.20
U.P (Plain) 3.02 30.10 3.08 28.71 3.10 30.09 3.19 40.45 3.29 42.93 3.05 30.98
West Bengal 1.35 14.58 1.12 12.19 1.16 12.83 1.16 10.35 1.17 13.74 1.28 15.36
A&N Islands 0.04 0.16 0.03 0.17 0.04 0.17 0.04 0.17 0.04 0.17 0.04 0.17
All India 31.8 372.5 43.1 386.0 33.5 415.0 35.7 404.5 37.0 432.6 37.2 440.4
4 5 0 3 7 7 9 8 2 3 7 2
(Source : National Horticulture Board)
Despite such high levels of production in this sector about 30% of the produce sets
spoiled due to improper storage, post harvest handling and lack of processing facilities. The
present output of fruits in the country is about 48 million tonnes while the demand has been
estimated at 72 million tonnes.
AREA AND OUTPUT OF MAJOR FRUIT CROPS
(Area in million ha, output million MT)
Crop 1997-98 1998-99 1999-2000 2000-01*
Area Output Area Output Area Output Area Output
Apples 0.23 1.32 0.23 1.38 0.23 1.04 0.24 1.30
Bananas 0.44 13.34 0.46 15.07 0.49 16.81 0.50 17.50
Citrus fruits 0.48 4.31 0.48 4.57 0.52 4.65 0.53 4.80
Grapes 0.04 0.97 0.04 1.08 0.04 1.13 0.04 1.20
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Owing to the poor surface and subsurface drainage, the groundwater in a large part
of the area (e.g. 60% of arid Rajasthan) is highly saline.
Fruit growing regions in India
1. Temperate zone: Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, part of Uttar Pradesh,
Arunachal Pradesh, part of Nagaland, Nilgiris and Pulney hills in Tamil Nadu.
2. North western subtropical zone: Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana, part of UP, part of
Mathaya Pradesh.
3. North Eastern subtropical zone: Bihar, Assam, Megalalya, Tripura, part of
Arunachal Pradesh and part of west Bengal.
4. Central tropical zone: Part of Madhya Pradesh, part of Mahsrashtra, Gujarat, part
of Orissa, part of West Bengal, part of Andhra Pradesh & part of Karnataka.
5. Southern tropical zone: Part of Karnataka, part of AP, part of TN & part of Kerala.
6. Coastal tropical humid zone: Coast of Maharastra, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, TN,
Orissa, West Bengal, Tripura and Mozorm, part of Gujarat along sea and the Indian
Islands.
The ICAR, New Delhi, has recognized eight agro climatic zones for effective land use
planning.
S.No. Agro climatic Region Status
1. Humid western
Himalayan Region
J&K, HP, Kumaon and Garhwal in Uttarnchall
2. Humid Bengal – Assam
Region
West Bengal & Assam
3. Humid Eastern
Himalayan Region
Bay Islands, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur,
Mizoram, Tripura, Sikkam,Megalaya & Andaman &
Nicobar Islands.
4. Sub-humid Sutlez-Ganga
Alluvial plains
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purely under raiunfed condition is followed. Established mango grooves in drylands are common
in this zone.
2. North – Western Zone: (Salem and Dharmapuri Districts): The mean annual rainfall is 875
mm and about 42 per cent of rainfall is received during the South – West monsoon period. The
mean monthluy maximum temperature ranges from 30 to 37° C and the minimum temperature is
from 19 to 25° C. The minimum temperature usually goes below 15 C in northern parts adjoining
Karnataka. The elevation rangers from 800 to 1000 m(MSL). The Cultivation is drylands
commences from the month opf June and
3. Western Zone: (Coimbatore and Periyar Districts): Themean annual rainfalls is 720
mm with a contribution of 49 per cent from the North-East period. The mean maximum
emperature is from 30 to 35° C while the mean minimum temperature ranges from19 to 24° C.
The predominant soil types in black soils during September/October . With the receipt of early
rain, groundnut is sown in red soils. In black soil areas, cotton for early rains and bengalgram for
late rains are raised. In the southern oiart if this zone the rainfal is about 550 mm only and more
area is devoted to pastures with hardy tress like white babul. With the help of well and cannal
irrigation crops, like cotton, finger milklet and sugarcane and raised.
4. Cauvery Delta zone: (Thanjavur and Tiruchirapalli Districts): The mean annual rainfall varies
from 900-1000 mm, out of which more than 50 percent is received through North_east monsoon
period. The main source of irrigation is the Cauvery river. The mean maximum temperature is
from ranges from 30.0 to 38.5° C and mean minimum temperature is from 21 to 27° C. The
major soil typer is alluvial in the old delta areas while red loamy and it has been rightly called as
‘rice bowl of Tamil Nadu’. After the rice crop, pulses are raised with residual soil moisture. In
places with supplemental irrigation through wells filter points cotton, groundnut and sesamum
are raised as su mmer crops.
5. Southern Zone: (Pudukkottai, Madurai, Quaide- e-millath, Passumpon, Kamarajar,
Ramanathapuram, Chidambaram and Tirunelveli): The topography of zone is undulating. This
zone lies on the rain shadow are of the western ghats. The mean annual rainfall is 850 mm with a
contribution of about 470 mm from North-East monsoon. The mean maximum temperature
varies from 28 to 38.5° C, and the minimum temperature ranges from 21 to 27.5° C. The soils of
this region fall under major groups, viz., black, red alluvial and lateritic. Saline coastal alluvial
soils are also present in the coastal belt. In black soils only one crop, either cotton or sorghum is
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Production Technology of Fruit Crops
raised. Direct seeded rice is cultivated under rainfed condition onlight soils. On red soils,
groundnut crop is raised. Under garden land conditions, pearl millet and chillies from the major
crops.
6. High Rainfall Zone: (Kanyakumari District) : The mean annual rainfall is 1460 mm
received in 64 rainny days, out of which 38 and 36 per cent are respectively received during
South-west and North -East monsoon periods. The mean maximum temperature ranges from 28
to 33,5° C and minimum is from 22 to 26.5 ° C. The soils are deep red loam except the crop
grown under rainfed condition followed by tapioca. Plantaion crops like tea, pepper, clove,
nutmeg, cardamom and coffee also cultivated on the hills.
7. Hilly zone: This zone c comprises the hilly region of the Nilgris, the Shevroys, the Yalagiri,
the Annamalais and the Palani. The rainfall varies from 1000 mm at the foot of the hills to 5000
mm at the peaks. The mean maximum temperature varies from 15 to 24° C and that minimum
ranges from 7 to 13° C. The soil is mainly lateritic. The major crops are cole vegetables, potato,
tropical and temperate fruit areas. At the foot of th hills minor millets are the raised by hill tribes.
At higher altitudes wheat cultivation is common during winter season.
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Mango (Mangifera indica), the king of fruits, is grown in India for over 400 years. India
shares about 56% of total mango production in the world. Its production has been increasing
since independence, contributing 39.5% of the total fruit production of India. Andhra Pradesh
tops in total production, whereas Uttar Pradesh tops area-wise. Andhra Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh,
Bihar, Karnataka, Maharashtra, West Bengal and Gujarat together contribute for about 82% of
the total production in India.
Climate and Soil
Mango can be grown on a wide variety of soils under varied climatic conditions. It can be
grown from alluvial to lateritic soils except in black cotton soil having poor drainage. It grows
well in soils with slightly acidic pH. It does not perform well in soils having pH beyond 7.5.
Soils having good drainage are ideal for mango.
Mango is a tropical fruit, but it can be grown up to 1,100m above mean sea level.
There should not be high humidity, rain or frost during flowering. The temperature between 24
and 27°C is ideal for its cultivation. Higher temperature during fruit development and maturity
gives better-quality fruits. The areas experiencing frequent showers and high humidity are prone
to many pests and diseases. Thus it can be grown best in regions with a rainfall between 25cm
and 250cm. Regions having bright sunny days and moderate humidity during flowering are ideal
for mango growing.
Varieties
India is the home of about 1,000 varieties. Most of them are the result of open pollination
arisen as chance seedlings. However, only a few varieties are commercially cultivated
throughout India.
Commercial mango varieties grown in different states
Andhra Pradesh Banganapalli, Suvarnarekha, Neelum and Totapuri
Bihar Bombay green, Chausa, Dashehari, Fazli, Gulabkhas, Kishen Bhog,
Himsagar, Zardalu and Langra
Gujarat Kesar, Alphonso, Rajapuri, Jamadar, Totapuri, Neelum, Dashehari
and Langra
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In India, mango is available from March to mid-August. The north Indian cultivars are
alternate-bearer whereas south Indian ones are generally regular-bearer. About 20 varieties are
grown commercially. They are
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Alphonso
One of the most popular variety of India, it is mainly grown in Ratnagiri area of
Maharashtra and to a small extent in parts of south Gujarat and Karnataka. Its fruits are
medium-sized (250g), with attractive blush towards the basal end. Pulp is firm, fibreless with
excellent orange colour. It has good sugar: acid blend. Keeping quality is good. It is
Banganapalli
A widely cultivated, early-maturing mango of south India. It is the main commercial
variety of Andhra Pradesh. Its fruits are large-sized, weighing on an average 350-400g. The pulp
is fibreless, firm and yellow with sweet taste. Fruits have good keeping quality.
Bombay Green
It is one of the earliest varieties of north India. Its fruits are medium-sized, weighing
about 250g each. Fruits have strong and pleasant flavour. Pulp is soft and sweet.
Chausa
Late-maturing variety of north India, it matures during July or beginning of August.
Fruits are large, weighing about 350g each. Fruits are bright yellow with soft'and sweet pulp. It is
shy bearing.
Dashehari
One of the most popular variety of north India, it is a mid-season mango. Fruits are
medium-sized, with pleasant flavour, sweet, firm, and fibreless pulp. Stone is thin and keeping
quality good.
Fazli
This is indigenous to Bihar and West Bengal. Fazli is a late-maturing (August) mango.
Fruits are large, with firm to soft flesh. Flavour is pleasant and pulp is sweet and fibre less.
Keeping quality is good.
Gulab Khas
It is indigenous to Bihar. Regular and heavy-bearer, it is mid-season mango. Fruits are
small to medium-sized. It has rosy flavour. Fruits are ambre-yellow with reddish blush towards
the base and on sides. Keeping quality is good.
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Himsagar
Very popular in West Bengal, it is a regular-bearing mango. Its fruits are medium-sized,
having good quality. Flesh is firm, yellow, fibreless with pleasant flavour. Keeping quality is
good.
Kesar
Popular in Saurashtra region of Gujarat, Kesar is an irregular-bearing mango. Fruits are
medium-sized. Flesh is sweet and fibreless. It has excellent sugar: acid blend. Fruits ripen to
attractive apricot-yellow colour with red blush. It has good processing quality.
Kishenbhog
Indigenous to West Bengal, it is a mid-season mango. Fruits are medium to large-sized,
good with a pleasant flavour. There are traces of turpentine. Flesh is firm with few fibres.
Keeping quality is good.
Langra
An important commercial mango variety of north India, it is biennial-bearer and a mid-
season variety, with good quality fruits. Flesh is firm, lemon-yellow in colour and scarcely
fibrous. It has characteristic turpentine flavour. Keeping quality is medium.
Mankurad
It is a mid-season variety, popular in Goa. Fruits are medium-sized with yellow skin.
Flesh is firm, cadmium yellow and fibreless. Keeping quality is good.
Neelum
A heavy-yielding, late-season mango in south India, it has regular-bearing habit. Fruits
are medium-sized with good flavour. Flesh is soft, yellow and fibreless. Keeping quality is good.
Pairi
A native to coastal Maharashtra including Goa, it is an early-maturing, heavy and
regular-bearer mango. Fruits are medium-sized with good quality. It has good flavour with sugar:
acid blend. Flesh is soft, primuline-yellow and fibreless. Keeping quality is poor.
Totapuri
Widely grown in south India, Totapuri is a regular and heavy-bearing mango. Fruits are
medium to large with prominent sinus. Fruit quality is medium. It has a typical flavour and flat
taste. Flesh is cadmium-yellow and fibreless.
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A number of selections/hybrids of mango have been evolved. These include Clone C-51
from Dashehari selected at the CISH, Lucknow, and an off-season selection, Niranjan, selected
at Parbhani. New clonal selections from Langra and Sunderja have been made at Varanasi and
Rewa. A clonal selection, Paiyur 1, has been made from Neelum, in addition to few dwarf
polyembryonic selections made in the north-eastern region.
As a result of systematic hybridization, several hybrids have been released. However only a
few have become commercially acceptable. Of these, Mallika, Ratna and Arka Puneet are
becoming quite popular.
Mango hybrids and their characters
Hybrid Place of research Parentage Important characters
Mallika IARI, New Delhi Neelum x Regular-bearers, high TSS, good
Dashehari colour, uniform fruits, moderate
keeping quality
Amrapali IARI, New Delhi Dashehari x Dwarf, regular-bearers, cluster-
Neelum bearing, small-sized fruits, good
keeping quality
Ratna FRS, Vengurla Neelum x Regular-bearers, free from spongy
Alphonso tissue and fibre
Sindhu FRS, Vengurla Ratna x Regular-bearer, stone thin
Alphonso
Arka IIHR, Bangalore Alphonso x Regular-bearer, attractive skin
Puneet Banganapalli colour, medium-sized, free from
spongy tissue. Good keeping quality,
good sugar, acid blend
Propagation
Mango is a highly heterozygous and cross-pollinated crop. There are 2 types of mango
varieties. Most of the varieties in south are polyembryonic and thus give true-to-type seedlings.
In north, the varieties grown are monoembryonic and need to be propagated vegetatively.
Mango is propagated on mango rootstock. For raising rootstock, the seeds of mango are
sown within 4-5 weeks after extraction otherwise they lose their viability. For sowing the seeds,
raised beds are prepared with a mixture farmyard manure, red soil and sand. In some places,
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seeds are sown directly in polythene bags. After germination, the leaves turn green in 2-4 weeks.
These seedlings are transplanted to polythene covers containing red soil, sand and farmyard
manure. Addition of nitrogenous fertilizer to polythene covers after the establishment of plants
helps in quick growth of seedlings. The seedlings thus raised should be used for grafting at
different ages. Several methods of grafting are practiced. They are:
lnarching: It is one of the most widely practiced methods of grafting. One can get a big-sized
plant material for planting with over 95% success rate.
Veneer and side grafting: These can be utilized for preparing a grafted plant material or for in-
situ grafting, i.e. for the rootstocks which are already planted.
Epicotyl /stone grafting: This method is widely practiced in the Konkan region of Maharashtra.
The germinated seedlings of 8-15 days old are used for grafting.
CULTIVATION
Planting
Different systems of planting like square, rectangular and hexagonal are followed at
different places. However, square and rectangular systems are also popular. The spacing depends
on the vigour of the variety and the cropping system. The planting season varies fron Jun to Sep.
The main field is brought to fine tilth. Pits of 1m x 1mx 1m size are dug. These are exposed to
sun for about 30 days. Before planting, pits are filled with well-rotten farmyard manure. The top
and sub-soil are taken out separately while digging the pits. The grafts should be planted during
rainy season. In the in-situ grafting, rootstocks are planted in the main field. Then they are raised
for 6 months to 1 year. Then the scions of the variety that need to be grown are taken and
grafted. This is usually done when humidity is high. After grafting the scions are covered with
polythene covers.
High-density planting
High-density planting helps increase the yield/unit area. In north India, mango Amrapali
is found amenable for high-density planting with a spacing of 2.5m x 2.5m. Soil drenching with
paclobutrazol (2 ml/tree) induces flowering during off year. It has become a commercial practice
in Konkan region of Maharashtra. If coupled with pruning, it, helps increase production /unit
area in Dashehari. The polyembryonic mango Vellaikolumban when used as rootstock imparts
dwarfing in Alphonso.
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Irrigation
The young plants upto 2-year-old should be watered regularly. The newly-planted grafts
need about 30 litres of water every week. Irrigation during preflowering phase increases
flowering. Irrigating grown-up trees after fruit set at 10-day interval increases the yield.
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mangoes Langra and Dashehari are alternate-bearers, whereas most of the south Indian mangoes
are regular bearers. Mango Mallika and Amrapali are also comparatively regular-bearer.
After harvesting, mangoes are graded according to their size. To maintain the quality,
proper packaging is a must. In western region, bamboo baskets are used for packing. A basket
contains 50-100 fruits. Straw is used for packing. Wooden boxes are also used in some place.
However, now perforated cardboard are generally used. In these boxes either fruits are
individually wrapped with tissue paper before packing or paper shavings are used for cushioning.
Minimizing the post harvest losses is one of the most important aspects. Usually green
and mature mangoes are stored better than ripe ones harvested from trees. Low temperature
storage, controlled atmospheric storage, use of chemical treatment for delaying ripening,
irradiation, heat treatment, packaging and shrink wrapping are methods to increase their shelf-
life. The temperature of 5-16°C for different varieties is ideal for storing. Mangoes are highly
susceptible to low temperature injury. Loss of flavour and development of undesirable softening
are major symptoms of chilling injury.
Under controlled atmospheric storage, retardation of respiratory activity, delaying of softening,
colour development and senescence of fruits take place. Hence, this method has not been adopted
in mango. The combination of waxing (3%) along with hot-water treatment results in good
quality fruits with extended storage life. Individual wrapping of fruit imparts uniform colour and
reduces shrinkage. Hydro-cooling at 12°-15°C and holding for 2 weeks at 15°C followed by
storage for 1 week at ambient temperature gives good storage life to fruits.
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DISORDERS
Alternate bearing
Alternate bearing has been one of the major problems. Most of the south Indian varieties
are regular-bearer, whereas north Indian ones alternate-bearer. Paclobutrazol is a promising
chemical for flower induction in mango. Soil drenching with paclobutrazol (5g -10g/tree) results
in minimum outbreak of vegetative flushes during September to October giving an early and
profuse flowering and more annual yield without affecting fruit size and quality.
Mango malformation
It is one of the most important disorders, causing huge losses. It is a major problem in
Punjab, Delhi and Uttar Pradesh. However, it has also been noticed in Gujarat, Maharashtra,
Bihar, West Bengal and Orissa. Of the 2 types of mango malformation, vegetative malformation
is more common in nursery seedlings and young plants. Floral malformation affects trees at the
bearing stage. In vegetative malformation or bunchy top, compact leaves are formed in a bunch
at the apex of shoot or in the leaf axil and growth of shootlet is arrested. Floral malformation
directly affects the productivity. The incidence of disorder varies from variety to variety.
Deblossoming alone or coupled with a spray of 200ppm NAA lowers the number of malformed
panicles significantly.
Black tip
This disorder is mainly noticed in Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and West Bengal. The distal-
end of the affected fruits turns black and becomes hard. These fruits ripen prematurely and
become unmarketable. This disorder is caused by the smoke of brick-kilns located within a
distance of 600m. Gases like carbon monoxide and carbondioxide, sulphur dioxide and acetylene
cause these symptoms. It can be controlled by raising the height of the chimney of the brick-
kilns. Spraying borax (0.6%) at 10-14 days intervals starting from fruit set also controls it.
Clustering (Jhumka)
This malady is characterized by a cluster of fruitlets at the tip of the panicle giving an
appearance of bunch tip called jhumka. These fruitlets are dark green with a deeper curve in the
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sinus beak region compared with normally developing fruitlets. These fruitlets grow to marble
size after which their growth ceases. One of the main reasons for clustering is the adverse
climate during February-March, particularly the low temperature. Most of the fruits are aborted
with shrivelled embryos and do not develop further, signifying the role of normal embryo growth
in the development of fruits.
Spongy tissue
It is specific in Alphonso mango. Fruits from outside look normal. but inside a patch of
flesh becomes spongy, yellowish and sour. This disorder has brought down the export of this
variety. Inactivation of ripening enzyme due to high temperature, convective heat and post
harvest exposure to sunlight are the causes. Use of sod culture and mulching are useful in
reducing its incidence. Mango hybrids Ratna and Arka Puneet which have Alphonso like
characters do not suffer from this malady. Harvesting mangoes when they are three-fourths
matured rather than fully matured ones also reduces this malady.
Use of Growth Regulator
Due to the various causes, fruit drop occurs in mango rather at a higher rate, even upto
about 99 percent in various stages of growth, more during the initial four weeks.
The extent of fruits drop can be reduced significantly by (a) Regular irrigation during the
fruit development period (b) Timely and effective control measures against major pests and
diseases, and (c) Through the application of growth regulators like NAA (50 ppm) and 2,4-D (20
ppm) during off years about six weeks after fruit set.
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Climate: Humid tropic plant. Temperature range of 10°C to 40°C with an average of 23°C.
Altitude: Upto 1500 mts from MSL.
Wind velocity more than 80 m/hr will damage the crop heavily.
Rainfall : 100 mm/ month is good.
Propagation : Sucker
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i. Sword sucker – suckers with a well – developed base and pointed tip having
narrow sword shaped leaf bladers in the early stage.
ii. Water sucker or broad leaved sucker – small, undersized suckers of superficial
origin bearing broad leaves.
Sword suckers – more vigorous, grows faster and comes to bearing early.
Average weight of the sucker – 1.5 to 2 kg.
Micropropagation through tissue culture – Rapid multiplication of banana suckers.
Pretreatment of sucker : The roots and decayed portion of the corn are trimmed.
Pseudostem is cut leaving 20 cm from the corn.
To avoid wilt disease infected portion of the corn may be pared, dipped for 5 min in
carbendazion 0.1% (1 gm in 1 lit of water) for wilt susceptible varieties – Monthan, Neyvannan,
Virupahshi etc.
Spacing Plants / ha
Garden land 1.8 x 1.8 m 3086
1.5 x 1.5 m 4444
Wet land 2.1 x 2.1 m 2267
Hill 3.6 x 3.6 m 750
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Irrigation
Irrigated immediately after planting, life irrigation – 4th day subsequent irrigation once in
a week for garden land 10-15 days in wetland after manuring.
Drip irrigation – 15 lit/ plant/ day from planting to 4th month.
20 lit/plant / day from 5th to shooting and 25 lit/plant/day from shooting till 15 days prior
to harvest.
Application of fertilizers
N P K
Garden land (g/plant/year)
Other than Nendran 110 35 330
Nendran 150 90 300
Wet land
Nendran 210 35 450
Rasthali 210 50 390
Pooven and Robusta 160 50 390
Hill banana
375 g of 40:30:40 NPK mixture and 130 g MOP/clump per application during October,
January and April. Azospirillum and Phosphobacteria – 20 g each at planting and 5th month after
planting preceding chemical fertilizer application.
Apply N as neem coated urea.
N & K in 3 splits 3rd, 5th and 7th month P at 3rd month of planting.
For tissue culture banana 50% extra fertilizer at 2nd, 4th and 6th and 8th month after
planting.
For maximing productivity – fertigation.
25 litres of water / day + 200:30:300 g N:P2O5:K2O /plant using water soluble fertilizer.
For economizing the cost of fertilizers fertigate using normal fertilizers (urea and MOP) with
30% of the recommended dose along with recommended dose of P as basal at 2nd month of
planting.
Fertigation schedule
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Interculture
Mammutti digging at bi-monthly interval and earth-up
De sucker – prune the side suckers at monthly interval
Dry and dead, leaves are removed and burnt.
Male flower – removed a week after opening of last hand
Bunch emergence – propping. The trees are supported with bamboos or casurina poles to
avoid damage by wind.
Growth regulator
Grade of bunch -2,4-D at 25 ppm (25 mg/lit) may be sprayed after the last hand has
opened. This also helps to remove the seediness in poovan variety. Spray CCC 1000 ppm of 4 th
and 6th month after planting. Spray plantozyme @ 2ml/lit at 6th and 8th month after planting to
get higher yield.
Micronutrient
ZnSO4 (0.5%) FeSO4 (0.2%) CuSO4 (0.2%) ad H3BO3 (0.1%) at 3, 5 and 7 MAP to
increase yield and quality of banana.
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Bunch cover
Use transparent polyethylene sleeves with 2% (during cool season)-4% (during summer
season) ventilation to cover the bunches immediately after opening of the last hand.
Intercropping
Leguminous vegetables, beet root, elephant foot yam and sunhemp. Avoid growing
cucurbitaceous vegetables.
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Physiological disorders
Kottavazhai
In certain pockets of Tamil Nadu, the banana cv. Poovan is manifested
with a peculiar development disorder which is characterized by the presence of
distinctly conical and ill filled fruits with a prominent central core having many
under developed non viable seedy structures rendering the fruits inedible. This
disorder can be overcome by spraying 2,4 D 20 ppm when the last hand of
bunch is opened. The same chemical at same dose and same stage results in
increased bunch weight and uniform grade especially in cvs. Nendran and
Monthan.
Hard lump
It is characterized by pinkish brown, firm pulp than the usual soft pulp
occurs in cv.Rasthali, tastes like immature or unripe fruits. Spraying the bunches
uniformly with 2,4 D at 1000 ppm or dipping the cut end of peduncle of the
bunches for a period of 5 minutes appears to favour the reduction of lumps and
improve the size.
Sunscald
The peduncle of the bunches may be covered with flag leaf to prevent
'main stalk rot' and also the bunches with banana leaves to avoid sunscald.
Nematode
Bunchy top virus – Pentalonia nigronervosa.
Crop duration : bunches will be ready for harvest after 12-15 months of planting.
Viral diseases of banana
1. Bunchy top – transmitted by Aphid Pentalonia nigronervosa
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Infected plants show short and narrow leaves together at the top of the pseudostem to form a
bunch, hence this disease is known as ‘Bunchy top’. The margins of leaves become wavy in
advance stage of infection and roll upward.
Management :a) Remove all the affected plants along with complete rhizome, planting of virus
free suckers.
b). control of banana aphid - spray 0.3% Rogar or Phosphomidon
Monocrotophos – 0.05% spray
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Yellowish green streaks appear along the veins which later on enlarge into
elongated/cylindrical spots. Several spots join together and cause drying of the leaves.
Management
Spray copper oxy chloride or carbendazim @ 500g/ha
Avoid close planting
Bacterial diseases
1. Moko wilt ( Pseudomonas solanacearum)
On leaves, yellowing starts from the inner leaf close to petiole and slowly spreads up
ward. All the leaves turn yellow and wilting occurs
Management
Good drainage facilities
Supress the wilt by bacteriazation with P.inflorescens
Crop rotation with sorghum
Yield (t/ha/year)
Poovan – 40-50
Monthan – 30-40
Robusta – 50-60
Dwarf Cavendish -50-60
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CITRUS
Citrus spp. Family : Rutaceae
Citrus fruits include oranges lamons, limes, pummelo and grape fruit.Being a
native of tropical and subtropical region of South East Asia, these have been under
cultivation from time immemorial in South China, Malaya and sub-Himalayan parts of
Assam, From here, they spread to other tropical and subtropical parts of the world. Next
to mango and banana, citrus represents the third most important group of fruits in India.
The botanical classification of the genus is highly confusing since more and more inter
specific and inter generic hybrids are going on added to the list each on deserving a
separate species status.
All the edible fruits of citrus come under subgenus Eucitrus which can be divided
into 5 horticultural groups.
1. Acid group :
Acid lime : Citrus aurantifolia
Tahiti or Persean lime : Citrus latifolia
Rangpur lime : C. limonia
Lemon : Citrus limon
Rough lemon : C. jambhiri
Citron : C. medica (Kidarankai in
Tamil, used for pickling)
Sweet lime : Citrus limettoides
2. Orange group :
Sweet orange : Citrus sinensis
Sour orange : Citrus aurantium
(Narthankaai in Tamil, used for
pickling)
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Mandarinorange: C. reticulata
The group of orange is otherwise called Kamala orange. Nagpur santra of Maharashtra,
Coorg of Karnataka and Kodai orange of Tamil Nadu. This group is characterized by the loose
skin of fruits.
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Spacing: 6 x 6 m pit size 75 cm3 planting during May-June and September – October.
Though the crop is grown as rainfed one, the young plants should be irrigated whenever
there is failure of monsoon as well as during summer season.
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Micronutrient
ZnSO4 – 600 g
In 450 lit of water
MnSO4 – 600 g
applied during new flush
MgSO4 – 600 g
FeSO4 – 600 g
After cultivation
Removal of water shoots
Rootstock sprouts
Dead and diseased shoots
Removal of laterals of the main stem upto 45 m from ground level
Basins should be provided for each tree with gradient slope.
Growth regulators
To increase the fruit retention spraying the trees at flowering and again at marble stage
with 2,4-D at 20 ppm or NAA 30 ppm.
Harvest: Starts bearing from 3-5 year after planting in budded plants. Incase of seedlings 5-7
years.
Varieties
1. Kodai Orange (Citrus reticulate)
Trees are vigorous, fruits are very small characterized by loose rind and medium
flavour. But it is a heavy seeded variety.
2. Nagpur Santra (Citrus reticulata)
It is the most important commercial cultivar of India. This cultivar is considered to
be one of the finest mandarins in the world orange vigorous growing variety. Fruits are
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medium to subglobose having a loose rind. Flesh is fine textured with abundant juice.
Fruits mature in January – February.
3. Coorg (Citrus reticulata)
Medium to large fruits, bright orange with a loose rind. It has a good flavour,
ripens later than Nagpur Santra. It is a regular bearer. It is the commercial variety in the
coorg region of Karnataka.
In Darjeeling district of West Bengal, the variety grown is known as Darjeeling
orange and it is Desi in Punjab. In Sikkim, the mandarin cultivar grown is known as
‘Sumithira’ while in Meghalaya it is called as ‘Khasi Mandarin’ or ‘Sohniamtra’.
4. Sastuma Mandarin (Citrus unshiu)
It is a Japanese variety with small spreading tree. Fruits are seedless with thin rind
having orange colour at maturity. The quality of fruit is excellent with good blend of sugar
and acidity.
5. King Mandarin (Citrus nobilis)
It is a commercial variety of USA. The trees grow 5-6 M, petioles narrowly
winged small, flattened, orange, red fruits with distinctly sweet pulp which is juicy and f
excellent quality.
6. Willow Leaf Mandarin (Citrus deliciosa)
It is another commercial variety of USA. Trees medium sized with drooping
growth habit. The distinctive characteristics are presence of mild and pleasant aromatic
flavour in fruit juice, plump spherical seeds, high degree of seed polyembryony and
marked alternate bearing tendency of the trees.
7. Kinnow (King x Willow leaf)
It is a hybrid between king and willow leaf mandarins. It was developed by Dr.
H.B. Frost at citrus Experiment Station, California 1915. It has performed very well in
Pakistan, Punjab, Uthrangal, Haryana, Karnataka and foot hills of Himachal Pradesh. This
hybrid cultivar produces excellent quality fruits and holds export potential. Fruit medium
in size, globose to slightly oblat, rind thin rather adherent for a mandarin but peelable,
tough and leathery, surface very smooth and glossy, colour yellowish orange at maturity.
Segments (9 to 10) do not separate easily, very juicy, flavour rich aromatic and distinctive,
TSS 10o brin, acidity 0.8%. Seeds numerous, (2 to 2H) polyembryonic and cotyledone
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15. Emperor:
It is a leading cultivar of Australia Frit large, early mid season in maturity but
quality deteriorates rapidly if stored on tree after ripening.
16. Ponkan
Ponkan is the famous and highly reputed cultivar of South China and Formosa. It
is the foremost tropical mandarin cultivar, matures in mid-season, highly productive and
strongly alternate in bearing.
17. Desi
It is mainly grown in Punjab and adjoining hills of Himachal Pradesh. Fruits
orange colour uniform, golden yellow, rind medium thick some what thicker than coorg
mandarin, segments vary between 7 and 10; pulp light reddish yellow, texture tender,
sufficiently juicy, acidic but moderately flavored; seeds few, usually 3-7.
18. Darjeeling orange
Also known as sikkim orange and is cultivated widely in and around Darjeeling
hills. The trees are vigorous and prolific bearer. Fruits are relatively small in size,
somewhat flat in shape colour yellowish to orange when fully ripe; rind thin, adherence
little; juice plenty and sweet with good flavour ; seeds are few.
Propagation
Most of the Mandarin cultivars are propagated through seeds except
kinnow and Nagpur mandarins; usual practice in coorg, Assam and North Eastern hills
is to use seedlings as planting material. But with concerted efforts made to find out
suitable rootstocks for different regions, orchardists hare shifted to vegetative methods,
particularly T. budding because budded plants bear early, tolerant to biotic and abiotic
stress. The seedling trees not only bear late but also tend to become thorny and grow
tall and slender.
By seed
For quality planting material, select uniformly matured fruits from healthy,
true to type and heavy bearing plants to extract seeds. Freshly extracted seeds should
be mixed with ash and dried in shade otherwise, they may loose their liability seeds are
sown at a distance of 2 – 3cm. Germination may take place with in 3 – 4weeks. Since
the seeds are polyembryonic growth are rouged out and the rest that are produced from
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the cells of nucleus are allowed to grow. The seedlings thus selected are more or less
uniform in growth and production.
By ‘ T ’ Budding
Budding is done using the buds of bud wood taken from the disease free
mother plants orn Rangpur lime, Cleopatra, Jatti khatti karna katta and Troyer citrange.
Rangpur lime is a vigorous, hardy rootstock with good adaptability to a wide range of
soil particularly heavy soil, tolerant to tristeza and salt; it is susceptible to footrot,
exocortis and xyloporosis. Cleopatra mandarin is the most salt tolerant root stock with
the ability to exclude sodium and chloride taken up by root system. It is tolerant to
tristezz, exocortis and fairly tolerant to foot rot. Rough lemon, well adapted to high
sandy soils. IT is susceptible to foot rot and scab and tolerant to tristeza. This is the
most important rootstock for light soils Troyer citranges are used in areas where cot of
hardiness and resistance to tristeza are necessary they are also resistant to foot rot but
susceptible to exocortis
Karna khatta (Citrus karma)
It is extensively used as a root stock in North India.
Seeds of identified root stock for a particular area should be extracted from
fully matured, healthy fruits. They are sown in lined (10-15cm deep) on raised seed
beds inside a polyethylene house. About 1 – 2 months old seedlings are shifted to
secondary beds. These are finally budded when they attain a height of 25-30cm and 1-
2cm diameter. Scion should be selected from healthy, vigorous, matures, virus free and
high yielding trees. They should also be free from water sprouts and chimeras.
Further use of dormant scion bud wood from past season’s growth is used after it has
hardened. The bud wood should be taken from round or cylindrical green twigs. T
budding is done on one and a half to 2 years old seedling. In about 6-9 months, the
budded plants will be ready for transplanting in the main field.
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Cultivation
Planting: Generally, planting is done during monsoon in all mandarin growing areas i.e.,
June – December. In sub mountainous tracts, where planting is generally done on slopes,
proper terraces are necessary, while in plains the land should be leveled properly. Pits of
45 cubic centimeters are dug at a spacing of 6 x 6 m and filled with FYM, sand and top
soil and then basins are formed. The buddlings are planted in the center of the pits and
irrigated.
In N-E parts of India, Khasi mandarins are very closely spaced (4.5 x 4.5
m is ideal for kinnow budded on Jattikhatti. Kinnow can be grown successfully under
high density planting by using Troyer citrange as a rootstock and by spacing the plants 1.8
x 1.8 m, accommodating 3000 lr/ha. The optimum spacing for Nagpur mandarin is
6 x 6 m when budded on Rough lemon. In Karnataka, coorg mandarin on Trifoliate
orange and Rangpur lime can be planted at a distance of 5 x 5, and 6 x 6 m,
accommodating 400& 275 trees / ha respectively.
In Tamil Nadu, Mandarin are planted at a spacing of 6 x 6 m in 75 x 75 x 75cm
size pits. The planting seasons are May – June and September – October.
Training and Pruning
The water shoots and rootstock sprouts should be periodically removed. Trees are
trained to single stem with 4 – 6 well – spaced branches for making the basic framework.
Further no branches should be allowed from the trunk up to height of 45-50 cm from the
ground level. An ideal mandarin tree should be low headed with dome like crown.
The bearing trees require little or no pruning. Pruning of bearing trees consists of
removal of dead, diseased, criss-cross and weak branches. Removal of water shoots and
suckers of rootstocks is also highly essential. Pruning of non-bearing trees can be done at
any time of the year, but for bearing trees, the best time is after harvesting, during late
winter or early spring when these are in somewhat dormant stage.
Root pruning is also practiced in some parts of central and southern India to
regulate flowering season. However, such prunings are not beneficial in the long run.
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Crop Regulation
In such and central India, mandarins bloom thrice a year. The February flowering
is known as ambe bahar; June flowering as mring bahar and October flowering as hast
bahar. Under such circumstances, plants give irregular and small crops at indefinite
intervals. To overcome this problem and to get fruitful yield in any of the 3 flowering
seasons’, treating mandarin trees has been practiced which is called resting or root
exposure or bahar treatment.
In this method, roots of the plant are exposed too sun by removing up to 7 -10 cm
soil around 40-60 cm radius of tree trunk. The water is withheld for a month or two before
flowering. As a result of water stress, leaves show wilting and fall on the ground. At this
stage the roots are again covered with a mixture of soil and FYM and irrigated
immediately. Subsequent irrigations are given at suitable intervals. Consequently, plants
give new vegetative growth, profuse flowering and fruiting. However, in light sandy and
shallow soils, exposure of roots should not be practiced and mere withholding of water for
2-3 weeks is sufficient for wilting and debilitation of trees.
It depends upon the choice of the grower as to which of the 3 bahars is to be taken
to get maximum profit. As the availability of water is a problem in central India during
April – May, the farmers prefer mrig bahar (June) so that the plants are forced to rest in
April – May.
Resting treatment is not feasible in North India, as mandarin plants normally rest in
winter and flower once a year. It is experienced that resting treatment in general is a
devitalizing process and should be resorted to only under the advice and direction of a
technical expert.
Manuring and Fertilizarion
Mandarin, like other citrus fruits also require judicious application of mineral
nutrients for proper growth, development and production of quality fruits. Mandarins also
require zinc, copper, manganese, iron, boron and molybdenum but not sodium and
chlorine, which are rather harmful for mandarins. Improper supply of nutrients may cause
serious disorders which may lead to orchard decline.
For palani Hills (Kg./ tree / Yr.)
Manures/
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Fertilizers
1 yr II yr III yr IV yr V yr VI on wards
FYM 10 15 25 25 25 30
N 0.100 0.200 0.300 0.400 0.500 0.600
P 0.040 0.080 0.120 0.160 0.160 0.200
K 0.050 0.100 0.200 0.300 0.300 0.400
For Shervaroyan hills (For trees above 6 year old)
NPK @ 700:375:600 g/tree along with VAM @ 1 kg / tree.
The fertilizers are to be applied in two splits on in May-June and another in
September – October.
Manures are to applied in the basin 70 cm away from the trunk at a death of 10 cm,
with topsoil covered and irrigated.
In hilly areas where the pH is very low, depending upon the pH, 2 – 4 kg of lime or
dolomite should be applied for each tree once in 2 years, one month ahead of the
application of regular fertilizers.
The spray solution containing following micronutrients can be applied once in
three months at the time of new flesh production.
Zinc sulphate - 0.5%
Manganese - 0.05%
Iron - 0.25%
Magnesium - 0.5%
Boron - 0.1%
Molybdenum - 0.003%
In addition to that apply 50 g in each of ZnSo4 mn and Fe per tree per year.
Application of VAM @ 20g/tree will help to accumulate Phosphorus, Zn, Cu and
sulphur.
The Fertigation treatment consisting of 500:240:70 NPK dose with 20% depletion
of available water content found best to increase the highest conopy volume, fruit weight,
TSS, Juice & yield in Nagpur mandarin.
Intercropping
eg: pea, cowpea and blackgram.
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Irrigation
In south India, mandarins are grown under rainfed conditions in high rain fall areas. In winter,
mandarins should be watered at 10-15 days intervals, while in summer at 5-7 days. In tarai
region of UP, soil has high moisture retention capacity, thus lesser number of irrigations are
required. However in Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and AP,more number of irrigations are
required.
Since root activity of mandarins is confined to a radial distance of 120 cm and to a depth of 24
cm, too much wetting should be avoided. Plants should be irrigated at 8-10 days intervals, during
drought (April – June in North India and October – December in South-Central India) Mandarins
are highly susceptible to water logging; therefore, stagnation of water around tree trunk should
be avoided. Water should also be free of salts.
Weed control
Weeds are a serious problem in mandarin nursery and young plantations Better way to eradicate
weeds is to use weedicides. Pre-emergence application of Diuron (5kg/ha) or Terbacil (4.5kg/ha)
or postemergence application of Atrazine (5-6 kg/ha) controls weeds significantly.
Others: Bromocil (6 kg/ha) – Mono & dicotweeds.
Glyph orate (5 lt/ha) – Perennial grasses
Simazine (5 kg /ha) - Perennial grasses
Harvest and yield
Generally, mandarins start bearing from the 4th year having 15-20 fruits/tree.
However, its trees attain the level of full bearing at the age of 7-10 years. From flowering
to maturity it takes 9 months.
Main harvesting periods of mandarin in different regions of India.
Region Main crop Off season
North –Western plants Dec - Feb -----
North –Eastern India Nov- Feb April - May
Central India Feb - March October - November
South India - Coorg December - April July - August
Nilgiris August - October Feb - March
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In Tamil Nadu, the main season is November – December, Harvest should be done at right
maturity. Therefore, fruits should be harvested when they attain full size, develop attractive
colour with optimum sugar; acid blend.
Yield
About 1000 – 1500 fruits can be harvested from a tree per year and 15 –20t/ha/year. The
common practice of harvesting is to pull the fruits from the branch, which may rupture the skin
near the stem-end leading to fungal infection and rotting. Therefore, fruits should neither be
plucked nor torn off, but should be cut off with clippers, shears or secateurs. Although mandarins
may attain optimum maturity standard but the fruits may not be attractive at the time of
harvesting due to lack of good yellow colour. Accordingly, degreening of mandarins with the
application of ethrel (50 ppm) one week before the harvesting develop golden yellow colour
within 5 days of the treatment.
Grading and Packing:
Generally mandarins and graded according to their size and appearance. Fruits are usually
packed in wooden boxes for distant markets, while for local marketing; baskets of
split bamboo and mulberry are used. Chopped straw and dry grasses are mostly used for padding.
The fruits should be cleaned and polished lightly with a piece of cloth, before wrapping them in
tissue paper or newspaper. Use of CFB carrions in place wooden boxes
is highly beneficial. Mandarins are generally transported by rail or road as ordinary cargos
without refrigeration, which often leads to heavy losses due to decay and fungal infection.
Storage
Green coloured fully ripe mandarins can be stored successfully at 8 -10º C with 85 – 90% RH
without impairing fruit quality. Kinnow mandarin fruit wrapped in HDPE 10G Poly bags haring
0.5% ventilation area can be safely stored up to 60 days and 80 days at ambient and cold storage
respectively without much loss of quality. In Nagpur Santra, neem leaf extract @ 20% sprayed
on fresh and fully matured fruits and packed in perforated polythene bags then stored in cool
chamber. The results indicated that after 42 days of storage a minimum PLW (18%) & rotting
(18%) Fruits (Green mature, colour break and ripe stage) dipped in 8% wax retained the
freshness of fruits up to 60-3 days under ambient condition.
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It is also called or sour lime. The fruit juice is rich in citric acid and ascorbic acid.
Climate and soil requirement
Tropical and subtropical. Can be grown upto 1000 m above MSL. Deep well drained
loamy soils are the best. They are sensitive to frost. The optimum temperature is 20 to 30°C.
Soil pH should be 6.5 to 7.0.
Irrigation: Irrigated copiously after planting. After establishment, irrigation may be given at 7-
10 days interval. Avoid water stagnation.
Manures and fertilizers per plant
N to be applied in two doses during March and October. FYM, P2O5 and K2O are to be
applied in October.
Manures and 1 year (kg) Annual income From 6th year (kg)
fertilizers (kg)
FYM 10.00 5.00 30.00
N 0.200 0.100 0.600
P 0.100 0.025 0.200
K 0.100 0.040 0.300
Spray zinc sulphate at the rate of 0.5% (500 g/ 100 lit of water) thrice in a year (March,
July and October) after the emergence of new flushes.
After cultivation
Remove branches of main stem upto 45 cm from ground level. Application of green
leaves 30 kg per tree once in 3 months.
Intercropping
Legumes and vegetable crops can be raised during prebearing age.
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Growth regulator
To increase fruit set spraying 2,4-D-20 ppm during flowering. Fruit retention spraying-
2,4-D@ 20 ppm or NAA 30 ppm after fruit set (marble size).
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CITRUS
Fruit cracking
It is due to sudden changes in temperature and also due to moisture stress condition.
Cracking of fruits may be radial or transverse.
Secondary infection is also possible due to Aspergillus, Fusarium or Alternaria
Management
Apply light irrigation at frequent intervals.
Application of potassium during fruit development.
Granulation
The juice vesicles become hard, enlarged and turn opaque grayish in colour.
The density of pulp is increased, juice contains increased minerals (Calcium, sodium,
potassium) and decreased carbohydrate and organic acid.
It results in lignification of juice cells that leads to formation of sclerenchyma
High humidity and fluctuation in temperature are the major factors.
Young trees are more prone to granulation than older trees.
Application of more nitrogen, excess irrigation, large size of fruits, rootstocks are also a
cause.
Mandarins on jattikhatti rootstock are more susceptible than sweet orange .
Management
Avoid excess moisture
Spray lime @ 20kg in 450 l of water.
Spray zinc (0.5%) and copper (0.5%).
Sunburn or sunscald
The portion that is exposed to sun develops yellow patches which turn brown and
become hard.
The inner portion becomes dessicated and discoloured.
Affected fruits are malformed and have low juice content.
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ACID LIME
Plant protection
Leaf mine
2 ml/l dimethoate + neem oil 3%
Leaf caterpillar
Endosulfan – 2 ml/l when infestation is moderate to severe.
Sucking pest
White fly : Spray quinalphos – 2 ml/lit
Nematodes : Carbofuran – 75 g/tree
P. fluroscens – 20 g
Diseases
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Twig blight: Dried twigs are pruned and sprayed with 0.3% Cu oxy chloride.
Scab: Spray 1% BM
Tristeza virus : Remove the infected trees and destroy. Spray monocrotophos - @ 1ml/lit to
control the aphids which spread the disease. Use pre immunized acid lime seedling for planting.
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climatic conditions are favourable is parts of Tamil Nadu so that 5 crops are taken in 2 years by
staggered pruning techniques.
Soil
Well – drained rich loamy soil with pH of 6.5-7.0. Soil depth should be almost
1 m.
Propagation
Propagated by hard wood cuttings prepared from matured canes (one year old shoot) of
healthy, moderately vigorous, virus tree vines. Cuttings of 25-30 cm length are prepared by
making the lower cut just below a bud and upper cut slightly above the bud. Cuttings should be
tied and stored in moist sand for a month for callusing. The callused cuttings start well in the
nursery. While planting only one bud in left above the ground level and remaining portion
buried in soil. At the end of winter the sprouted and rooted cuttings can be lifted and planted in
the main yield. Grafting and budding is practiced with a particular root stock for specific
requirement.
a. Phylloxera resistant root stock
Vitis riparia, V. rupestris
b. Nematode resistant root stock
Dogridge, Salt creek
c. Saline tolerant : Solanis, 1616
Preparation of main field and planting
Trenched of 0.6 m width and 0.6 m depth are dug at a distance of 3 m apart for Muscat.
Other varieties 1 m3 pits are drug. Well decomposed FYM or compost or green leaf manure has
to be applied in the trenches or pit and then covered with soil. The rooted cuttings are planted
during June – July.
Spacing: 3 x 2 m for Muscat
4 x 3 m for other Varieties
Irrigation
Immediately after planting 3rd day and once in a week. Irrigation with held 15 days before
pruning and also 15 days before harvest.
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The manures should be applied twice after pruning. Apply half the dose of K
immediately after pruning and the other half after 60 days of pruning. Foliary spray of 0.1%
boric acid + 0.2 % ZnSO4 + 1.0% urea twice before flowering and 10 days after first spray to
overcome nutrient deficiency.
Special practices
Tipping of shoots and tying of clusters in the pandal after the fruit set. Remove tendrils.
Nipping the growing shoots of axillary buds and terminal buds at 12 to 15 buds. Thinning the
compact bunches by removing 20% of the berries at pea stage.
The clusters are dipped in a solution containing Brassinosteriod 0.5 ppm and GA3 25 ppm
at 10-12 days after fruit set to maintain vigour, yield and quality parameters.
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Pests
Nematode
Carbofuran – 60 g/vine a week before pruning and irrigated profusely. The soil should
not be disturbed to atleast 15 days. Application of neem cake 200 g/vine also controls nematode.
We can afforded for application of P. fluorescens.
Flea beetles
Phosalone – 2ml/lit after pruning and followed with 2 or 3 sprayings.
Diseases
Powdery mildew: Sulphur dusting @ 6-12 kg/ha
Downy mildew: Spray 1% BM
Ripening
To get uniform ripening bunches are sprayed with 0.2% K chloride at 20th and 40th day
after berry set and clusters of seedless varieties are diped in 25 ppm GA (25 mg/lit) at calyptra
fall stage and repeated again at pepper stage to increase the size of berries.
Yield
Seed less : 15 t/ha/yr
Muscat : 30 t/ha/yr
Pachadroksha: 40 t/ha/yr
Anab-e-shahi
and Arka hybrids : 20 t/ha/yr
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Grapes should be harvested only after ripening. The heat requirement of most of
varieties ranges from 2900 to 3600 units.
The grape berries can be kept without spoilage for 7 days at room temperature. Grapes
can economically be stored upto 40-45 days in cold storage. The optimum storage temperature
recommended is -2 to -1.5°C.
Raisins from grapes form an important by product industry in several grape growing
countries in the world. Grapes of 17° brix and above are used for raisin making while 20-23°
brix is the standard.
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It does well in varied soil types, the best performance is observed on loams of uniform texture
upto 1.8 m in depth. The most important requirement is that the soil should have good drainage.
Even two to three cm of water stagnation around the tree for a few hours is likely to damage
them due to the collar-rot disease occurrence. Papaya performs well in tropical climates where
summer temperature ranges from 35„aC to 38„aC. At higher elevations, the fruit quality is
usually lower. It cannot tolerate very hot summer or frost, this limits cultivation in Northern
India. It cannot tolerate, very hot summer or frost, a dry
warm climate tends to increase the sweetness of the fruits. In strong wind prone areas, wind
breaks have to be provided to save the trees from wind damage.
Tamil Nadu is an ideal home for growing papaya because of the mild temperatures and freedom
from mosaic and leaf curl virus diseases. These features help all the year round cultivation of
papaya.
Seed production
Papaya is a highly cross-pollinated crop. Seeds taken from a fruit wouldrarely breed true to type.
If a variety is to be maintained pure, controlled pollination between selected female and male
progenies of the same parent i.e.,crossing of sister and brother, called sib mating has to be done.
This consists ofcollection of pollen from the male parent and applying it on the previously
bagged female flower. Seeds from such sib mated fruit should be used for further multiplication.
Failure to observe this precaution leads to the deterioration of the variety resulting in the progeny
being a mixture of all kinds of types within a few years.
Propagation
The most common method of propagation of papaya is from seeds. Seeds are collected from well
mature, ripe and large fruits borne on female plants to hermaphrodite plants as the case may be.
The fruits are cut open and seeds are carefully extracted in trays. They are washed and dried in
the sun or shade and are stored in bottles. Fresh seeds may be mixed with fine cold wood-ash
which absorbs the slimy coating on them and helps to keep the seeds separate on drying. About
500 g seed is required for raising in one hectare. Seedlings can be raised in the raised nursery
beds or in polythene bags, however the seedlings from the latter one are good. Two seeds in
gynodioecious type or 5 to 6 seeds in
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dioecious type' should be sown per poly bag. The papaya plant can also be propagated from
cuttings and grafts. Propagation from seeds is, however, preferred, because the vegetative
methods of propagation are not economical.
Planting
Pits of 45cm x 45cm x 45cm size are dug at about 1.8x1.8m apart either way. This would
accommodate 3000 plants per hectare. Due to sex variations, about 40 to 60 per cent of the plants
may turn to be male in the case of dioecious varieties. Therefore, in such case 2 to 3 seedlings
per hole at 30 cm apart in the pit should be planted, so that when they reach the flowering phase,
the unproductive male trees can be removed to keep the population ratio of one male tree for
every 15 to 20 female trees. In the case of bisexual varieties,
such contingency may not arise. One good seedling per pit may be planted.The best time for
planting papaya is the beginning of the South- West monsoon in most parts of India. In south
India, June to October and January to March are suitable for planting as the other months are
either too hot or rainy.
Manures and fertilizers
The nutrition of papaya is different from other crops because of its quick growing, continuous
and heavy fruiting nature. Nutrient uptake studies conducted at TNAU showed that the uptake of
N,P.K is more between flowering and harvesting stage, its peak requirement being between fruit
development and harvesting. As three stages ie flowering. fruit development and harvesting
concurrently occur in papaya plant, regular fertilizer application ie., 10 kg of FYM/plant as basal
.besides 50g each of N, P and K per plant at bimonthly interval is recommended by TNAU. At
Indian Institute of Horticulture Research. BangaIore. a dose of 250 g each of N, P2O5 and 500 g
K2O per plant per year in six split application recommended to get higher yield. .
Irrigation
Papaya responds well to copious irrigation in well drained soils. Regular irrigation helps fruit
development and induces the tree to bear larger sized fruits. Water stagnation should be avoided.
In most parts of India; papaya are irrigated once in 8 or 10 days.
After cultivation
It is not possible to identify the sex at the early stage until they put forth flowers which may take
4-5 months from planting. At this stage, male trees should be removed maintaining one male tree
for every 20 female trees for proper pollination and fruit set. In each pit only vigourously
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growing female/hermaphrodite tree should be retained and other plants removed. During the pre-
bearing age, short duration vegetables like cabbage, cauliflower, onion, chillies, radish, etc. can
be grown as intercrops. Weeding should be done regularly to keep the field weed free in the
young plantation as in the grown up
field, the interspace remain well covered with the top growth which helps in checking weeds.
Sex expression
Many sex forms such as dioecious, hermaphrodite, gynodioecious etc.,have been reported in
papaya. There, are no distinct or definite methods to ascertain the sex of the plants at the early
stage itself. Besides, many factors have been reported to influence the sex expression.
l) Environment: Low temperature tends to produce perfect flowers on the male tree and female
flower production is increased in cool weather and short days. Season of planting also affects the
sex expression. Planting during February shows more male plants while planting in March/April
produces an equal number of staminate and pistillate plants.
2) Growth regulators: such as GA (50 ppm), ethrel (200ppm) SADH (250ppm) and phosphon -
D (2500ppm) increase the femaleness in dioecious types.
Harvesting and yield
The first crop of fruits becomes available in 12-14 months from the time of planting. The
cropping is practically continuous during the life of the tree. In the plains of North India fruits
continue to mature through the spring and summer, but in the cooler places in the hills only 3 to
4 months from February to May. Fruits should be harvested when the colour changes from green
to yellowish green. It should be harvested individually with hand, taking care to avoid injuries on
the fruits. The yield varies considerably and the yield per tree may vary from 50 to 100 fruits.
The yield may also vary according to the number of female and hermaphrodite trees in the
orchard. TNAU bred varieties yield 100-160 t/ha. Papaya gives economic crop upto 2 years and
thereafter it declines drastically. Fruits to be consumed locally should be stored in a single layer
of straw until they become yellow. For distant market, it should be packed in bamboo baskets
lined
with straw to avoid bruising.
Extraction of papain
The latex or'milky juice of the unripe green papaya fruit contains a largeamount of
digestive enzyme called papain which is able to digest the protein in our feeds. Fully developed
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green large sized hard papaya fruits which are about three months old are selected for tapping.
The latex is obtained by making scratches or shallow incisions on the skin of the fruit The
incisions are about 0.3 cm deep. Usually not more than four incisions per fruit at equal distance
are made every day. To cover the whole surface around the fruit not more than five tappings at
intervals of four or five days would be necessary. Non-metallic instruments should preferably be
used in tapping and collecting, as the juice acts upon metals and gets discoloured. An ivory blade
or a sharp edge or piece of bamboo splinter may be used. The latex should be collected in
porcelain glass or earthen containers. After about 2 to 4 hours, the latex is scraped out from the
tray and dried in the sun. Tapping should be undertaken early in the morning so that drying in the
sun can be done before mid-day. This makes the material sufficiently dry by the evening. When
thoroughly dried, the latex becomes crisp and flaky. It may be then ground into a powder,
preferably still warm. The dried papain is powdered and sieved in 10 mesh sieves. The cream
coloured powder should be placed in air-tight bottles or poly bags. Papain can be also dried
artificiaIly at temperature of 50 to 55°c which will attain better colour and quality. Potassium
metabisulphite (KMS) at 0.5% may be added to it for better colour and keeping quality. The
papain production is influenced by certains factors such as fruit size, fruit maturity,
varietal factor etc.
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Propagation
Grafted plants on Manilkhara hexandra (Pala) root stock.
Season of planting-June to December.
Planting
Pits of 1m3 in drug. Filled with top soil mixed with 10 kg of FYM, 1 kg of neem cake
and 100 g of lindane 1.3%.Grafts are planted in the centre of the pit with ball of earth intact. The
graft joint must be alteast 15 cm above the ground level. The plants are staked to avoid bending
or damage of graft joint.
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Irrigation
Irrigated copiously immediately after planting and on the third day and once in 10 days
after words till the graft establishes.
Manures and fertilizers may be applied in September – October, 45 cm away from the
trunk upto the leaf drip and incorporated.
After cultivation
Removal of the root stock sprouts, water shoots criss cross and lower branches.
Intercropping: Legumes and short duration vegetable crops may be raised as intercrop during
pre bearing stage.
Plant protection
Leaf webber: Spraying of phosalone – 2ml / lit
Hairy caterpillars : Spraying of endosulfan – 2 ml/lit of water
Budworm : Spray phosalone – 2ml/lit
Diseases
Sooty mould : 1 kg maida or starch is boiled with 5 lit of water, cooled and diluted to 20 lit (5%)
and sprayed.
Harvest: Mature fruits are dull brown in colour. When scratched the colour immediately below
the skin will of lighter shade if matured while in the immature fruits it is green. The mature
fruits are harvested by hand picking.
Fruits at full maturity develop a dull orange or potato colour.
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Season: February – June and September – October. The fruits are ripen by keeping the fruits in
a air tight chamber with. 5000 ppm Ethrel + 10 g NaOH pellets.
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Propagation
In India, guava is commonly propagated from seed which germinates in about three weeks.
Boiling the seeds for five minutes, soaking them in water for weeks prior to sowing or treating
them in strong sulphuric acid for five minutes facilitates their germination. Propagation through
this method is not desirable as the seedlings will take more time to come to bearing and seedling
trees differ greatly from the mother plants. Vegetative propagation through layering is therefore
recommended. Both air layering and simple layering have been found to be successful. In about
45 days, layers can be separated from the mother plants. These separate layers should be planted
in full size pots and they are hardened by gradually exposing them to direct sunlight. Such
hardened layers are ready for planting in about six months. Though it is hard to root semi hard
wood cuttings, treating with IBA or NAA at 2000 to 5000 ppm root well under mist conditions.
In some places, budding techniques using forkert, shield, patch, chip etc have been tried with
different success.
Planting .
Pits of 0:5 m x 0.5 m x 0.5 m size are dug at a spacing of 5m x 5m. The layers with the ball of
earth are planted in the centre of the pit.
Manures and fertilizers
It responds well to the application of inorganic fertilizers along with organic manures. Therefore
for the bearing trees, 50 kg of FYM and one kg in each of N, P and K are applied per tree in two
equal split doses, once during March and again during October. The manure and fertilizers are
spread in the entire basin of the tree, 15 cm away from the trunk upto leaf drip and incorporated
by shallow digging. It also responds to foliar spray of nutrients and spraying of urea 1 % + Zinc
0.5% twice a year during March and October increase the yield. Guava sometimes suffers from
deficiency of micronutrients. Hence, a mixed spray containing ZnSO4, MgSO4. MnSO4 @ 0.5%
and CUSO4 and FeSO4 @ 0.25% plus a wetting agent @ 1 ml per 5 litre of solution at various
stages viz. new flush, I month after first spray at flowering and at fruit set are recommended.
Irrigation
Guava though can withstand drought, it responds to irrigation at interval of 10 days.
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Open centre systems or delayed open centre is generally recommended. Pruning consists of
removal of suckers arising from the base of the trunk. Dried twigs and branches have to be
removed and the cut ends may be applied with Bordeaux paste. The flowers are borne on the
axils of current season shoots. Light annual pruning after harvesting promotes vegetative growth
and flowering. In Tamil Nadu, it is recommended that the tips of 10-12 cm lengths of past
seasons shoots are pruned during September and February every year to encourage more laterals.
Pruned trees give large fruits and early ripening. When the trees become old, the branches are
pollarded leaving 30 cm in length at their origin. The cut branches produce plenty of shoots and
flowers and ultimately high
yields. In the trees having upright and tall growth habits, the straight growing branches are bent
and tied on the pegs driven on the ground. In the bent branches, dormant buds are activated and
induced to produce flowers and fruits heavily. In certain parts of Maharashtra, root pruning is
practiced to produce heavy yield. In this method roots are exposed and minute roots are cut away
and irrigation is withheld so as to allow the leaves to shed. Then, the basins are covered with the
manures and soil and irrigated copiously.
Cropping
The fruit buds are borne on past season growth terminally or laterally. The flowers are borne on
the current season growth in the axils of leaves. The flowers are solitary or in cymes of 2 to 3.
The current season growth takes one or two months to bear flowers. The floral buds require 38-
42 days for full development. Layers generally take 2-3 years for fruiting. Guava flowers twice a
year, first in April-May for rainy season crop and then in August – September for wiriter season
crop. In South India, there is a third crop with flowers appearing in October. As the rainy season
fruits are insipid and watery and do not keep well. In certain parts of India, some practices are
followed to avoid flowering and
fruiting during rainy season so as to get large sized fruits of better quality during
winter season. They consists of
1. Bahar treatment - consisting of root exposure and or root pruning before the
onset of monsoon.
2. Deblossoming of rainy season crop - spraying NAA 200-400 ppm and
3. Withholding of water and removing the soil from around the upper roots during
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rainy season and covering it again with soil and manure mixture. Guava fruits should be picked
immediately when it is mature and they should not be allowed to ripen in the trees lest the
damage by birds and squirrels. Individual hand picking is preferable to shaking the tree. Mature
or half ripe fruits are mostly prefered for consumption than ripe or over ripe fruits. Yield varies
due to many factors. On an average 800 number of fruits weighing 20-25 kg may be obtained
from guava.
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Soil and Climate: Mild tropical climate as found in the humid hill slopes is best suited. Can be
grown in plains under shade. Elevation from 500 m to 700 m is ideal. A light well drained soil
with pH 5.5 to 7.0 is preferable. Heavy soils can also be used if drainage facilities are available.
Spacing: Plant in double rows either in beds or in trenches with the plants into the second rows
set in the middle of the plants in the first row.
The spacing between two trenches will be 90 cm. Row to row spacing in the same bed
per trench will be 60 cm and plant spacing within the row is 30 cm.
Planting: Use suckers and slips of 300-350 g weight for planting. Give a slanting cut to the
suckers before planting and dip in Mancozeb 0.3% or Carbendazim 0.1%.
Manures and Fertilizers: FYM 40-50 t/ha. N 16 g, P 4 g and K 12 g/plant in two equal splits at
6th and 12th month after planting. Apply as foliar spray 0.5%-1.0% sulphate of Zinc and Ferrous
solutions at 15 days interval to overcome the deficiencies in the early crop phase.
Aftercultivation: To have uniform flowering apply the following when the crop attains 35-40
leaf stage. NAA 10 ppm + 2% urea (20 g in 1 lit of water) @ 50 ml / plant poured into crown or
2% urea + 0.04% Sodium carbonate + 20 ppm Ethephon (ethrel) @ 50 ml/ plant poured into the
crown. To increase the size of the fruit, 200-300 ppm NAA should be sprayed after fruit
formation. To avoid calcium induced Iron chlorosis adequate shade should be given.
Plant protection
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Harvest: Fruits can be harvested from 18 to 24 months. Slight colour change at the base of the
fruit indicates maturity.
Yield: 50 t/ha
A plant crop and two ratoon crops are normally taken and in Mauritius variety upto five
crops can be taken.
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India is considered to be the native home of jack. In the tamil literature, jack has been
given the important second position of significant ‘three fruits’ viz., ‘Mukkani’. It is mainly
distributed in the tropical humid belt. In India, Assam, Bihar, Kerala and Tamil Nadu are the
main jack growing states. In Tamil Nadu lower Palani hills of Dindigul Anna District and Panruti
of South Arcot Vallalar District are known for the best quality jack fruits. The fleshy carpel
(which is botanically the perianth) is the edible portion. Hundred gram edible portion contains
19.8g carbohydrate mainly as sugars, 1.9f protein, 0.1f fat, 1.1 g fibre, 20 mg calium, 41 mg
phosphorus 0.56 mg iron, 175 mg carotene (Vit. A), 0.03 mg thiamine, 0.13 mg riboflavin, 0.4
mg niacin and 7 mg citamin C. one hundred grams of jack carpels supply 88 Kcal of energy.
Recently it has been reported that jack fruit could be very useful in the treatment of the
dreaded disease of human being AIDS. An extract of jack fruit was seen to have inhibited the
growth of HIV infection in vitro. The power of this substance called jacaline was discovered by
Jean Favero, Department of Microbiology and Antibacterial limmunology, Montpellier
University, France. ‘Jacaline’ is inactive on lymphocytes which hare already infected but has
proved its might by protecting the healthy ones. After modifying this molecule to make it less
toxic, scientists are planning to use in vivo (technical News from France, Centre for
Documentation on Universities Science and Technology, Office of the Counsellor for Cultural,
Scientific and Technical Co- operation. Embassy of France, 2, Aurangazed Road, New Delhi,
(India).
Apart from its use as a table fruit, jack is popular fruit with the housewife for making
pickles, for dehydration into jack leather or thin round papad. Canned jack fruit, syrup, jam,
jelly and candy have also been attempted. Preservation of ripe flackes in bottles after mixing
with sugar and honey is very common in west coast. The dehydration of salted flakes for use as
substitute for potato chips after frying in oil or ghee is another practice there.
The outer pericarp of the fruit and sterile flowers (present in between the fleshy fertile
flackes) is praised as cattle feed relished by the cattle as such or after mixing with rice gruel.
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From seeds, a starchy flour is made. The seeds are also relished when boiled or roasted and
eaten out of hand or after soaking in syrub for some time. The seeds are also popular ingredients
in many culinary preparations. The latex from bark contains a large amount of resins and is
often used to plug holes in earthen containers. The timber is valuable in construction and
furnishing. The leaves are sued as fodder and particularly relished by goats.
VARITIES
Cultivated jack types are classified into two groups (1) firm flesh (2) soft flesh.
Singapore (or) Ceylon jack
It was introduced in Tamil Nadu from Sri Lanka. Fruits are medium in size each
weighing 7-10 kg. The carpels are crisp, sweet, yellow with strong pleasant aroma. It is a
precocious bearer viz., even seedling progenies will start bearing from 3 years after plantinf
(normally in other types the seedlings progenies will start bearing only from 7-8 years after
planting). Fruits will be available from March – June and again from September to December.
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Hybrid jack :
It is a cross between Singapore jack x Veliappala developed at Fruit Research Station,
Kallar. Trees are precocious in bearing; carpels are bigger in size sweeter than the parents.
PLR – 1 : (Palur-1)
It is a high yielding variety developed at Vegetable Research Station, Palur of Tamil Nadu
Agricultural University. A single plant section isolated in Panikkankuppam village near Panruti
of South Arcot Vallalar District of Tamil Nadu. The fully ripe fruits have flat stigmatic surface
instead of a spiny surface. The special feature of this genotypes is that the trees bear fruits twice
in a year viz., fruits will be available in the regular jack season March to June and an off season
crop during October to December is also available. Each tree bears about 60-80 fruits. The
average fruit weight is 12 kg containing 115-120 flakes. The total flake weight per fruit is 2.36
kg which accounts for 19.68 % of the totalfruit weight. Flakes pale yellow in colour, crip and
sweet; TSS is 190brix.
PPI – 1 : (Pechiparai – 1)
It was developed at Horticultural Research Station, Pechiparai of Tamil Nadu
Agricultural University by clonal selection from Mulagummoodu local. Trees are medium tall
maximum bearing in tree truck. On average each tree bears 107 fruits weighing 1818 kg per year
in two seasons, viz., April – June and November – December. Carpels are sweet, crisp, tasty
with pleasant aroma. Suitable for commercial planting as well as for planting in home garden.
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FYM 10 kg 10 kg 50 kg
The fertilizers are applied during rainy season. If irrigation is available they can be split
into two and applied twice in a year June – July and September – October. The manures and
fertilizers can be applied in a circular trench taken 50 -06 cm away from the trunk.
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Irrigation :
Though jack is cultivated under rainfed conditions, it is very sensitive to drought. Hence
irrigation should be done depending on the type of soil, season etc. so that, there should not be
any moisture stress especially during flowering and fruitset. Similarly too much of soil moisture
will affect the quality of fruits. The flakes will develop an insipid taste when there is excess soil
moisture.
Intercultivation :
During the prebearing age pulses can be raised as intercrop and dried leaves can be
spread below the trees to serve as a mulch for moisture conservation. As the trunk increase in
size, the active buds of female inflorescence develop from the trunk as well as from main
scaffold branches. This type of bearing habit is called ‘cauliflorus’. These fruit buds should be
protected from any possible damage by rubbing body of the stray cattle such as buffaloes
through spreading dried thorny bushes. This is very essential especially when there is no proper
fence in the fields.
The male inflorescence (catkins) are seen in the current season growth while female
catkins are produced as cauliflorus (on trunk and main scaffold). Some times there will be more
production of female flowers as well as male flowers but there will be no fruitset. This is mainly
due to lack of proper pollination. The male catkins show protrusion of anthers on their surface of
the spikes. The stigma becomes visible by 8 AM from 4th day after it comes from the sheath.
Every day between 8.30 AM and 9.30 AM, the male catkins showing the pollen have to be
collected and rubbed on the sticky surface of female of female spikes. This can be done for 10-
15 days, for each spike. Such hand pollination will help in proper fruitset and yield.
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Plant protection :
Pests :
Bud weevil L (Ochyromera artocarpi)
It bores into the tender buds, shoots and fruits.
Management :
Destroy fallen fruits and buds, collect and kill grups, adults and then spray endosulfan
(0.035%).
DISEASES :
Fruit rot : (Rhizopus artocarpi)
It causes premature fall of young fruits due to rotting and may result in heavy loss in
yield under very humid conditions.
Management
Spraying Disthane M. 45 (0.2%0 or Bavistin (0.05%) or Fytolan (0.2%) at 15 days
interval during fruit growth.
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POMEGRANATE
Pomegranate is a favorite table fruit of tropical and subtropical countries. The aril around
the seeds form the edible part which contains cool refreshing juice. Besides its use as edible fruit,
pomegranate also possesses a number of medicinal properties. The juice is useful in the cure of
leprosy, rind of the fruit is useful in curing dysentery and diarrhea. The colouring matter present
in the fruit rind is also used in the synthesis of dyeing material for clothes. Pomegrante is native
of Iran and cultivated in Spain, Morocco, Egypt, Iran, Afghabistan, Clifornia. In India though a
number of states cultivate pomegranate, the main state which has the maximum area is
Maharashtra. Pomegranate is a rich source of carbohydrate (14.5%), protein (1.6%), calcium (10
mg/100g), phosphorus (70mg/ 100g), iron (0.3 mg/100g) and vitamin C (65mg/100g)
Despite adapted to a wide range of climatic conditions, pomegranate yields the best
quality fruits in areas of cool winter and hot dry summer (which is prevalent in Baluchisthan,
Afghanistan and Iran). Right from sea level upto 1850 metres, it can be successfully grown. It
is fairly tolerant to low temperature, of course with differences among varieties. For proper fruit
development and maturity and sweetness, a temperature of 35 – 38 0 C is needed. Under humid
condition the quality gets affected. At higher elevation and areas of low temperature during
winter the tree behaves as a deciduous one. It is not very specific about its soil requirement.
However, in deep loamy or alluvial soil it gives very good yield. It can tolerate salinity and
alkalinity in the soil to certain extent.
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Because of the hard seeds though the aril is pleasant, consumption of pomegranate has been a
tedious and boredom process for centuries. But due to evolution of soft seeded genotypes, there
is a great increase in the consumption rate of this fruit.
Kandhari :
Fruits are large with deep red rind, aril deep blood red or deep pink with sweet, slightly
acidic juice. Seeds are very hard.
Musker Red :
Medium sized fruits with medium thick red rinds. Aril is fleshy with moderately sweet
juice, seeds are medium hard.
Alandi or Vadki :
It possesses medium sized red fruits, aril fleshy, blood red or deep pink with sweet acidic
juice. Seeds are very hard.
Kabul :
Large fruits, dark red with yellow parches, aril dark red fleshy seeds hard with slightly bitter
juice.
This cultivar has large fruits with greenish white rind, whitish to pinkish white, thick,
juicy soft arils. It is the commercial variety of Gujarat.
Paper Shell:
Medium sized fruits with thick rind; arils are fleshy, reddish to pink with sweet juice.
Seeds are soft.
Spanish Ruby :
It has medium sized fruits with thin rind , flesh rose coloured and seeds are soft.
Ganesh :
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Jothi : (GKVK-1)
Yercaud-1 (YCD-1)
CO-1:
Miridula :
Ruby:
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A multiple cross hybrid developed at IIHR, Bangalore for aril colour and seed
mellowness. The hybrid develops dark red arils in winter and dark pink or red aril in summer
whereas in Ganesh even though the pink or dark pink aril is developed in winter, it is almost
white in summer. Ruby derived certain fruit quality attributes from Ganesh, while genes for red
colour of the aril was incorporated from a Russian variety ‘Gulsha Rose Pink’. The fruit skin
colour is reddish brown with green streaks. Rind is thin, arils are bold (37.2 g/100 arils), seed
soft (2.19 kg/cm2) each fruit weighs on an average 270 g. Yield is 16 – 18 tonnes/ha.
Amlidana :
It is an F1 hybrid (Ganesh x Nana) grows well under tropical climate. With quality fruit
attributes Amlidana is superior to sour variety Daru whose trees come up naturally in temperate
regions of North India. Its fruits provide more acidic (16.18%) ‘anardana’ an acidulant
commercial product prepared by drying the arils of highly acidic pomegranate which is
commercially marketed as condiment in North India for use in culinary preparations which
serves the purpose of dried green mango (amachur) and tamarind for souring curry, chutney etc.
This hybrid fruits weigh 120 g each with pink bold arils. It yields 56 fruits / tree. Trees are short
statured and hence suited for HDP which will give higher fruit yield / unit area.
Manuring:
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N P K
After I year 250 125 125
II Year 500 125 125
III Year 500 125 250
IV year and above 625 250 500
Besides this every year 20 kg of FYM should be applied / tree. The manures and
fertilizers are mixed and applied in a round basin 1 metre away from the trunk. A week before
application of fertilizer, the soil around the root zone is slightly removes and 50 g of
phosphobacterium = 150 g of Vesicular Arbuscular mycorrhiza have to be applied near the
feeder roots. Besides farmyard manure each tree is supplied with 10 kg of pressmud, by
spreading on the top layer of soil. In sandy soils press mud serves as a mulch and prevent
moisture loss during summer season. Besides this, press mud also supplies some of the nutrients.
Press mud applied plants have come to earlier bearing in sandy soil condition.
Application of 375 kg N, 1875 kg P2O5 and 187.5 kg K2O through fertigation along with
irrigation level at 20% wetted area is found best for pomegranate var. Mridula.
Irrigation :
Drip irrigation using pitcher pot or tube will keep the soil moisture constant without
much fluctuation. This helps the pomegranate to get better establishment in the early stage as
well as regular bearing in the fruiting phase.
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in such growth which exhaust the maximum reserve food. IF such diversion of food is allowed
then there will be very poor bearing in the trees.
Crops regulation can be done by withdrawal of irrigation water followed by manuring
and then irrigation, Water is withheld for about 2 months in advance of the normal flowering
season. After 2 months, manures and fertilizers are applied and light irrigation is given. Three to
four days later heavier irrigations at normal interval are followed. For this treatment the trees
readily respond and produce new growth, bloom and bear a good crop.
The fruits are ready for harvest in about 5-7 months after the appearance of blossoms.
Fruit cracking is a serious problem. This is mainly due to high temperature coupled with
moisture stress at the time of fruit growth and maturity some times it is due to boron and
potassium deficiency. The intensity increase if the matured fruits are subjected to drought or
heavy rains. Cracking can be controlled by avoiding moisture stress during fruit development,
application of recommended dose of 500 g of potash and bimonthly spraying of 0.25% borax =
0.1% urea during the later stages of fruit development.
Plant protection :
Pests :
1. Pomegranate butterfly (or) Fruit borer. (Deudorix isocrates)
Infestation starts from flowering to button stage. The female lays eggs on calyx of
flowers and small fruits. On hatching, caterpillars bore inside the developing fruits and feed
inside. Such infested fruits may also be invaded by bacteria and fungi which cause fruit rot.
Affected fruits fall down.
Management :
a. Spray NSKE 5% (or) neem formulations @ 2mla /1 four times at 15 days interval
commencing from flowering (as oviposition deterrent)
b. Release egg parasite, Trichogramma chilonis (Tricho-Cards) @ 1 lakh (16 to 20cc). Tie
the tricho-card (at 4 to 5cc) per release.
c. Apply endosulfan 35 EC 2 ml or dinethoate 30 EC 1.5 ml/l when the fruits are in marble
size.
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Management
a. Spray 0.04% monocrophos for control of mealybugs and scale insects.
b. Spray 0.03% dimethoate or phosphomidon for control of whiteflies, aphids and thrips.
c. Spray kelthane (50%) 500 ml in 500 lit of water for control of red mites.
d. Nicotinyl compounds viz., acetamiprid 20 Sp, Imidachloprid 200 SL and thiomethoxam
70 WS can be tried. Chitin inhibitor, diaphenthiuron is also reported effective against
sucking group of pests.
DISEASES :
The disease starts as minute dull-violet black spots on leaves. The area surrounding the
spot turns yellow, then spots enlarge and cause drying.
Fruit rot :
Black pin head spot appear on the fruit at different ages. The spots will be severe on mature
fruits. Black sunken spots develop and enlarge to cover larger areas of rind. The fruit rind
cracks and infection spreads to interior areas and petals also. The petals become blackened and
complete rotting occurs.
Management :
Spraying fruits with 0.25% mancozeb or copper oxy chloride 0.25% or carbendazim
0.1% starting from one month after flowering and repeated at monthly interval (3 sprays).
Several minute (2-5 mm) dark coloured irregular spots surrounded by yellow tissues
occur on the leaves. Later the leaves turn yellow and prematurely drop. The bacteria also attack
fruits and cause dark brown irregular spots.
Management :
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– 200 fruits / year. The fruits can b stored for 15 to 20 days under ambient temperature. At 0 0 C
and 80 % RH, they can be stored even for 2 months.
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Custard apple (Annona squamosa) can be called as a delicacy of dry region due to its
very sweet delicate flesh. It is a deciduous or semideciduous tall woody shrub of anout 5-6
meters height having irregularly spreading branches. The fruits are rich in carbohydrate mainly
in the from of sugar (23.5%), protein (1.6%), calcium (17mg/100g), phosphorus (47mg/100g)
and iron (1.5mg/100g). The custard apple of India the sitaphal or sugar apple of sweet sop has
many relatives.
1. Bulock’s heart (or) Bull’s heart (or) Ramphal: (Annona reticulata) Fruits are larger in
size, heart shaped, smooth and less seeded but pulp is inferior in quality.
2. Sour sop: (A. muricata). The fruits have many soft spines. Fruits are highly acidic.
3. Cherimoyer (or) Cherimola (or) Cherimoya (or) Lakshman phal: (A. cherimola).
Fruits are most the delicious, slightly adicdic, sweet with buttery consistency of pulp
and low seed content.
4. Atemoya: A. atemoya (A. squamosa x A. cherimola). It is a F1 hybrid with a better
quality of A. cherimola and adaptability to high temperature as that of A. squamosa.
Besides used as a dessert fruit, custard aple can be used in ice cream and in preparation of
jam, jelly etc. Tropical America is considered to be the native home of all home of all
Annonaceous fruits.
The probable origin of A. squamosa is West Indies and South America, while A.
cherimola originated in mountains of Ecuador and Peru.
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40oC) and humidity is low there willl be no fruitest though the flowering is profuse. An
annual rainfall of 500-750 mm is adequate ofr growth and fruiting. Cherimoyer (A.
cherimola) requires a lower temperature and a subtropical mild climate and it is difficult to
be cultivated at very high temperature. Atemoyas (the hybrids between custard apple and
cherimoyar) have the superior tastes of cherimoyer can tolerate fai8rly higher temperature
just like A squamonsa. Ramphal (A. reticulate) does not tolerate severe summer when
compared to sitaphal.
Annonas can be grown in varied soil right from heavy claly upto sandy one. They can
also be grown on rocky, marginal and even waste lands. However for best yield, a well
drained fertile soil with neutral pH will be ideal. The plants are shallow rooted anod hence a
deep soil is not necessary. They can be grown on slightly alkaline soil and with irrigation
water having slight higher pH and salinity.
CULTIVARS:
Balanagar:
It is a cultivar of A. squamosa. The fruits are greenish yellow in colour. Each fruit
weight 130-140g. TSS is 20.7o brix.
Red sitaphal:
It probably originated as chance seedling. Fruits of this cultivar through belong to A.
squamosa are pinkish dark with erythrite red pulp. Average fruit weight is 150-160g with
22.3obix TSS.
Mammoth:
It is a cultivar of A. squamosa. The weight of the fruit is about 125g, TSS is 20o brix.
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African Pride:
It is a cultivar of A atemoya (Cherimoya x sugar apple). It is a popular variety grown is
subtropical region of Australia.
Pink Mannoth:
It is another popular cultivar of atemoya. The pulp is similar to cherimoyer, being juicy
with an excellent acidic flavour.
Arka Sahan:
It is an interspecific hycrid developed at IIHR, Bangalore. Fruits are big (210g) skin is
light green in colour with waxy bloom, moderately thick with large flat eyes. Fruits have
improved shelf life viz., take 7 days to ripe, 4 days more than ‘Mammoth’. The creamy white
flesh in juicy with mild pleasant aroma and tender with sparse seeds (9/100g of fruit weight).
The fruit of this variety is also characterized by large segments or flakes and many of which are
seedless. Flesh is very sweet (30o brix) compared to 24o brix in Mammoth. Average yield is 12
tonnes/ha.
APK (Ca)-1:
It is a clonal selection from a high yielding type in State Horticultural Farm, Courtallam
of Tirunelveli District of Tamilnadu developed at Regional Research Station, Aruppukkottai. It
is a high yielder in rainfed vertisol (Black soil) 14.90 kg/tree, 30.7% more than Balanagar. Each
fruit weighs 207g. Average number of fruits would be 72/tree. TSS 24.5o Brix, acidity 0.2%.
Adapted to semiarid plains.
Annona is propagated commonly by seeds. Fresh seeds germinate in 20-30 days. Seed
propagation results in variability in plant vigour, prolonged juvenility and inferior fruit quality.
Vegetative propagation by budding or inarching on owoon seedlings and A. reticulata ensures
genetic uniformity. Budding is usually done in early spring or in the autumn. Inarching should
be carried out in early spring using one-year old mature scion and more than one-year old root
stock.
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Since Annonas are mostly cultivated on poor soils, manuring is necessary for production
of good crops. Application of 10 kg Farmyard manure, 250g N, 125g P2 O5 and 250g K2 O is
recommended per tree. The fertilizers hould be applied at the commencement of rainy season.
Black polythene mulch is most effective in reducing the irrigation requirement in anola cv. N.A
7 (60.86%) with an annual water requirement of 777.6 litres per tree.
Intercultivation:
Intercrops like groundnut, minor millelts, crowpea and linseed can be grown in the initial
years of planting.
The problem of poor fruit set in custard apple can be overcome to a large extent by
application of GA at a concentration of 50ppm. Dipping of freshly opened flowers in GA
ensures better fruit-set, better fruit retention, increased fruit size and weight with less seed. The
crop can be sprayed with NAA 20 ppm four times at weekly interval during flowering (March –
April) to encourage fruitset. Irrigatin and mulching during summer season also helps to prevent
fruit drop.
Plant protection:
Pests:
These cause blemishes on fruits and the pest can be controlled by spraying 0.05 per cent
dichlorvos. Refer : previoue sections for newer insecticides.
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DISEASES:
Leaf spot:
Affected leaves drop down prematurely. This canbe controlled by fortnightly sprays of
0.05% carabendazim commencing from the appearance of the disease symptom.
Infection begins at blossom-end of the fruit and later spreads on entire fruit surface,
affected fruits shrivel and they may cling to the tree or fall down.
Management:
The fruts are to be harvested at correct stage of maturity. Light green fruit colour,
yellowish white colour between the carpels and initiation of cracking of the skin between the
carpels may be taken as maturity indices. The fruits are hand picked. The peak harvest period is
October – November. A sugar apple tree usually produces 80-100 fruits per tree after 4 to 5
years.
The custard apples ripen with in a few days after harvest. The mature fruits can be stored
at 15o to 20oC with RH of 85-90% and low oxygen and ethylene but with 10% CO2. Under such
storage conditions, the fruts can be kept intact for 12-18 days.
Additives like Saccharified starch (1:1), high voltage treatment and packing under
nitrogen gas cover, sugar (1:2) were quite effective in extending the storage of pulp at 4oC (45
days) and –18oC (90 days) temperature.
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BER
Zizyphus mauritiana (Indian ber) Zizyphus jujube (Chinese jujub) Family:
Rhamnaceae
The ber is a vigorous growing, small spreading tree with almost vine like drooping
Branches. The round to oval reddish brown are having 5.4-8.0% sugar and 85-95 mg of Ascorbic
acid (Vit. C) per 100g. Central Asia is supposed to be the centre of origin for ber. The tree is a
host plant for rearing lac insect (Tachardia laccad). Lac insect rearing helps in the production of
lac. The powder of ber roots has very many mewdicinal properties such as cure for ulcer, fever
and wounds. The stem bark powder is a remedy for diarrhea.
Varieties:
Kaithili:
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It is a variety with straight thorns but not so pronounced. Leaves are ovate with minutely
serrated margin. Fruits ovate-oblong with broadly mummillate apex, 3.37 cm long, 1.9 cm thick
weighing 6.22 g. stone elliptic oblong with pointed tip and furrowed surface.
Umran:
In this variety, the trees are medium sized with bushy decumbent branches almost
touching the ground. The thorn is curved. Ovate oblong leaves with prominent serrations. Fruit
elliptic, 4.2 cm long and 3.2 cm thick.
Gola:
It has got spreading tree. Fdruits are almost round with flat stylar end. Skin is bright
yellow, smooth and glossy, fruits come to ripening during January. Each fruit weighs 14-25g.
each tree yields about 100-125kg.
Seo (Sanaur No.2):
leaves ovate to ovate oblong with obtuse base and acute apex. Fruits round
resembling crab apple, stylar end round with mild depression in the centre, stem end broad,
deeply grooved. Fruits light pinkish yellow with occasional specks at maturity. Selected from a
place called Sanuar near Patiala in Punjab.
Seb:
It is an early variety. Fruits are golden yellow in colour and slightly oblong ie., 3.0cmx
2.5cm. it yields 90-1000 kg per tree. It acts as a good pollinizer for a number of varieties.
Banarsi:
It is a mid-season variety. Trees are 8-12 M tall. fruits globose oblong to long in shape
with tapering stylar end. Unripe fruits are green in colour. After ripening they turn to golden
yellow. It has performed well under Tamil Nadu condition. Yield ranges from 100-
110kg/tree/year.
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Chhuhara:
It is another mid-season variety with semi-tall tree having spreading branches. Fruits
ovate-oblong, size 2.9 cm x2.1cm; weight 16.8g. fully matured fruits which start ripenibg will be
greenish yellow in colour. After full ripening, the colour changes to chocolate brown and the
skin becomes very thin and soft. The flesh will be very sweet. Fruits are suitable to be heated and
made into dry fruits like dates.
Sandhura Narnaul (Sanaur No.1):
It has erect trees. Fruits are oval-oblong to longish, stylar end slightly pointed. Fruits are
greenish yellow to golden yellow. Size 4.45x2.18 cm. it has thin skin. The average yield is 80
kg/tree/year.
Elaichi:
Trees spreading with fruits having the characteristic shape of cardamom hence called
‘elaichi’. Fruits are small each weighing 6g with thesize of 2.05 cmx 1.88cm. the average yield is
115kg/tree/year.
Propagation, preparatory cultivation and planting:
Ber is propagated by ‘T’ budding or inverted ‘T’ budding on seedling rootstock of
Z.jujuba, Z. xylocarpa and Z. rotundifolia. Fruits of wild species are taken; seeds are extracted
and soaked in 17% salt solution to remove the ill filled ones which float. The seeds which sink
are taken and soaked in con. H2SO4 for 5 minutes washed and soaked for 48 hours in cold water.
Then the seeds can be sown in the poly bags (25 x 15 cm) of 300 gauge thickness. The seeds take
10-15 days for germination. Since the development tap root system is very fast in ber as well as
in wild species, when the seedlings are with two leaves they are transplanted in the main field in
pits of size 1x1x1 m filled with 20 kg of FYM + top soil and irrigated. The treated seeds can also
be sown directly in to the pits @ 2-3 seeds per pit at a depth of 3 cm. normally the required
varieties are budded in situ on this rootstock seedlings after 90 days.
If we want to bud the seedlings raised in polybags, large sized polybags have to be used,
since the tap root grows very fast. June to august is the best period for budding for getting
maximum bud-take. The scion sticks with 0.9 cm dia, about 1 year old maturity with plumpy
buds should be selected to take buds. The buds will take about 7-10 days for sprouting.
Training:
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For young plant, a support should be provided by bamboo stakes. In the first year, all the
branches arising upto 75 cm-1M should be removed so that a straight trunk can be developed.
Above this 3-5 primary branches should be developed so as to have a balanced frame work in all
directions. In the second year, on each primary branch, 3-4 well distributed secondary branches
ca be allowed, and during third year final frame work should be decided.
Manures and manuring:
The plant should be fertilized in the following ratio at every year.
Age FYM N P K
(kg/tree)
1 Year after planting 10 125 40 75
2 year after planting 15 250 80 150
3 year after planting 20 250 120 225
4 year after planting and then onwards 25 500 160 300
The manorial dose can be split into two equal halves and applied once during June and another
after pruning. The manure fertilizer mixer should be placed in trenches of 30 cm width formed at
1.0-1.2 M away from trunk.
Irrigation:
For young trees, irrigation should be done once in a work. As the trees grow older, it can
restricted once in 15 to 20 days. At the time of flowering and fruiting, there should not be any
moisture stress. In rainfed condition, rain water harvest can be done by forming a saucer basin
giving a 0.1% slope towards the trunk of the tree from a distance of 3 M.
Interculture and pruning:
The interpace can be utilized to raise a crop like pulses such as greengram, blackgram,
cowpea etc., for about 3 years. If sufficient irrigation facilities are available papaya or phalsa can
be grown as inter crop for first three years.
In ber, the fruit buds are borne on current season growth in the leaf axils.
Therefore the plants should be pruned every year to induce new growth to provide maximum
fruit bearing area. After the harvest of fruits, the plants have to be pruned by heading back 25%
of one year old shoot. If severe pruning is attempted, it will adversely affect the growth leading
to poor yield. Dry, dead, diseased wood and criss-cross branches should be removed.
Plant protection:
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Pests:
Fruit fly: (Carpomyia vesuviana)
The flies puncture the young developing fruits by inserting their ovipositor and lays eggs
singly. Hatching of eggs completes in two to three days. The larvae (maggots) feed inside the
fruit pulp and make small holes in the rind and come out of the fruit when fully grown. The
affected fruits become misshapen and their growth is retarded.
Management:
a. Collect infested fruits and destroy them
b. Spray monocrotophos(0.04%) or Rogar 30EC(0.06%).
c. Spray with a mixture of 100 ml Malthion 50EC and one kg jaggery or sugar in 100 lit of
water twice starting from September to October at 7-10 days interval (3 sprays).
d. Cultivate ber orchard soil during April-May and apply 10% BHC to destroy pupae.
e. Grow fruitfly tolerant varieties like Umran, Sanaur
2.Bark eating caterpillar: (Inderbela quadrinotata)
The caterpillar maks holes in the trunk while feeding. Affected trees become stunted and
yield potential is reduced.
Management:
Remove frassy galleries and paint the bark with 0.05% monocrotophos 40EC.
3. Hairy caterpillar: (Euproctis freterna)
caterpillar feed on leaves and cause damage.
Management:
a. Dust 10% BHC.
b. Spray carbaryl at 0.15% a.i.
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JAMUN
Syzygium cumini (Syn: Eugenia jambolana) Family : Myrtaceae
It is a tall handsome evergreen tree of tropical and subtropical regions and has its origin
probably India or East Indies. It is one of the most hardy fruits and best suited for wastelands. It
is drought tolerant, at the same time can tolerate water stagnation and marshlands, where other
fruit crops can not be grown successfully. The wood is used as a timber in building and railway
sleeper. One hundred gram of fruits contain 19.7 g carbohydrate, 0.7 g protein, 1.0 g iron, 0.02 f
calcium, 0.01 g phorus 0.1 g fat and 0.9 g fibre. Besides taken as a dessert fruit, it is also used to
make beverages, squash, jam, jelly and wine. Fruit syrup is used in curing diarrhea.
Climatic and soil requirements :
It is adapted to tropical and subtropical conditions requiring a dry climate during
flowering and fruiting. Early rains resulting in better soil moisture will help in growth and
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development and ripening of fruits. Well drained deep loam would be ideal though it can grow
on a wide range of soil conditions. In the initial stages of establishment there should not be any
drought. When the tree has grown sufficiently it can tolerate drought as well as flooding.
Cultivars :
In North India a cultivar known as ‘Ra Jamun’ with big sized fruits is being cultivated.
One seedless type (with under developed ovule) was isolated at Horticultural Research Station,
Periyakulam is being grown in Agricultural Research Station, Paramakudi. But the fruits are
very small.
Propagation and planting :
Though it is propagated by seeds, for true to type progenies vegetative propagation is
recommended. Air layering and application of 1000 ppm NAA or IBA as lanolin paste can give
80 – 90% rooting. Inarching, veneer grafting and forkert method of bedding are also used. The
plants are planted at a spacing of 10-12 m in pits of 1 cubic metre size.
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Plant protection :
Leaf eating caterpillars can be controlled by spraying dimethoate / malathion. White fly
damages all parts and even fruits get wormy. Affected, dropped fruits should be collected and
burnt. At the time of flowering if spraying has to be taken up only a safe insecticide to
honeybees like endosulfan has to be sprayed. Leaf spot and fruit spot caused by Glomerella can
be controller by Indofil Z. 78 (2 g/lit.)
Harvest and yield :
The seedling trees start bearing after 10 years, while the vegetatively propagated
progenies come to bearing in 5- 6 years. The fully ripe fruits should be picked by hand by
climbing on the trees and collecting in a bag. Since the jamun fruits are highly perishable and
hardly stand only 5 days, they should be immediately sent to market. However if necessary they
can be stored for 3 weeks at 90 C and 85 – 90% RH. They yield ranges from 70 – 100 kg /tree/
year.
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Being a member of Euphorbiaceae to which most of the xerophytes, the cacti and
succulents belong, aonla is a hardy drought resistant fruit tree. A rare combination of character is
its ability to withstand water stagnation too. It is also known as amla, amali and nelli etc. The
amla fruits are a rich source of Vitamin C. The special attribute is its capacity to retain Vitamin
C even in a dried state which is not possible in other fruits. The vitamin C supplied by its fruits
and dried powder is even superior to synthetic Vitamin C. One part or other is used in the cure
of cough, bronchitis, jaundice, diabetes, dyspepsia, diarrhea and fever. Hundred grams of fruit
pulp contains 14 g of carbohydrate, 0.5 g protein, 1.2 g iron, 0.3 mg vitamin B and 600 mg of
Vitamin C. Because of the high content of iron (1.2mg/100g) and B vitamin C. Probably this
fruit extract is used in a number of ayurvedic and homeopathic preparations which are said to
prevent greying of hairs and falling of hairs. The probable centres of origin are the South and
Central India, Sri Lanka, Malaysia and South China.
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Though in a well-drained loamy soil the amla trees grow faster, they can grow in a heavy
clay also provided slight drainage is arranged during heavy rains in their early crop growth phase
of first 2 – 3 years. They also fairly tolerate alkalinity in soils (pH 8.5) and irrigation water.
Banarasi :
The fruits are large in size flattened oblong with smooth skin, yellowish with
characteristic three raised segments. On an average each fruit weighs 38g. It is a shy bearer.
Trees are having upright growth habit.
Krishna : (NA – 4)
A chance seedling of Banarasi developed at Narendra Deva Agrl. University, Faizabad
with medium to large size (40 g) conical, angular, smooth yellowish fruits with red blush on the
exposed surface. It has fibreless flesh which is semitransparent and hard. It is a moderate
bearer.
Kanchan : (NA-5)
It is supposed to be a chance seedling of Chakaiya. A profuse bearer with small to
medium-sized fruits (32g) flattened oblong; skin is smooth, yellowish in colour. It was also
developed at Narendra Deva Agrl. University, Faizabad.
Francis :
Fruits are large (41.5g) with a TSS of 12.00 brix, flattened oval, greenish yellow in
colour, soft and almost fibreless. The branches have dropping habit.
BSR-1 :
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Propagation :
Seed propagation which has been in practice has given lot of variation in the progenies.
Hence vegetative propagation was resorted to. Building using 1 year old rootstocks through “T”
method (shield) or patch method is successful. In-situ budding will be better than budding in
nursery and transplanting the budded plants. To raise rootstock seedlings, from the fully ripe
mechanically or by drying in sun and the seeds are extracted. The seeds are hard and take long
time to germinate. Hence the seeds should be treated with con. H2SO4 for 3 minutes and then
washed with water and soaked in 500 ppm of Gibberellic Acid for 24 hours. Such treated seeds
can be sown in nursery bed or polybag filled with pot mixture.
When the crops started bearing early year after the harvest of fruits, dead, diseased, weak
and criss-cross branches should be pruned. The water sprouts and rootstock growth should be
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watched and periodically removed. During early stages of establishment, the plants should be
watered periodically especially during summer. Fully mature trees are seldom watered.
However, irrigation during April-June one in 15 days will help to encourage fruitset and prevent
fruit drop. During early stages of crop growth an inter crops like cowpea, greengram can be
grown upto 4 – 5 years.
Black polythene mulch is most effective in reducing the irrigation requirement in aonla
cv. N.A7 (60.86%) with an annual water requirement of 777.6 litres per tree.
Plant protection :
Bark borer makes tunnels along the bark. This can be controlled by injecting kerosene oil
in the holes and plugging with cotton and clay during September – October and February –
March and spraying with phosphomidon 0.03% Shoot gall maker can be controlled by pruning
the affected shoots and spraying 0.1% monocrotophos. Amla rust can be controlled by spraying
dithane Z.78 ot M.45 at 0.2%. blue mould develops water soaked lesions on fruits which is
ultimately covered by bluish green pustules. This can be checked by a weak solution of borax or
sodium chloride.
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WOOD APPLE
Feronia limonia L.
Family: Rutaceae
Wood apple, a native of India and Sri Lanka is one of the hardy trees of arid and semi
arid regions. The fruit is a hard- shelled many seeded berry with its pinkish brown aromatic sour-
sweet pulp being the edible portion the seeds embedded in it. The pulp contains 18.1%
carbohydrate, 7.1% protein, 3.7%, fat, 5.0%, fibre and 1.9% mineral matter. The pulp is a rich
source of calcium (130 mg/100g), phosphorus (110mg/100g) and iron (0.48 mg/100g). the
vitamins supplied by one hundred gram of pulp are carotene 61 µg, riboflavin 0.17 mg, niacin
0.8 mg, thiamine 0.04 mg and vitamin C 3 mg. the ripe fruit pulp makes excellent chutney and it
is also consumed afresh along with sugar. It is used as an adjunct in jelly preparation along with
the pulp of guava.
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dry regions where irrigation potential is limited. The seedlings can be planted in the field and in
situ budding has to be done on established seedling.
Interculture:
Training is done by Central leader method allowing well spaced branches in all
directions. Intercrops can be taken during rainy seasons for the first 5 years. In the post monsoon
season, the basins can be mulched with dry leaves. Every year 25 kg of FYM is to be applied for
each tree at the beginning of the monsoon rains. This will help in increasing fruit- size and
quality. During early stages of crop growth, if pot watering is done during summer it will be
beneficial. Being a member of citrus family it is attacked by the leaf-eating caterpillar of citrus
which completely defoliate the plant. Spraying of any contact insecticide should be done after
hand picking and destruction of larvae.
BAEL
Aegle marmelos Corr.
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Family : Rutaceae
Beal, one of the oldest fruits cultivated in India has a mythological significance viz., a
sacred tree whose leaves are used for worship of Lord Shiva. The fruit pulp which is
carbohydrate. One hundred gram of pulp contains 55 µg of carotene, 0.13 mg thiamine, 1.19 mg
riboflavin, 1.1 mg niacin and 8 mg vitamin C. from its pulp sherbet and syrup can be made. The
marmalade prepared from its fruits is used in curing diarrhea and dysentery. From the stem, gum
is obtained. The wood is used for making agricultural implements. The leaves are used as fodder.
All parts of the plant are medicinally important due to a substance called ‘marmelosin’.
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DATE PALM
Phoenix dactylifera Family : Palmae
Date palm is a nutritive fruit rich in sugar and iron and predominantly seen in desert
oasis. It is believed to have originated in countries around persian gulf such as Iraq
(Mesapatomia) and Egypt. The flesh contains 60 – 65 percent sugar, 2 percent protein, 2.5 per
cent fibre, 0.4 per cent fat and 2 per cent mineral matter. It is a good source of easily assimilable
iron (7.3 mg/100g) and hence prescribed to anemic patients along with honey.
Cultivars :
Depending on the season of ripening, the cultivars are classified as early, mid and late
cultivars. Though there are nearly 40 cultivars imported from Middle East and North Africa, few
only were found to be promising, under Indian conditions.
Halawy :
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An early variety with small fruits. At full maturity before ripening (doka stage) the fruits
are yellow in colour and free from astringency.
Khadrawy :
Small to medium sized fruits; light yellow at doka stage.
Barhee :
Mid –season to slightly late cultivar with small to medium sized fruits, yellow colour and
low astringency at doka stage.
Zahid :
Mid – season cultivar with small to medium sized fruits ; it is tolerant to rain and
humidity.
Medjool :
A late cultivar; fruits are large, broad, oblong-ovate, orange yellow with reddish brown
stippling at doka stage.
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Fruitset :
Fruit thinning has to be resorted to so as to retain 1300 – 1600 fruits in 8-10 bunches per
palm will be optimum. Bunch thinning can be done either by removal of entire strand or
shortening of strands. Spraying ethephon @ 200 ppm 10 – 30 days after fruitset will help to thin
fruits effectively. It also helps to overcome biennial bearing and encourage earlier ripening and
to get better fruit weight and soluble sugar.
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Doka Khalal 13-17 weeks after pollination Hard, yellow pink or red may
be sweet or astringent, Edible
stage.
Dang Rutab 17-21 weeks after pollination Fruits soften at tip, edible
stage.
Pind Tamer 21-22 weeks after pollination Fully ripe 60-84% TSS,
edible stage.
Plant protection :
Termites in young plantation can be controlled by application of BHC 10% dust.
Rhinoceros beetle and red palm weevil are also attacking as in coconut. The control can be
achieved by dusting BHC 10 % in manure pit for former while for later injecting Monocrotophos
or a fumigant like celphos will give good control. To control black headed caterpillar (Nephantis
serinopa) which fees on leaves hiding inside the tunnels in the folds of the leaves, root feeding
with 10 mil of monocrotophos mixed with 10 ml of water per tree and releasing the predator
Gonioyis nephantidis can be done. False smut a disease caused by Graphida phoenicus
characterized by dark brown or black pustules full of yellow spores particularly under humid
conditions can be controlled by spraying 01.% Bavistin or 0.2 % Copper oxyhloride. Fruit rot
can be controlled by collected and destruction of infected fruits followed by spraying indofil Z-
78 (0.2%). To prevent birds damage wire gauges can be used.
Harvest, yield and processing :
Under Indian condition, since the fruit ripening period is not free of rains, the fruits have
to be harvested at doka stage during June – August. The fruits harvested at doka stage have to be
dipped in boiling water for 5 minutes followed by dehydration in electric oven at 500C for 160
hours or in solar drier to obtain best quality ‘Chhuhara’ which is the commercial date or produce
of commerce. The Chhuhara recovery would be 33 – 35%.
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19.8 g CHO
0.5 g protein Vit A – 14 IV
11 mg Ca
The fruit hull (pericarp) is used as an
17 mg P
astringent in the treatment of diarrhea and
0.9 mg Fe
dysentery and also in chlora.
66 mg Vit.C
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Severe drought – Sunburn and drying of leaves. Should not have strong wind cause
injury to leaves and branching.
Propagation :
Sets fruits by parthenocarpy (without pollination and fertilization) and also sets
germinable seeds without fertilization propagated through seeds and the plants resemble the
mother plant.
When seedlings attain 2 leaf stage – transplanted seedling growth is very slow seedlings
do not reach more than 15 cm height ever after 2 years of girth (due to lack of adequate fibrous
lateral roots).
Vegetative propagation
Air-layering, grafting or budding
Plants are planted at 10 m x 10 m spacing.
For young plants, protection from scorching sun should be given.
Time of
Before flowering After flowering After fruit set
application
P (g/tree) -- -- 500
FYM (kg/tree) -- -- 25
Irrigation needs regular irrigation in places where rainfall is light and good drainage
where and rainfall is heavy.
Frequency of irrigation – decided on the basis of weather and soil moisture.
Mulching without grass and dried leaves – conserves soil moisture.
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Physiological disorders
Gamboge and fruit splitting – Physiological disorders
Yellow exudation of gum on fruits and branches. Fruit splitting results in swollen
arils without mushy pulp.
More pronounced in fruits exposed to direct sunlight and in crop that matures in
summer.
Heavy and continuous rains during fruit ripening favour gambridge and fruit splitting in
certain locations.
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Fig was an important food crop for the ancient civilization of the eastern Mediterranean
region. It is a highly nutritious fruit valuled as fresh fruit as well as in a dried state. The fruit has
a laxative property. The main countries that produce fig are Afghanistan, Greece, lraq, Syria,
Spain, Portugal etc.,
Climatic and soil requirements:
The fig is a subtropical fruit the optimum temperature for its good growth being 15.5 to
21oC. Buds of most cultivars requires some winter chilling. In mild tropical and subtropical
areas, figs exhibit continuous growth without a distinct rest period. However, the tree usually
has a semi- deciduous habit and enters into mild dormancy during October-January. Fruit
qualities are also got influenced by climate. A dry climate with temperature especially at the
time of fruit development and maturation produces the best quality figs. High temperature like
35 to 38oC will result in premature ripening of fruits. Similarly very low temperature will result
in splitting and poor quality fruits.
Fig can be grown on a wide range of soil type. But deep, clay-loams are the best suited.
Well drained alluvial clay loams or medium black soils are also good for fig cultivation. The fig
is one of the most drought tolerant crops. It can tolerate sulphate and chloride salts. Soils having
a high lime content produce fruits of better quality suitable for drying. But even a small amount
of sodium carbonate in soil is injurious to fig. Major portion of the root system is distributed
within 50-60 cm depth and hence the fig can also be grown in shallow soils of 2 feet where other
fruit trees cannot be accommodated.
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Capri fig:
This type has short styled pistillate and functional staminate flowers. Most caprifigs are
not edible, but are grown because they harbour a small wasp viz., Blastophaqa psenes which is
necessary for pollination and fruit set in other types like Smyrna fig by transferring the pollen
grains from caprifig.
Smyrna fig:
It is commercially the most important one. However, the fruits develop only when the
flowers are pollinated with pollen from the male flowers of the caprifig transmitted by the
Blastophaga wasp. Calimyrna is the common cultivar of this type.
Sanpedro fig:
In this type, the first crop is completely parthenocrpic, but the second crop develops only
if the flowers are pollinated. The common cultivars of this type are Sanpedro, King and Gentile.
In India, common fig is mostly grown. Some of the cultivars grown are Black Itchier,
Brown Turkey, Turkish White, Kabul and Marseilles. Yercaud Timla fig is a drought tolerant
cultivar. Fruit are large and reddish purple in colour.
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After cultivation
To keep the trees more productive and to facilitate inter cultivation operations, the fig
trees are trained to a desired height and shape. The fig tree bears tow crops in a year, the first
crop on the wood of previous season and the second crop on new wood of current season.
Pruning is necessary to induce growth of flower bearing wood. The time and amount of pruning
are adjusted according to the growth habit and bearing capacity of the tree.
Notchin stimulates production of laterals on vigorous upright branches.
Plant protections:
Insect pests:
Leaf feeders : Glyphodes sp
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Hypsa ficus
Phycodes radiata
Borers : Olenecamptusbilobus
Thrips : Gigantothrips elegans.
Fig Fly (Lonchaea aristella)
If warranted, these pests can be controlled by spraying endosulfan @2.5ml/lit. which is
safer to Blastophaga especially when the caprifigs are interplanted for pollination.
DISEASES:
Rust:
It is caused by Cerotolium fici Small, round brownish to black eruptive lesions occur on
the leaves. The rust causes heavy defoliation of leaves. It can be controlled by dusting with
sulphur.
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CULTIVARS:
Haak Yip:
The fruit is heart shaped each weighing 20-22g, skin is thin, soft and purplish red. Flesh
has an excellent aroma and is sweet in taste. It separates easily from flesh. It is the commercial
cultivar of Thailand, Taiwan and China.
Taiso:
The fruits are eggshaped each weighing 22-26g, bright red skin changing to dull red at
maturity, flesh is sweet. It is the commercial cultivar of Australia, Queensland and South Africa
(Where it is known as Mauritius).
Waichee:
Fruit are small (16-18g) round with deep red skin. It possesses soft flesh with abundant
sweet juice. It is cultivated in China and Australia.
Rose secented:
Fruits are oblong conical with deep rose pink skin, pulp grayish white. The aril has a
delicate rosy flavour. It is an important cultivar of India.
Muzaffarput:
The fruits are deep orange to pink with medium juicy sweet pulp. It is grown in India.
Bombai:
Fruit is heart shaped, 15-20g in weight usually with another under-developed fruit
attached to stalk. Tubercles are carmine red with uranium green interspace. It is an important
commercial cultiver of West Bengal.
China:
Fruits are globose with a blend of nasturtium red and marigold orange. Fruits are large,
25-27g having a sweet flesh with good juice and pleasant aroma. It is also one of the important
cultivars of India.
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Stooling, apical grafting, approach grafting, approach grafting and shield budding are other
methods of propagation.
The land should be prepared thoroughly by ploughing and leveling. A windbreak should
be established around the litchi orchard using eucaluptus, casuarinas, jamun preferably before
one year of establishment of litchi orchard.
Pits of 1 M x M 1M x1 M are dug, allowed for a week, filled with 25kg FYM +2 kg of
bone meal and 300g of muriate of potash +1 basket of soil from litchi orchard containing
mycorrhizal fungi., The spacing recommended is 10 M x 10 M . If the soil is not fertile and the
climate is comparatively dry, the spacing can be reduced to 8 M x 8 M. The young plants should
be staked.
Irrigation and manuring:
Frequent irrigation is necessary so as to maintain the adequate soil moisture for proper
establishment of young plans. If there is moisture stress the plants will not establish. Manurial
requirement of lithchi is as follows.
Tree’s age
N (g) P (g) K (g/tree)
(Years)
1 75 25 75
2 100 25 100
3 150 50 150
4 250 75 250
5 250 75 250
For bearing trees also there should not be any moisture stress in soil.
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growth should be avoided as otherwise it will delay the next season flowering. Sorghum stubble,
wheat straw, groundnut shells can be used as mulch to conserve soil moisture.
Plant protection:
The bark feeder (Indarbela tertronis) can be controlled by plugging the holes after
application of carbondisulphide or formalin. Leaf rollers can be controlled by an insecticide like
Nuvan which has fumigant action also. Red rust can be controlled by spraying lime – sulphur 3
times during autumn and 3 times during spring.
Leaf galls, caused by eriophid mite Aceria litchi is a common problem. This cab be
reduced by pruning and spraying of conventional (or) new avermectin compounds viz., spinosyn,
emanectin, spiromesifen etc.
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AVOCADO
Avocado, one of the most nutritive fruits, has orighinated in Central America. Avocado
is now grown in most of the tropical and subtropical countries. The pulp of Avocado the so
called butter fruit, has a buttery consistency and the fruit has very high fat content (26.4 g /100g).
As the sugar content is low, it can be recommended as a high energy food for diabetics.
Climatic and soil requirements:
Avocado trees of the West Indian race perform well in humid tropical climate, but the
other two races viz., Mexican and Guatemalan fail to flower or set fruit in the tropics. On the
other hand, the West Indian race sets little or no fruit in subntropical climte. In between
Mexican and Guatemalan races, the Mexican race alone survives in regions where minimum
winter temperatures goes to – 0.5oC to 3.5oC. If proper race and cultivars are chosen, avocadoes
can thrive and produce a good crop in climatic conditions ranging from true tropical to warmer
parts of the temperate zone.
Though avocadoes can be grown successfully in varying soil conditions, they are
extremely sensitive to poor drainage and saline conditions. They will be happy in soils with pH
ranging from 5-7.
Mexican Race:
This group is characterized by small fruits weighing less than 250 g and ripening in 6-8
months after flowering. Oil content of the fruit is 30 per cent, the highest of all the three races.
Guatemalan Race:
Fruits are fairly large each weighing upto 600g and ripen in 9-12 months after flowering.
Oil content ranges from 8 – 15%.
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The fruits are medium sized and ripen in 9 months after flowering. The oil content of
fruit is low, ranging from 3 – 10%.
CULTIVARS
Fuerte:
It is the most popular cultivar of avocado. It is a hybrid of the Mexican and Guatemalan
races. Fruits are pyrifrom, each weighing between 225 and 450 g having 18 to 26 per cent oil.
It is fairly resistant to cold, better suited to subtropics than tropical climate. It belongs to group-
B.
Hass:
It originated as a seedling from the Guatemalan race. It matures much earlier than
Fuerte. Fruits are medium sized, roundish and turn purple on ripening. This is also more
suitable to subtropical climate. It belongs to group –A.
Pollock:
A West Indian race bears large fruit that weights upto 1 kg or more having an oil content
of 3-5 per cent suited to be grown in a tropical climate.
Purple:
It belongs to the West Indian race. Fruits are pear-shaped, skin is deep crimson or
maroon in colour. Suited to humid tropics.
Green:
This belongs to the Guatemalan race. Fruits are large, oval, with yellowish green skin. It
is suited to subtropical climate.
TKD 1:
Developed at Horticultural Research Station, Thadiyankudisai of TNAU, Tamilnadu.
The fruits are medium sized and round. Trees upright and semispreading hence suited for high
density planting. Yield 264kg / tree. Fruits are sweet TSS8o brix, fat 23.8%, protein 1.35%.
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Manurings:
Avocado requires heavy fertilization. Application of nitrogen is the most essential.
Nitrogen deficiency causes restricted growth, with reduced, pale coloured leaves and smaller
fruits. An average crop of avocado removes 40 kg N, 25kg P2O5, 60 kg K2O, 11.2 kg Ca O and
9.2 kg MgO/ha from the soil. Therefore, to maintain the soil fertility for getting consistent
yields, it becomes necessary to replenish these nutrients.
Problems in fruitset:
Avocado starts bearing at 5-6 years after planting and has a marked tendency to biennial
bearing which is prevalent in a number of other fruit trees. But there is specific problem in
fruitset as far as avocado concerned.
In avocado, the inflorescence is a compound panicle. The individual flowers are
morphologically bisexual having fertile male and female organs. But they exhibit dichogamy
viz., the male and female organs coming to maturity at different time thereby avoiding self-
pollination of an individual flower. In dichogamy, they are protogynous viz., the female parts
coming to maturity before male organs. The type of dichogamy in avocado is a complicated one
unique to avocado-the diurnally synchronous dichogamy. The female parts of all flowers that
open at a time in a particular tree will mature simultaneously and hence behave functionally as
female flower. The male parts of same flowers will come to maturity when the flowers open
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next time and hence all of them behave as male flowers during that period. By this the cross
pollination between flowers of the same tree are also ruled out. The situation is further worsened
by the fact that all the trees of a particular group will be exhibiting the same sex phase at a
particular time and the opposite sex phase during the next opening of the same flower. So if the
trees of single group are planting in mass, they will not set fruit and each group requires inter
planting of trees of mother group, the two groups being compatible with one another.
Based on this unique flower behaviour, avocado cultivars can be divided into two groups
A & B. In group A, first opening takes place in the morning, second opening during the
afternoon of the following day. In group B, first they open in the afternoon then agin next
morning. Therefore, every morning A-pistils can be fertilized by B-pollen, while during
afternoon B-pistils are ready to receive A-POLLEN.
Honey bees are the chief pollinating agents.
Interculture and weed management:
Deep cultivation in avocado orchards should be avoided because of surface roots.
Intercropping with legumes or shallow-rooted crops can be done in young orchards which can
smoother weeds also.
Avocado trees are pruned sparingly mainly by heading back the central shoot in upright
growing cultivars such as Pollock, to develop a spreading habit. Branches are thinned and
shortened in spreading cultivars like Fuerte.
Plant protections:
Pests:
Mites, mealy bugs, scales are the important insect pests of avocado. Spraying of
systemic insecticides will effectively check these pests.
Fruitspot:
It is caused by Colletotrichum gloeosprotioides. Infection results in shedding of young
fruits. Ramaining fruits become deformed. This can be controlled by spraying of Indofil-
M.45@2g/lit . Controlled atmospheric storage of fruits in 2% O2 at 7.2oC for 3-4 weeks will
prevent the development of the fungus in storage.
Root rot:
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DURIAN
[Durio zibethinus Bombacaceae]
Native to Borneo, an Island in the Malaysian region. It is tall evergreen tree of humid
tropics with ovoid oblong fruits, each weighing 2-5 kg characterized by trough fibrous rind
covered with greenish, coarse, sharp, pointed, short spines. The edible portion inside the fruit is
buttery with yellowish while pulp with very strong odour. People have strong like or dislike for
this fruit. Many like it, because if its sweet, delicious and filling taste, while others dislike it for
its highly objectionable odour. The penetrating odour is comparable to that of rotten onion and is
unacceptable to many. The chemicals that are responsible for the flavour are hydrogen sulphide,
ethyl hydrosulphide and dialkyl polysulphide.
100 g of edible portion 28.8 g CHO
2.5 g protein
2.5 g fat
20 mg Ca
63 mg P
37 mg Vitamin C
Indonesia, Philippines, India, Thailand, Myanmar and South China.
The fruits are believed to have aphrodosiacal qualities. Root decoction is used to cure
fever and leaves for curing jaundice.
Cultivars :
Frog, Gibbon, Longstem, Deception. Cha-Nee, Golden Pillow are important varieties of
durian.
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Pruning :
The tree usually takes pyramidal shape by itself. However, after harvesting the tree can
be cleared off dried and old twigs.
Manuring :
It needs manuring at early stages of crop growth. Upto 7 years absorption of nutrients and
retention on the vegetative part is more –
20 kg Nitrogen, 5 kg Phosphorus and 10 kg K/ha Potassium can be applied during 3rd
year and can be increased to 40 kg, 10 kg and 20 kg of NPK during 7th year. Beyond 7 years.
Only very little quantity can be applied.
Plant protection :
Hawk moth is serious problem, larvae feed on leaves, soil incorporation of Lindane 1.3 D
and creation of light traps recommendation, harvest, yield and post harvest management.
Grafts produce crop in 4-5 years, seedlings take 10 years. Fruiting available 2 times /
year. Durian has cauliflorous flowering in older branches. Self incompatibility noticed in Durian.
Yield – 100 fruits/year. Harvesting done when the fruits are smooth, flat with far – apart spines.
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Ripe fruits last for 4 days under refrigeration, while mature fruits can be stored upto 14
days at 10-15°C.
CARAMBOLA
Carambola is a warm tropical and subtropical fruit with five star shaped projections and
having juice with characteristic acidic taste. It is also known as five corner fruit or five edge
fruit. The juice content is about 60 – 70%. The acidity is mainly due to oxalic acid and malic
acid. One hundred gram of fruit contains 3.5 – 11.0 g sugar, 0.75 g protein, 560 IU of vitamin A.
The probable origin of carambols is Malaysia or Indonesia. Besides consumed as dessert fruit,
carambola can also be served as juice, jam, jelly and pickle. The star shaped cross section slices
of fruit can be used in fruit-salad and to decorate cakes. A close relative of carambola is Bilimbi
(Averrhoa bilimbi) which produces more acidic fruits.
Climatic and soil requirements:
Carambola loves a warm, humid condition with long hours of sunshine. Though it can be
grown in a wider range of soils viz., right from sand to heavy clay loam, it will be at its best on
well drained deep clay loam with a pH of 5.2 to 6.2.
CULTIVARS:
Golden Star:
Developed by Florida, Queensland, Singapore, Taiwan and Japan. The wing edges are
slightly rounded. Fruits are golden yellow, crisp each weighting 90m- 200 g.
B1:
Developed at Malaysia having lemon yellow fruit which are crisp each weighing 100-300
g. The edges are rounded.
B6:
Another variety developed at Malaysia with orange fruits. The edges are slightly
rounded.
Maha:
Commonly grown in Florida. Fruits pale lemon yellow each weighing 100-200g. Besides
this a number of varieties like Thai kinight, wheeler F wang Tung are grown in Florida.
In Australia a number of local selections like Jungle Gold. Chujuba, Giant Siam are being
cultivated.
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RAMBUTAN
[Nephelium lappaceum] Family : Sapindaceae
Rambutan is called “hairy litchi” as the fruits have red soft spines on the surface. The
white translucent, sub arid – seet flavoured aril is the edible flesh of the fruit. Its appearance
differs from the litchi by having red and soft spines (hairs) covering the whole surface of the
fruit.
Origin :
Malay archipelago, from there it has spread to South East Asia, Central America and
Africa. RAmbutan growing countries are Thailand, Myammar, Sri Lanka, India.
100 g fruit contains 14.5 CHO
0.9 g protein
0.1 g fat
31 mg/100 g Vitamin C.
TSS : 14.9 – 21.2%
Uses :
Rambutan mainly serves as fresh fruit or a dessert mixed with other fruits or used for
canning or made in to fruit syrup. The oil of seed is used for soap making. The root has
medicinal uses while the tannin it contains is used for dyes. The whole tree with its beautiful
leaves, flowers and colourful fruits also serves as an environmental tree in landscape.
Tree is large, round-topped, much branched every green tree reaching upto 15 m or more
in height. Fruits are one-seeded, large, ovoid in shape, 10-12 fruits are borne in clusters. Fruits
are 3.5 – 8 cm long, 2-3.5 cm wide, soft, with curved spines weighting 14.3-43.7 g.
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The soft curved spines (hairs) covering allt he pericarp may be red or yellow in colour.
Inside the fruit, a big seed is surrounded by pearl-while aril/flush) which is fixing, subacid-sweet
in flavour but the taste is rather flat or insipid as compared with the sweeter litchi.
Climate and soil
It is a high-temperature bring plant. A warm humid tropical climate would be ideal. Mean
minimum temperature 23°F. Mini temperature should not be below. 13-15°C, it comes well
under humid condition. It requires 2000-2800 mm annual rainfall which should be evenly
distributed over the year.
A rich sandy or clay loam with high organic matter and good drainage will be ideal for
the growth and flowering. When reference is insufficient, the land should be irrigated in time to
provide sufficient moisture to the soil.
Cultivars :
Rohug-Rian – Thailand cv.
Oval bright red fruits spines are red which green tip. The aril is juicy, tough and sweet.
Seematjan
Fruits deep red with soft curved spines.
BR.1 (Boting Rambutan No.7)
Fruits are big (30g), ovate, red etc. spines are fine and dense. Aril is juicy, crisp and
sweet.
New cv. Developed in China.
Propagation :
Seed :
Dioecious tree, about 1/3rd of the total number of the progeny become male plants.
Seed propagation not recommended as seedlings are very variables and may produce low
quality infirm fruits. Used only for raising seedling rootstock for grafting seeds are sown
immediately when taken out from fleshy fruits because they loose viability within a few days, if
left day.
Vegetative propagation :
Patch or forkert budding on 1-2 year old seeding rootstock is recommended.
Air-layering is another method.
Planting :
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Storage :
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Plant protection
Litchi stink bug, bark borer, fruit weevil, leaf roller are major pests.
Downy mildew, anthracnose are the diseases.
Both can be controlled by application of pesticides and fungicides whenever necessary.
LONGAN
Longan is a close relative of lychee having similar growth and fruiting habit, but
somewhat hardier than lychee. The fruits are smaller, smooth surfaced with yellow tan to brown
colour. It originated in subtropical region of China or in between Myanmar and India. Fruits
contain 25.2% carbohydrate, 1% protein, 0.5% fat, vitamin A (28 1U/100G) and vitamin C.
Climatic and soil requirements:
Longan requires a warm subtropical climate with high rainfall. The winter should be
short and frost free. The summer should be long, hot, humid and wet. The best temperature for
flowering and fruitset is 20 to 25%C. Temperature above 40oC will cause damage to fruit
resulting in fruit drop. A deep well drained fertile soil with pH 5.5 to 6.0 with low salinity will
be ideal for its growth.
CULTIVARS:
Fu yan: (Lucky Eye)
It is the major cultivar of fujian province of China. Fruits are large (18g), thin skin, crisp
flesh and small seed. It is the best variety for canning.
Wu long line: (Black Dragon peak)
Medium sized fruits (15g) with thick skin, good flesh having sweet flavour.
Wu yuan: (Black Round)
Fruits are medium in size (15g), seed large, flesh soft and juicy.
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Daw:
It is the popular cultivar of Thailand. Fruit is large with big seed, thin skin and crisp
sweet flesh.
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Fruitfyl (Bactrocera dorsalis) is a serious pest, which can be controlled by any safe insecticide
like malathion. (Refer Mango section for details).
Harvest and yield:
Longan fruits are harvested after full maturity and ripening. A fully matured tree yields
100 – 120 kg /year. The fruits can be stored for 4-6 weeks at 5oC.
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APPLE
Malus pumila
[Syn: M. commumis , Pyrus malus ; Family : Rosaceae]
‘An apple a day keeps the doctor away’. This is the old proverb which significe the
nutritive importance of apple in human diet. Apple is a rich source of easily assimilable
carbohydrate (13.4%) and it is also fairly rich in calcium (10mg/100g), phosphorus (14
mg/100g), and potassium (120mg/100g). it supplies vitamin B and C. apple has been under
cultivation since time immemorial and today more than 80% of the world’s supply is produced in
Europe where the major producers are Italy, France, and Germany. Other countries which also
produce apple are Hungary, USA, N.C.America, China, Old USSR, India, Spain, Switzerland,
Iran and South America.
Propagation
Apple varieties are propagated by whip and tongue method of grafting. The root-stocks
are either related species such as Malus sylvestris (crap apple), M. prunifolia, M. sikkimensis or
their hybrid derivatives or seedling progenies of cultivated varieties. The main aims in
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developing rootstocks are either to dwarf the trees, or to have resistance to below freezing soil
temperature or high soil temperature, to wooly aphid, root knot nematodes etc. The East Malling
Research Station in England developed Malling Stocks (M). John Innes Horticultural Institute,
Jointly Merton and East Malling Research Station jointly developed rootstocks (MM) which, are
clonally propagated by either cutting or stooling. Some of the important rootstocks developed for
specific purposes are as follows:
M9, M – 27 : Dwarfing
M7, MM-106 : Tolerant to below freezing (-40o C to – 35o C) resistant to wooly aphids.
Northern spy : Resistant to wooly aphids (Eriosoma lanigera).
Robusta-5 : Developed at Ottawa. Canada as a selection of Malus robusta – Resistant to
wooly aphid. Other rootstocks used are Merton 779, 793.
Varieties
In India at himachal Pradesh, varieties like king of Pippins, McIntosh, Golden Delicious,
Red Gold, Starking Delicious, Yellow Newton and Granny Smith are grown. In Jammu and
Kashmir, Irish Peach, Cox Orange Pippin, Kerry Pippin, Ambri, Lal Cider, Golden Delicious,
Lal Ambri, Red Delicious, Sunehari and Razakwar are important varieties under cultivation. In
utter Pradesh and Fanny, Cortland, Early Shanburry, Golden Delicious, McIntosh, Red
Delicious and Buckingham are important varieties.
In the hills of tropical region where warm winter conditions exist, Parlin’s Bearty and Tropical
Beauty have been judged as the best performers. They require only less chilling for bud break
and flowering.
Red Delicious
It is a midseason variety. Widely grown cultivar throughout the world. Evolved as a
chance seedling in Iowa, USA. Fruits are large, oblong conical with 5knob like projections at
calyx end. Smooth skin covered with red streaks on a plain background. Flesh creamy white,
tender, crisp, fine grained, sweet and highly aromatic. A number of strains like Starking
Delicious (Royal Delicious), Ruby Red, Red Spur, Red Chief, Richard Delicious have been
developed from this cultivar.
Jonathan
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It is also a mid season variety, fruits are round to conical in shape medium to small in size and
reddish in colour.
Golden Delicious
It is a late variety with moderate vigour. Fruit medium to large, oblong, skin golden
yellow with russetted prominent small dots scattered all over. Flesh creamy white, firm, crisp,
sweet with a blend of acidity. It is a good pollinizer for all Delicious group.
McIntosh
It is a mid season variety. Trees are vigorous. Fruits are medium in size, oblate round,
skin smooth, shining carmine colour on pale green background. Flesh White, develops red shade
after storage, tender, crisp, sweet with a good acid blend, juicy and mild flavoured. But this
cultivar is scab susceptible.
Bramely Seedling
It is an English cooking apple ideal for stewing especially baking. Skin deep green, waxy
sometimes with a slight orange red blush.
Jona gold
(Triploid) Golden Delicious x Jonathan. Developed in New York. Fruits large with
attractive red strips and have good storage life.
New Jona Gold
A virus free clone of Jona Gold at Japan with super grade having high red colour
intensity.
Kent
A hybrid between (Diplod) Cox and Jonathan. Late maturing variety; fruit slightly
conical with dark red colour on a green background. For this, Golden Delicious and Sparten are
good pollinizers.
Chaubattia Anupam
Developed at Chaubattia from a cross Early Shanburry x Red Delicious. Fruits medium in
size, skin smooth, thin shining yellow almost entirely flushed are striped red; flesh is firm, crisp,
creamy white, juicy, sweet with distinctive aroma.
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Shamrock
A cross between irradiated McIndosh x Starkspur strain of Golden Delicious. It is green
apple identical in appearance and taste with Granny Smith but matures six weeks earlier.
Romus-2
Released from Romania, resistant to scab. Early maturing (mid july onwards). Fruits are
medium sized (120g) red in colour with good flavour.
Kodaikanal-1
A clonal selection made from Parlin’s Beauty at Horticultural Research Station,
Kodaikanal in Tamil Nadu. Adapted very well to warm winter conditions prevailing in South
Indian Hills. Fruits is medium weighing 150g, global in shape with crisp flesh which is
moderately juice. Fully rips fruits are attractive yellow in colour with crimson drop.
Applethrope Summerdel
Cross between Delicious x Earliblaze, fruits medium in size 6.5 – 7.5 cm dia. Globose to
flat globose. Flesh creamy white to yellow, medium coarse texture, firm, juicy and sweet.
Developed at Granite Belt Horticultural Research Station, Queensland, Australia.
Richelien Apple
Developed at Canada Agricultural Research Station by a multiple cross involving Melba,
McIntosh, Jonathan, Rome Beauty and Malus floribunda. Even after full ripening, it hangs on the
tree for 10 days without loosing its firmness. It has good flavour.
Freedom
Developed at New York. Highly resistant to scab. Fruit is large in size and oblate in
shape with firm moderately coarse flesh.
Planting
Pits of size 60 x 60 x 60 cm are dug at a spacing of 5 M x 5M. For effective fruit set
(since self incompatibility exists in most cultivars) pollinating varieties are interplanted. Usually
one in six or one in nine plants is used as pollenizer in self-unfruitful varieties. In intensive
system, planting is done at 4M X 2.5 M or less. A complete row of pollenizer is used for every
two rows of main variety.
High Density Planting (HDP) and Medium Density Planting (MDP)
For this dwarfing rootstocks like M9,M4,MM106 and M26 have to be used. The grafts
are planted at a close spacing of 2M X 1M, so that 5000 plants/ha. Are accommodated. But in
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comparison with M. D. P. where in the total number of plants accommodated was 1666 trees/ha
(3 M X 2 M), the H. D. P. did not give much yield. An additional yield of 50% more than HDP
can be obtained from MDP. The fruit colour and quality also better in MDP than HDP.
Training and pruning
Training is done to give a desired shape as well as to get a canopy for intercepting
maximum sunlight so that all the portions of the tree get sunlight and become productive. The
trees are trained as central leader, open centre, modified leader, cordon, dwarf pyramid,
espalier, tatura trellis and Lincoln canopy.
The apple bear fruit buds in a past season growth called spur. In the established spur
system, permanent fruit spurs are obtained on laterals by heading back the leader every year. The
strong erect laterals near the central leader are removed leaving wide angled vigorous laterals for
formation of spurs. In regulated syatems, the crowed weak and shaded branches are removed
leaving leader and strong laterals are grow.
Manures and manuring
Apple trees require all the mineral elements. Depending on the soil type, rootstock, a
quantity of 500g of N, 250g of P, 750g of K/ tree can be applied.
Deficiency of calcium will lead to physiological disorder in apple fruit called ‘bitter pit’
or ‘cork spot’. Bitter pits appear as slight indentation in the skin usually towards the calyx of
the fruit. These areas turn brown and soft dried pits of collapsed tissues develop. In fruits, colour
changes and cracks develop. Spraying 0.5 % calcium chloride during the later development of
the fruit. 4 times at 14 days interval will help to reduce the deficiency symptom.
Boron deficiency also causes internal browning of fruit and corking spots on the flesh
(internal cork) and sometimes as cork tissue in the skin (external cork). Sparying sodium borate
@ 10g/ lit. 3 times during flowering and fruit set will help to correct the disorder.
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Plant protection
Pests
1. Aphids (Eriosoma lanigerum and Aphis pomi)
Symptoms
They feed on new wood and roots to farm galls. Cold and wet condition favour the
development of this pest.
Management
1. Destruction of eggs before hatching should be done by spraying tar oil or DNOC –
petroleum oil, thoroughly wetting the bark of the tree. Spraying of
organophosphorous insecticides (malathion 0.2%, phosphomidon 0.2% or dimethoate
0.2%) at green cluster stage will be effective.
2. Use wooly aphid resistant rootstocks like Northern spy, Robusta - 5
3. Its main natural enemy, are the parastoid, Aphelinus mali is an important control
agent.
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Management
Spray schedule
Spray
Tree stage Fungicide/ 100lit of water
No.
1. Silver tip to green tip Captafol (300g)/mancozeb (400g/ captan 50 WP
(400g)
2. Pink bud stage Mancozeb (300g)
3. Fruit set (pea stage) Captan 50 WP (300g)
4. Petal fall Thiophanate methyl (50g)/ carbendazim (50g)
5. Fruit set Mancozeb (300g)
6. Repeat fungicide of 5th
spray after 14 days
7. Pre harvest (20 – 25 days Captafol (150g)/ mancozeb (300g)
before)
Management
Destruction of over wintering fungus structures reduction of inoculam by pruning shoots.
Spraying triadimephon (0.05%) or pyrazophos (0.021%).
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PEAR
The probable origin of the Pyrus genus is mountainous China. From there it moved to
East and West and in the different ecological conditions, the evolution would have taken place.
Pear is next to apple in the temperate fruits. It is a rich source of carbohydrate as sugars, starch
and cellulose and minerals like calcium (8 mg/100g) phosphorous (15mg/100g) and sulphur
(14mg/100g).
Climatic and soil requirements:
Pear is adapted to a wide range to climatic condition from as low as –26oC (in dormancy)
and as high as 45oC (in growing period). However most of the pear cultivars require about 1200
hours below 7oC during winter to complete their chilling requirement in order to flower and fruit
to a satisfactory level. However after bud break, at blossoming and fruiting phase, below
freezing temperature will affect the crop severely. Because of its tolerance to wide range of
climate and soil, it is grown both in temperate and subtropical conditions. In the tropical belt
pear can be grown at an elevation of 1300-2100 M above sea level. Deep, well drained, fertile,
medium textured clayey loam soil is the bet for pears. A neutral pH range of 6.0-7.5 will be
ideal. A minimum soil depth of 180 cm is required. When compared to apple, pear is less
tolerant to drought but more tolerant to wet soils.
VARIETIES:
Pear cultivars can be classified in to 3 groups viz., European types, Asian types and the
hybrids of European and Asian types.
The Asian types (oriental pears) are mainly derived from Pyrus pyrifolia, Pyrus
ussuriensis or their hybrids. The European types are derived from Pyrus communis.
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It is well adapted to different climatic conditions and moderately resistant to fire blight.
The fruit is brownish, gritty and hard. It is a self unfruitful variety.
Gola:
It is found to be suitable for lower altitude. Fruits are large, round and possess excellent
keeping quality. Hence it is suitable for long distance transport.
Le Conte:
Suitable for lower aremid hills as its chilling require-ment is low. Fruits are round in
shape, small in size, yellowish green in colour. But it is a blight susceptible variety.
Patharnakh:
This is another low chilling variety. Tolerant to very high temperature and hot winds. It
possesses a peculiar quality combination of drought tolerance as well as tolerance to water
logged condition. Fruits are round with prominent dots. Fruits have tough skin and hence suited
for long distance transport.
Propagation:
Pears are commercially propagated by shield or ‘T’ budding and also by whip and tongue
grafting.
The root-stocks are raised from the seeds of commercial pear varieties. A number of F1
hybrids of Pyrus communis such as Old Home x Farmingdale are multiplied clonally and used as
rootstock. Quince (Cydonia oblonga) is another related genus which shows very good
compatibility with a number of commercial cultivars and it is resistant to wooly aphids,
nematodes but susceptible to Oak rooto fungus, fire blight, cold and excess of lime in soil.
Quince clones are easily propagated by semihardwood and softwood cuttings. Some of the
commercially used clones of quince are QA, QB, QC. But commercial cultivars of pear like pear
Bartlett, Bosc, Eldorado need ‘Old Home’ as interstock as they don’t have compatibility with
Quince.
The chilled scions of Doyenne du comice grafted at 1.0 m height on 1.0m long shoots of
Pant pear –18 stock found to be the best for higher fruit yield and quality.
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One year ahead of planting, the field should be prepared by removing stems and roots of
previous trees and shrubs, leveled giving a gentle slope for drainage of excess water during
heavy rains.
For a crop on its own rootstock (pear), an initial spacing of3 Mx2 M is given which is
changed to 6 M x 4M after 4-5 years. For pear on Quince, a planting distance of 3.5 M x 1.1 M is
enough since quince he has the effect of dwarfing the trees.
The pit size should be 1M x 1M x 1M and the pits are filled with a mixture of soil and
compost. The planting can be taken up during late fall or early spring. Immediately after
planting the basin should be formed and irrigated.
Training and pruning:
Pears are trained in a number of systems like pine shaped, pyramid, spindle, palmette and
trellis. Among these, palette system and tatura trellis are found to be commercially superior. In
tature trellis, the rows are oriented North-South. Each tree is topped to develop two arms to from
‘Y’ shape in East – West direction within 50o-600 crotch angle. Tensioned wires on steel frames
support the arms to a height of 4-5 M and the branches on each arm are trained on each arm are
trained on these trellises.
Bearings trees are pruned by combining heading back and thinning out. Pear bears fruit
bud on spurs arising on two year old wood and a spur continues to bear for more than six years.
Manures and manuring:
An optimum dose of major nutrients is 600g N, 150 g P and 300g K er tree to get the
maximum yield. Normally in pears, the response to P and K can be seen only in soils of low
availability of P&K. At higher altitudes where soil pH will be less than7, the ‘P’ will not be
available. Similarly, when the soil pH is more than 7 (alkaline condition) too, the ‘P’ availability
will be less. Under these conditions, application of additional ‘P’ will increase the yield.
Nitrogen @60g/tree in two splits (2/3rd in January and 1/3rd in May) along with a basal
dressing of 40g each of phosphorus and potash was potash was found the best in Bagugosha
cultivar of low-chilli pear.
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three pickings are taken up. Fruits should be carefully handled while storage and transit as the
bruising is possible by rubbing with one another as well as stalk damage. From a well-
maintained orchard an yield of 30 – 40 tonnes/ha/year can be expected. The unripe fruits
harvested at optimum maturity can be stored for even 5 months at a temperature of –1oC.
Ripening can be accomplished by keeping at 15 to 21 and 21 to 25oC and 80-85% RH in 3-6
days depending on the cultivar. Most of the commercial cultivars require this post harvest
chilling treatment for proper ripening. When such post harvest chilling treatment for proper
ripening. When such post harvest chilling treatment for proper ripening. When such post
harvest cold treatment are not available, the fruits can be treated with ethylene, so that they ripen
properly and get good quality (both taste and colour).
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Area :
Sub-tropical plants of Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh to high hills of Himalaya in
Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir.
Great scope exists in NE
Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, Uttar Pradesh – important states.
Uses :
Rich in minerals, vitamins, sugars and organic acids, protein, fat and CHO2’s
Jam, jelly, marmalades and pies.
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Environment
Warm winter - Bending branches with holding irrigation
Light winter - reduce apical dominance
Rain summer pruning
Chemicals spray, rootstocks
Climate :
Japanese plum – sensitive to frost (spring flowering) if no spring frost – good.
Rainfall :
As rainfed crop, 100-125 cm rainfall, well distributed throughout the year.
High wind velocity – not suitable
Hail prone areas – not suitable.
Soil :
Avoid water logged, poorly drained, very shallow soils with high salts.
Soil depth should be 1.5 m
High alkalinity (5 mg/100 g) + acidic soil toxic, apply lime.
Origin
European plum – Europe
Japanese plum - China
Cherry plum - Europe, West Asia
American plum - N. America
Flower initiation
Flower initiation in one season and flowering seen in the next year, flower development
greatly affected by age of wood, position of bud on tree, temperature, water, CH2O, N and
others, PGR.
Flowering takes ploace on one year old shoot and 2 year old spurs.
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Propagation
Cuttings – heard, semi-hard wood and soft wood
IBA treatment in winter, rooting in 4-6 weeks.
Clonal
Rootstock
Myrobalan 29°C, Myrobalan – 2261, GF 1246.
Peach - Suits to light soil, resistance to nematodes
Almounds - Suits to deep soil, but graft incompatibility
Apricot - high immunity to nematodes
Rootstocks seeds - dormancy problem is seen, so stratification is necessary @
3-5°C.
Planting :
Rootstock vigour and soil fertility decides spacing.
Square system – suits to all situations.
Hexagonal system – fertile and expensive lands.
Training systems :
Branching at 1 m height is practiced
Training system depends on growth habit
Spreading type – open centre
Upright type – Central modified leader
Open centre – more common in Europe
Modified leader – more common in India
Other systems :
Hedge rows
Pyramid for mechanical farming
Palmette
Pruning
Intensity differs with varieties
Japanese plum – over bearing – heavy pruning
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Post-harvest management
For distance market harvest in the early morning or in Afternoon and leave it for over
might cooling.
CA storage O2 – 2-3%
2-3 months
CO2 – 2.8%
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PEACH
Prunus persica (L.) Batsch
Family : Rosaceae
This is a stone fruit in warm temperate climate also grown in sub-tropics, but of inferior
quality. It is most popular because of its attractive colour, excellent quality and taste. Grown in
warm temperate zone of Europe, North America, South Africa, Asia and Australia. Nectarines
are smooth skin mutants allied to peach. It is non-pubescent peach of smaller size.
Use : Favourite table fruit, highly valued for its taste, nutritive properties and therapeutic uses.
Canned, dried, frozen peaches, jam, juice and beverages are popular. Nutrient rich fruit, used as
baby food also.
Nutritive value
Good source of sugars, vitamins and minerals.
TSS - 8-13°B
Total sugars - 8%
Ascorbic acid - 6-13 mg
Carotenoids - 0.19-0.53% - white flesh cultivars
0.75-0.79% - yellow flesh cultivars
Peach kernel contains
Fats, proteins, fibre and minerals
39-55% Fat
23-30% Proteins
14.8% Crude fibre
2.7% Minerals
Glycosides
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‘Prunacin’ – Pulp
‘Amygdalin’ - Seeds
Medicinal properties :
Peach kernel oil - Food, cosmetics, cattle feed, pharmaceuticals, bio-fertilizer
Flower & leaves - Pulgative and anthelmintic, urinary stone, kidney function,
indigestion
Origin : China
India : Uttar Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Nilgiris
North eastern staters viz., Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Manipur.
P. behmi a natural hybrid of almond and peach used as rootstock for plum, peach, almonds
Nectarinc P. persica var. nucipersica.
Morphological description :
Fruit is low headed, wide spread tree, drupe from superior ovary and velvety skin.
Soil
Mild to moderate steep hill slopes are ideal
Deep valleys not prefused, because sensitive to water logging.
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Others rootstock :
Apricot P. armeniaca – Root knot nematode rest.
Almond P. amygdalis – dwarfing rootstock
Western sand cherry – P. berseyi, P. tomentosa – dwarfing.
Namking cherry – P salicina – medicinal to large trees.
Micropropagation of both rootstock and scion is possible, axillary shoots and embryo
culture are successful.
Planting
One year old plants.
Spacing 4-6 m in square
Spring planting better than autumn planting
Trees bare to be white washed to protect it from sun.
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For HDP
Hedge row - 519-889 plants/ha
Tatura trellis - 666 plants/ha
Medow - 13,333 plants/ha
Pruning :
1st year : Stem cut at 61 cm from ground, 3-4 branches allowed, well spaced and well
developed on all sides., All other new growth are removed.
2nd year : 2 well spaced secondary branches on each main branch (Dormant season).
nd
2 summer : Water sprouts suppressed, Secondary branches encouraged.
Forked branches cut to make crotches strong / outside buds are pruned to have
speedy shape. In the 3rd dormant pruning diseased, criss-cross branches,
water sprouts removed. No severe pruning in early seasons.
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– Colour development
– Fungal diseases
Annual heading back
- to maintain low canopy
- 2-3 year old branches to be removed.
- Side branches to be shortened and thinned
- Annual new growth to be maintained @ 41-61 cm length.
Nutrition
Balanced nutrition – health and productivity FYM 40 kg/tree.
For Indian conditions :
Nitrogen : 55-65 kg/ha, phosphorus : 55-65 kg/ha, potassium : 110-135 kg/ha bearing
orchard.
NPK : 20:15:15 g/year
This should be increased annually. Apply fertilizers as band than broadcasting.
Micronutrients
0.5% ZnSO4, 0.2% Boric acid and 0.2% CuSO4 corrects respective deficiency.
Irrigation
Soil moisture important particularly at the time of fruit maturity. Deep well drained soils
is wetting upto 1.8 m depth. Shallow soils is irrigation at frequent intervals with less water.
Stress – less winter hardiness.
Inter cultivation
Desirable but confined to 10 cm soil depth by light hoesing or shallow ploughing.
Advantages : Weed competition decreased, good physical condition, soil erosion, soil moisture
conserved.
Intercropping : Short duration crops can be grown till peach comes to bearing. Eg: Cowpea,
soyabean, turmeric and pineapple.
Green manuring :
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Mulching : Peach normally grown under sod – permanent sod cover, depletion of nitrogen.
Crop regulation :
To regulate heavy flowering and fruiting, thinning can be done to get quality fruits of
marketable size.
Ethrel 50-100 ppm effective in increasing fruit size, fruit weight increased. Pulp – stone
ratio increased, twit quality increased
Spraying : 1000-2500 ppm DNOC prior to full bloom effective.
Time of thinning : Depends on maturity.
Early cultivars – blossom thinning.
Mid & early – at petal fall or fruitset.
Physiological disorder :
1) Split pit and gumming – At pit hardening stage splitting at joint of dorsal and ventral side.
Exudation of gum and the gum fills the pit cavity and seeds become abortive, fruits become
unfit for consumption.
Causes : prolonged drought followed by sudden rain – temperature and humidity increased –
splitting.
2) Sunscald – Constant exposure to sun Sunscald on trunk, twigs and branches.
Control : Painting the exposed area with time and propride shade.
Harvest : Maturity at harvesting decides the post harvest quality and storage.
Maturity indices :
1) Days after full bloom
2) Fruit size
3) Fruit firmness
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4) Pit discolouration
5) Freeness of pit
6) Ground colour
7) Sugar , TSS-arid ratio.
Yield :
7-10 tonnes/ha
High Density Planting – 78 MT/ha
Climacteric fruit
Application of growth retardants Alar (SADH) and ethrel
Enhance ripening
Increase flesh colour and ……….. colour
Increase fruit quality
Uniform ripening
Alar @ 500 ppm at pit hardening, Ethrel – 100, 700 ppm before harvest – effective
Storage :
Soft textured high moisture is highly perishable, spoil within 2-3 days.
Pre-cooling – reduces field heat.
Hydrocooling with running H2O @ 10°C
Precooling + 0°C storage with 85-90% RH 28-36 days storage.
CAS – Very effective
Packing material of weed, fibre, jute, plastics can be used.
Recently corrugated paper board boxes.
Plastic film with entrapped air bubbles
Storage diseases
Brown rot, Whiskers rot, grey mould, green mold, blue mould, black mould.
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To control
Radiation treatment, hot H2O dipping - reduces spoilage.
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References:
1. Veeraragavathatham, D., Jawaharlal, M., Jeeva, S., Rabindran, R and Umapathy,
G. 2004 (2nd edition). Scientific fruit culture. Published by M/s. Suri associates,
1362/4, Velraj Vihar Complex, Thadagam Road, Coimbatore- 2
3. Bose, T.K., S.K. Mitra and D. Sanyal 2001, Fruits : Tropical and Subtropical (2
volumes) Naya Udyog, Calcutta.
4. Bose, T.K., S.K.Mitra, A.A. Farooqi and M.K. Sadhu (Eds) 1999. Tropical
Horticulture Vol.1. Naya Prokash, Calcutta.
8. Mitra, S.K., T.K. Bose and D.S. Rathore. 1991. Temperate fruits. Horticulture
and allied Publishers, Calcutta.
10. Sadhu, M.K. and P.K. Chattopadhyay.2001. Introductory Fruit Crops. Naya
Prokash, Calcutta.
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