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Five Rootstocks for “Emperor” Mandarin Under Subtropical Climate in Southern Brazil

Rootstocks modulate several characteristics of citrus trees, including vegetative growth, fruit yield and quality, and resistance or tolerance to pests, diseases, soil drought, and salinity, among other factors. There is a shortage of scion and rootstock cultivars among the combinations planted in B...

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Autores principales: da Cruz, Maria Aparecida, Neves, Carmen Silvia Vieira Janeiro, de Carvalho, Deived Uilian, Colombo, Ronan Carlos, Bai, Jinhe, Yada, Inês Fumiko Ubukata, Leite Junior, Rui Pereira, Tazima, Zuleide Hissano
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8722343/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34987531
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.777871
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author da Cruz, Maria Aparecida
Neves, Carmen Silvia Vieira Janeiro
de Carvalho, Deived Uilian
Colombo, Ronan Carlos
Bai, Jinhe
Yada, Inês Fumiko Ubukata
Leite Junior, Rui Pereira
Tazima, Zuleide Hissano
author_facet da Cruz, Maria Aparecida
Neves, Carmen Silvia Vieira Janeiro
de Carvalho, Deived Uilian
Colombo, Ronan Carlos
Bai, Jinhe
Yada, Inês Fumiko Ubukata
Leite Junior, Rui Pereira
Tazima, Zuleide Hissano
author_sort da Cruz, Maria Aparecida
collection PubMed
description Rootstocks modulate several characteristics of citrus trees, including vegetative growth, fruit yield and quality, and resistance or tolerance to pests, diseases, soil drought, and salinity, among other factors. There is a shortage of scion and rootstock cultivars among the combinations planted in Brazil. “Ponkan” mandarin and “Murcott” tangor grafted on “Rangpur” lime comprise the majority of the commercial mandarin orchards in Brazil. This low genetic diversity of citrus orchards can favor pest and disease outbreaks. This study aimed to evaluate the agronomic performance, Huanglongbing (HLB) tolerance, and fruit quality of “Emperor” mandarin on five different rootstocks for nine cropping seasons under the subtropical soil-climate conditions of the North region of the state of Paraná, Brazil. The experimental design was a randomized block, with six replications, two trees per block, and five rootstocks, including “Rangpur” lime, “Cleopatra,” and “Sunki” mandarins, “Swingle” citrumelo, and “Fepagro C-13” citrange. The evaluations included tree growth, yield performance, fruit quality, and HLB disease incidence. “Emperor” mandarin trees grafted on “Rangpur” lime and “Swingle” citrumelo had early fruiting and high yield efficiency. “Rangpur” lime also induced the lowest tree growth, but low fruit quality. Trees on “Swingle” citrumelo and “Fepagro C-13” citrange showed low scion and rootstock affinity and produced fruits with high total soluble solids (TSS), with a lower number of seeds for those from trees on “Fepagro C-13” citrange. “Cleopatra” and “Sunki” mandarins induced higher juice content, while fruits from trees on “Cleopatra” also had higher TSS/titratable acidity (TA) ratio. “Emperor” mandarin trees were susceptible to HLB regardless of the rootstocks. Overall, “Cleopatra” and “Sunki” mandarins, “Swingle” citrumelo, and “Fepagro C-13” are more suitable rootstocks for “Emperor” mandarin under Brazilian subtropical conditions than “Rangpur” lime.
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spelling pubmed-87223432022-01-04 Five Rootstocks for “Emperor” Mandarin Under Subtropical Climate in Southern Brazil da Cruz, Maria Aparecida Neves, Carmen Silvia Vieira Janeiro de Carvalho, Deived Uilian Colombo, Ronan Carlos Bai, Jinhe Yada, Inês Fumiko Ubukata Leite Junior, Rui Pereira Tazima, Zuleide Hissano Front Plant Sci Plant Science Rootstocks modulate several characteristics of citrus trees, including vegetative growth, fruit yield and quality, and resistance or tolerance to pests, diseases, soil drought, and salinity, among other factors. There is a shortage of scion and rootstock cultivars among the combinations planted in Brazil. “Ponkan” mandarin and “Murcott” tangor grafted on “Rangpur” lime comprise the majority of the commercial mandarin orchards in Brazil. This low genetic diversity of citrus orchards can favor pest and disease outbreaks. This study aimed to evaluate the agronomic performance, Huanglongbing (HLB) tolerance, and fruit quality of “Emperor” mandarin on five different rootstocks for nine cropping seasons under the subtropical soil-climate conditions of the North region of the state of Paraná, Brazil. The experimental design was a randomized block, with six replications, two trees per block, and five rootstocks, including “Rangpur” lime, “Cleopatra,” and “Sunki” mandarins, “Swingle” citrumelo, and “Fepagro C-13” citrange. The evaluations included tree growth, yield performance, fruit quality, and HLB disease incidence. “Emperor” mandarin trees grafted on “Rangpur” lime and “Swingle” citrumelo had early fruiting and high yield efficiency. “Rangpur” lime also induced the lowest tree growth, but low fruit quality. Trees on “Swingle” citrumelo and “Fepagro C-13” citrange showed low scion and rootstock affinity and produced fruits with high total soluble solids (TSS), with a lower number of seeds for those from trees on “Fepagro C-13” citrange. “Cleopatra” and “Sunki” mandarins induced higher juice content, while fruits from trees on “Cleopatra” also had higher TSS/titratable acidity (TA) ratio. “Emperor” mandarin trees were susceptible to HLB regardless of the rootstocks. Overall, “Cleopatra” and “Sunki” mandarins, “Swingle” citrumelo, and “Fepagro C-13” are more suitable rootstocks for “Emperor” mandarin under Brazilian subtropical conditions than “Rangpur” lime. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC8722343/ /pubmed/34987531 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.777871 Text en Copyright © 2021 Cruz, Neves, Carvalho, Colombo, Bai, Yada, Leite Junior and Tazima. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Plant Science
da Cruz, Maria Aparecida
Neves, Carmen Silvia Vieira Janeiro
de Carvalho, Deived Uilian
Colombo, Ronan Carlos
Bai, Jinhe
Yada, Inês Fumiko Ubukata
Leite Junior, Rui Pereira
Tazima, Zuleide Hissano
Five Rootstocks for “Emperor” Mandarin Under Subtropical Climate in Southern Brazil
title Five Rootstocks for “Emperor” Mandarin Under Subtropical Climate in Southern Brazil
title_full Five Rootstocks for “Emperor” Mandarin Under Subtropical Climate in Southern Brazil
title_fullStr Five Rootstocks for “Emperor” Mandarin Under Subtropical Climate in Southern Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Five Rootstocks for “Emperor” Mandarin Under Subtropical Climate in Southern Brazil
title_short Five Rootstocks for “Emperor” Mandarin Under Subtropical Climate in Southern Brazil
title_sort five rootstocks for “emperor” mandarin under subtropical climate in southern brazil
topic Plant Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8722343/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34987531
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.777871
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