Citrus × deliciosa

Citrus × deliciosa
Hybrid parentage Parents unknown; has a mixture of mandarin and pomelo ancestry, though it was once thought to be a pure mandarin.
Cultivar "Mediterranean"?
Marketing names Willowleaf, Ba Ahmed (Morocco), Blida, Boufarik and Bougie (Algeria), Bodrum (Turkey), Paterno and Palermo (Italy), Nice and Provence (France), Valencia (Spain), Setúbal (Portugal); commune (French), comuna (Spanish), gallego (Portuguese), koina (Greek), yerli (Turkish), and beladi (various spellings, Arabic); Effendi or Yousef Effendi (Egypt and the Near East), Emperor, Avana or Speciale (Italy), Thorny (Australia), Mexirica or Do Rio (Brazil), Montegrina, Natal, and Chino or Amarillo (Mexico).[1]
Origin Italy

Citrus ×deliciosa (thorny (Australia), amarillo, beladi, Willowleaf Mandarin, Mediterranean Mandarin[1]) is a citrus hybrid (mandarin × pumelo),[2] though it was once thought to be a pure mandarin.[3][4] It is related to the ponkan.[3]

It has been widely grown around the Mediterranean since it appeared in Italy (between 1810 and 1818), but was not found in the orient until it was exported there.[1] It is one of the most commercially important citrus. Its sweet fruit is eaten, its rind oil is used to flavour food and drinks, and petitgrain oil is extracted from the pruned leaves.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 http://citruspages.free.fr/mandarins.html#deliciosa
  2. Riccardo Velasco and Concetta Licciardello (2014), "A genealogy of the citrus family", Nature Biotechnology, 32: 640–642, doi:10.1038/nbt.2954
  3. 1 2 "Sequencing of diverse mandarin, pummelo and orange genomes reveals complex history of admixture during citrus domestication". Nature Biotechnology. 32: 656–662. doi:10.1038/nbt.2906.
  4. "Assessing genetic diversity and population structure in a citrus germplasm collection utilizing simple sequence repeat markers (SSRs)". Theoretical and Applied Genetics. 112: 1519–1531. doi:10.1007/s00122-006-0255-9.


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