Fruit variation and geographical distribution of citron.
10.19540/j.cnki.cjcmm.20211012.102
- Author:
Hang-Xiu LIU
1
;
Di FENG
2
;
Chun-Rui LONG
1
;
Xian-Yan ZHOU
1
;
Hong-Ming LIU
1
;
Hong-Xia YANG
1
;
Yu-Xia DU
1
;
Li-Na GUO
1
;
Xiao-Meng FU
1
;
Zhao-Cheng MA
2
;
Jian-Qiang YUE
1
Author Information
1. Institute of Tropical and Subtropical Cash Crops, Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences Baoshan 678000, China.
2. Institute of Health from Horticulture, College of Horticulture & Forestry Sciences, Huazhong Agricultural University Wuhan 430070, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Citri Fructus;
citron;
germplasm resources;
intraspecific variation;
original plant
- MeSH:
China;
Citrus;
Fruit;
Taste;
Tibet
- From:
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica
2021;46(23):6289-6293
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
The ripe dried fruit of citron(Citrus medica) is one of the important sources of Chinese herb Citri Fructus. At the same time, it is also grown for edible and ornamental uses. There are many species and abundant genetic variation. To clarify the intraspecific variation and resource distribution of citron, this study investigated the variation in 11 citron fruits, basically covering the main species in China, including Xiaoguo citron(C. medica var. ethrog), Goucheng(C. medica var. yunnanensis), Muli citron(C.medica var. muliensis), Dehong citron(C.medica×Citrus spp.), Fuzhou citron(C.medica×C.grandis?), Mawu(C.medica×C.grandis?), Cangyuan citron, Binchuan citron, Sweet citron, Big citron, and Small citron. The natural communities of citron were proved to be mainly distributed in the southwestern and western Yunnan and southeastern Tibet of China, with Yunnan, Sichuan, Guangxi, Chongqing, Hubei, and Zhejiang identified as the main production areas. Citron has also been widely grown in India, the Mediterranean region, and the Caribbean coast countries. The field investigation revealed the large-scale intraspecific variation of citron fruits. Most of the fruits are oval-like or sphere-like in shape. The fruits are green when raw and yellow when ripe, with oil cell dots on the skin, stripe-likes running from top to bottom, and bulge at the top. Usually, in the smaller citron fruits, the pulp and juice vesicles are better developed and the central columella is tighter. By contrast, the juice vesicles and central columella in larger fruits became more vacant, with carpels visible, and the apex segregation and development of the carpels is one of the reasons for variation. These variations should be given top priority in the future variety selection and breeding, and the quality differences of different citron species and their mechanisms should be further studied. In particular, variety selection and classification management according to their medicinal or edible purposes will provide scientific and technological supports for the orderly, safe, and effective production of citron products consumed as food and medicine.