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Papayas

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Flowers are cymose and originate from leaf axils .100 days after planting ... Field seed placed 20/hole to allow for losses and selection of proper flowering type ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Papayas


1
Papayas
2
World Production and Distribution
  • World production 5,950 x 1000 mT.
  • Major countries
  • Brazil (1,500),
  • Nigeria (748),
  • Mexico (700) x 1000

3
World Production and Distribution
  • Distribution - throughout tropics, seeds store
    and ship well
  • Permitted wide distribution, 23ENS latitude

4
World Production and Distribution
  • Not cold tolerant, -0.6 to -1EC. Grows poorly at
    low temperatures
  • Many different types, sizes, shapes, colors
  • Florida production, 250 acres

5
Origin and Botany
  • Originated in tropical Americas
  • Disseminated around the world by Spanish from
    Americas

6
Origin and Botany
  • Family - Caricaceae - 3 genera, about 30 species
  • Carica papaya L. Most important. Charactersitics
  • Stiff unbranched trees, palmate, large leaves,
    dicot
  • Milky sap, herbaceous

7
Origin and Botany
  • Some monoecious species, but usually dioecious
  • Papaya is polygamous or hermaphroditic
  • Flowers unisexual or bisexual

8
Origin and Botany
  • Vigorous growth, in full sun up to 9-10 m
  • May live 20 years in some areas, but in Florida
    18-36 mos. Due to papaya ringspot virus, bunchy
    top

9
Growth and Development
  • Trees grown from seed, fairly uniform within a
    cultivar
  • Root growth precedes shoot growth which is very
    rapid

10
Growth and Development
  • Leaves are laid down from apex, 10-20/mature
    plant
  • Rapid vegetative growth until flowering, then
    growth slows
  • Large, palmate, large petiole (60-90 cm long)

11
Flowering
  • Flowering - very complex, unusual, 8 types
  • Flowers are cymose and originate from leaf axils
    .100 days after planting

12
Flowering- Male Tree
  • Flower morphology (dioecious to polygamous)
  • All male flowers - produced on long racemes,
    flower tubular with 10 stamens in 2 series.
  • No gynoecium.
  • Thus, rarely fruit produced.

13
Flowering-Female Tree
  • Female tree - only female flowers, 5 petals
  • Functional pistil (5 carpels)
  • No stamens, pear-shaped flower

14
Flowering-Female Tree
  • Hermaphroditic - many forms
  • Tubular contains both sexes, 5,5,10,5
  • Stamens may become carpelloidic Fruit at low
    temp, excess N or water

15
Flowering
  • Environmental interaction (fig. 10.1, pg. 241,
    handout 1)
  • Low temperature (winter carpellodic
  • High temperature (35EC) bisexual becomes male
  • Water stress, female sterility

16
Flowering
  • Hermaphrodite more prominent in summer. High
    temperature may lead to female sterility
  • Anthesis timing ranges from 46-80 days depending
    on temperature

17
Pollination and Fruit Set
  • Usually self-fruitful, depends on flower
    morphology
  • Wind pollinated
  • Problems when dioecious and not enough males

18
Pollination and Fruit Set
  • Usual scheme 8-151 female male
  • Fruit set variable, may be 85-95

19
Fruit Characteristics
  • Berry with 5 fused carpels
  • Shape varies hermaphroditic-diverse
  • Female, spherical
  • Seeds black, parietal placentation, covered by
    sarcotesta

20
Fruit Characteristics
  • Fruit development - biphasic 0-80 then
    80-maturity
  • Days to maturity vary 150-160 in tropics to
    190-270 in subtropics
  • Starch is low, decreased rapidly 0-50 days, TSS
    increase nearer maturity, again temperature
    dependent

21
Fruit Characteristics
  • Composition (table 10.9, pg. 268, handout 2)
  • Has moderate TSS, high in K, vitamins A and C
  • Vitamin A especially in yellow and red cultivars
  • Also source of papain, proteolytic enzyme
    collected by scoring fruit, collecting latex

22
Cultivars (Pp. 254-255, Handout 3)
  • Not true cultivars, propagated by OP seedlings
  • Many have been inbred for years, e.g. Solo
  • 100s of local cultivars vary in size, peel
    thickness, shape, color, flavor, aroma

23
Cultivars (Pp. 254-255, Handout 3)
  • Florida cultivars include Cariflora, Betty,
    Homestead
  • Desirable characteristics include good vigor,
    less carpellody expression, smooth skin, good
    shape, and disease/pest resistance
  • Cultivar list (pg. 254) - Nine pairs of
    chromosomes

24
Cultural Practices
  • Soils
  • Sandy loams
  • Volcanic must be well-drained and have pH 5.5-6.5

25
Cultural Practices
  • Climate
  • Optimum temperature 21-33EC (effects growth and
    flowering)
  • Moderate drought tolerance, in wet-dry need
    irrigation and RH 66
  • Need wind breaks to prevent damage to trees and
    fruit

26
Propagation
  • Propagation and planting
  • From seeds, selected, washed, dried, in flats
  • Germinate in 10-15 days
  • Transfer to containers for 1-2 mos., Acclimated
    to field

27
Planting
  • Field seed placed 20/hole to allow for losses and
    selection of proper flowering type
  • Planted at 1600-2000 plants/ha

28
Planting
  • May be planted at 45 angle, lower height first
    fruit
  • 2.0-2.5 m between and within rows, before rainy
    season

29
Nutrition and Fertilization
  • Varies with location, soil type
  • Apply balanced fertilizer at planting and every
    few months
  • Use leaf (soil) analysis - leaf, N 1.0-1.4, P
    0.15-0.18, K 2.5-3.5 minor elements

30
Pruning
  • Not usually necessary, except at harvest
  • Weed control - standard practices

31
Yields
  • Variable, 45 kg/tree x 2000/ha 90 mT/ha at best

32
Diseases- Fungi
  • Phytophthora
  • Pythium (damping off)
  • Anthracnose, stem-end rot
  • Fusarium, soft rot
  • Rhizopus on fruit

33
Diseases-Bacterial
  • Bunchy top - stunting, yellowing vectored by
    leafhopper, cause unknown

34
Diseases-Viral
  • Papaya ring spot - worse - yellowing, stunting,
    aphid vectored
  • Possible molecular biology controls (have in
    Hawaii), bunchy top

35
Insects and Mites(Not Major Problems)
  • Insects - fruit flies (see postharvest) include
    Mediterranean, Oriental, Caribbean (in fruit)
  • Mites include broad, Texas citrus, red and black
    feed on young leaves and fruit

36
  • Other problems include
  • birds, monkeys

37
Harvesting
  • Time varies with market - from ¼-½ for local to
    color break for long distance
  • Also may be based on minimum TSS (Hawaii)
  • Procedure by hand with a cutting tool then
    packed, shipped

38
Postharvest
  • Must treat for fruit fly if exporting to
    susceptible area
  • Vapor heat - hot air 93 RH, 4 h so internal
    temperature 47.2 - can damage fruit (hot water
    used in past)
  • Irradiation - useful with hot water, also may
    damage fruit

39
Postharvest
  • Generally - washed, fungicide, waxed and packed
  • Proper handling is important to prevent bruises
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