Citrus hybrid
Citrus hybrids include many varieties and species that have been selected by plant breeders, usually for the useful characteristics of the fruit. Some citrus hybrids occurred naturally, and others have been deliberate created, either by cross pollination and selection among the progeny, or (rarely, and only recently) as somatic hybrids. The aim of plant breeding of hybrids is to use two or more different citrus varieties or species, in order to get intermediate traits, or the most desirable traits of the parents. In some cases, particularly with the natural hybrids, hybrid speciation has occurred, so the new plants are considered a different species from any of their parents. Citrus hybrid names are usually marked with a multiplication sign after the word "Citrus", for example Citrus × aurantifolia.
Taxonomy
Citrus taxonomy is very complex and this page currently follows the Swingle system.[citation needed]
Major citrus hybrids
The most known citrus hybrids that are sometimes treated as a species by themselves, especially in folk taxonomy, are:
Minor citrus hybrids (partial list)
- Shikwasa, Hirami lemon - Citrus × depressa
- Kaffir lime - Citrus × hystrix
- Persian lime - Citrus × latifolia
- Rangpur lime - Citrus × limonia
- Sudachi - Citrus sudachi
- Yuzu - Citrus ichangensis × reticulata
- Ponderosa - Citrus limon × medica
- Lumia - Citrus lumia
- Rhobs al-arsa - Citrus limon
- Florentine citron - Citrus limonimedica
- Oroblanco, oro blanco (white gold) or sweetie and Melogold - (Citrus grandis Osbeck × Citrus Paradisi Macf.)
- Pixie mandarin - a cross between King tangor and Dancy mandarin with possible unknown pollen donor
- Ugli fruit - Citrus reticulata × Citrus paradisi
- Lemonade fruit - a cross between navel orange and lemon
Graft hybrids
Graft-chimaeras, also called graft hybrids, can occur in Citrus. The cells are not somatically fused but rather mix the tissues from scion and rootstock after grafting, a popular example the Bizzaria orange. In formal usage, these are marked with a plus sign "+" instead with an "x".
Intergenetic hybrids
Citrofortunella
Citrofortunella according to the Swingle system, is a hybrid genus, containing intergeneric hybrids between members of the genus Citrus and the closely related Fortunella. It is named after its two parent genera. Such hybrids often combine the cold hardiness of the Fortunella, such as the Kumquat, with some edibility properties of the citrus species. Citrofortunellas, which are all hybrids, are marked with the multiplication sign before the word "Citrofortunella",[1] for example × Citrofortunella microcarpa or × Citrofortunella mitis which refer to the same plant.[2]
Citrofortunella
These plants are hardier and more compact than most citrus plants, often referred to as cold hardy citrus. They produce small acidic fruit and make good ornamental plants. Citrofortunella hybrids include:
- Calamondin — (tangerine crossed with kumquat)
- Citrangequat — (citrange crossed with kumquat)
- Limequat - (Citrofortunella floridana) — (Key lime crossed with kumquat)
- Orangequat - Citrofortunella nippon — (satsuma mandarin crossed with kumquat)
- Procimequat - (Citrofortunella floridana) (limequat crossed with kumquat)
- Sunquat - Citrus limon × japonica — (lemon crossed with kumquat)
- Yuzuquat - Citrus ichangensis × reticulata — (yuzu crossed with kumquat)
Citrocirus
Citrocirus also according to the Swingle system, is a hybrid genus, containing hybrids between members of the genus Citrus and the closely related Poncirus, which includes the trifoliate orange, a cold hardy plant that is commonly used as a citrus rootstock. Citrocirus commonly refers to the citranges which are hybrids between the trifoliate and sweet oranges. However a molecular investigation suggested that Fortunella, Citrofortunella, Poncirus and Citrocirus should all be equivocally included in the genus Citrus.[3][4]
- Citrange - Citrus sinensis × Poncirus trifoliata - three cultivars: 'Troyer', 'Rusk' and 'Carrizo'.
- Citrumelo - Citrus paradisi × Poncirus trifoliata
Labelling of hybrids
Citrus fruit taxonomy is still poorly understood, and even modern hybrids of known parentage are sold under general names that give little information about their ancestry, or technically incorrect information.[5][6]
This can be a problem for those who can eat only some citrus varieties. Drug interactions with chemicals found in some citrus, including grapefruit and Seville oranges,[7][8] make the ancestry of citrus fruit of interest; many commonly sold citrus varieties are grapefruit hybrids[9][10] or pummello-descended grapefruit relatives. One medical review has advised patients on medication to avoid all citrus juice,[7] although some citrus fruits contain no furanocoumarins.[10]
Citrus allergies can also be specific to only some fruit or some parts of some fruit.[11][12][13]
See also
References
- ^ "EasyBloom :: Calamondin - x Citrofortunella mitis :: Detailed Plant Information". easybloom.com.
- ^ Gardens World
- ^ Nicolosi et al. (2000)[full citation needed]
- ^ de Araújo et al. (2003)[full citation needed]
- ^ Larry K. Jackson and Stephen H. Futch. "Robinson Tangerine". ufl.edu.
- ^ Commernet, 2011. "20-13.0061. Sunburst Tangerines; Classification and Standards, 20-13. Market Classification, Maturity Standards And Processing Or Packing Restrictions For Hybrids, D20. Departmental, 20. Department of Citrus, Florida Administrative Code". State of Florida. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ a b Saito, M; Hirata-Koizumi, M; Matsumoto, M; Urano, T; Hasegawa, R (2005). "Undesirable effects of citrus juice on the pharmacokinetics of drugs: focus on recent studies". Drug Safety. 28 (8): 677–94. doi:10.2165/00002018-200528080-00003. PMID 16048354.
- ^ Bailey, David G. (2010). "Fruit juice inhibition of uptake transport: a new type of food-drug interaction". British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology. 70 (5): 645–55. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2125.2010.03722.x. PMC 2997304. PMID 21039758.
- ^ http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/morton/tangelo.html[full citation needed]
- ^ a b Widmer, Wilbur (2006). "One Tangerine/Grapefruit Hybrid (Tangelo) Contains Trace Amounts of Furanocoumarins at a Level Too Low To Be Associated with Grapefruit/Drug Interactions". Journal of Food Science. 70 (6): c419–22. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2621.2005.tb11440.x.
- ^ Bourrier, T; Pereira, C (2013). "Allergy to citrus juice". Clinical and Translational Allergy. 3 (Suppl 3): P153. doi:10.1186/2045-7022-3-S3-P153. PMC 3723546.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ Cardullo, AC; Ruszkowski, AM; DeLeo, VA (1989). "Allergic contact dermatitis resulting from sensitivity to citrus peel, geraniol, and citral". Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. 21 (2 Pt 2): 395–7. doi:10.1016/s0190-9622(89)80043-x. PMID 2526827.
- ^ Boonpiyathad, S (2013). "Chronic angioedema caused by navel orange but not citrus allergy: case report". Clinical and Translational Allergy. 3 (Suppl 3): P159. doi:10.1186/2045-7022-3-S3-P159. PMC 3723846.
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: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)