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[品种特性] PAWPAW-泡泡树

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PAWPAW-泡泡树
Asimina trilobaAnnonaceaeCommon Name:Pawpaw, Paw Paw, Papaw, Poor Man's Banana, Hoosier Banana, etc. (In Australiathe tropical papaya, Carica papaya, is also known as Pawpaw).
Related species: Asimina incarna, A. longifolia, A. obovata, A. parviflora, A. pygmaea, A. reticulata, A. tetramera, A. X nashii. These eight Asimina species grow in the southeastern United States. Distant Affinity:Cherimoya(Annona cherimola), Soursop (Annona muricata), Custard Apple (Annona reticulata), Sugar Apple, Sweetsop (Annona squamosa), Atemoya (Annona squamosa X A. cherimola). Origin: The pawpaw is native to the temperate woodlands of the eastern U.S. The American Indian is credited with spreading the pawpaw across the eastern U.S. to eastern Kansas and Texas, and from the Great Lakes almost to the Gulf. Fossils prove the pawpaw is indigenous to the U.S. Adaptation: The pawpaw is adapted to the humid continental climate of its native habitat. It is seldom found near the Atlantic or Gulf coasts. It requires a minimum of 400 hours of winter chill and at least 160 frost-free days. Pawpaws appear to be sensitive to low humidities, dry winds and cool maritime summers. It has been successfully grown in parts of California and the Pacific Northwest that meet its growing requirements. It has grown well in the San Jose area (USDA Climate Zone 9 or Sunset Climate Zone 15). The climatic conditions of Southern California make growing the pawpaw there more difficult. The deep winter dormancy of the tree makes it highly frost tolerant, withstanding temperatures of -25° F or lower (hardy to USDA Climate Zone 5). Pawpaws can be grown as container specimens, although this is not often practiced. A deep pot is needed to accommodate the root system. DESCRIPTIONGrowth Habit: The pawpaw is a deciduous, often narrowly conical tree growing from about 12 feet to around 20 feet. Pawpaw trees are prone to producing root suckers a few feet from the trunk. When these are permitted to grow, the single-clone pawpaw patch comes into being. The prevailing experiences of many individuals is that the pawpaw is a slow grower, particularly when it is young. However, under optimal greenhouse conditions, including photo-period extension light of approximately 16 hours, top growth of up to 5 feet can be attained in three months.
Foliage: The dark green, obovate-oblong, drooping lees grow up to 12 inches long, giving the pawpaw an interesting tropical appearance. The lees turn yellow and begin to fall in mid-autumn and leaf out again in late spring after the tree has bloomed. Flowers: Dormant, velvety, dark brown flower buds develop in the axils of the previous years' lees. They produce maroon, upside-down flowers up to 2 inches across. The normal bloom period consists of about 6 weeks during March to May depending on variety, latitude and climatic conditions. The blossom consists of 2 whorls of 3 petals each, and the calyx has 3 sepals. Each flower contains several ovaries which explains why a single flower can produce multiple fruits. Fruit: The pawpaw is the largest edible fruit native to America. Individual fruits weigh 5 to 16 ounces and are 3 to 6 inches in length. The larger sizes will appear plump, similar to the mango. The fruit usually has 10 to 14 seeds in two rows. The brownish to blackish seeds are shaped like lima beans, with a length of 1/2 to 1-1/2 inches. Pawpaw fruits often occur as clusters of up to nine individual fruits. The ripe fruit is soft and thin skinned. CULTURELocation: The young plant is very sensitive to full sunlight and requires filtered sun for the first year or two. The use of tree shelters is an ideal solution to the problem, permitting the plant to receive a full day of filtered sunlight. Once established, pawpaws prefer full sun. The large dangling lees dislike strong winds. Overall the tree is an excellent edible landscape addition.
Soil: Pawpaws do best in deep, fertile soil that is moist, but well-drained and slightly acid (pH 5-7). The addition of compost to most western soils makes them more hospitable to the pawpaw. oid hey, wet, alkaline soil. Irrigation: The pawpaw needs regular watering during the growing season. The soil should be kept moist but oid waterlogging. Fertilization: The pawpaw responds to the application of an organic or granular fertilizer high in potassium twice a year. For container growing, 250 - 500 ppm of soluble 20-20-20 NPK plus soluble trace elements during growth phase is optimal. Pruning: Ordinarily little pruning is required, except to remove dead, damaged or wayward branches. Periodic pruning may be used to stimulate some new growth each year on older trees, since it is new growth that produces fruit the following season. Propagation: To break dormancy Pawpaw seed must receive a 90 to 120 day stratification, i.e. exposure to cold temperatures. To accomplish this, the seed should be placed in plastic freezer zipper bag containing a handful of moist sphagnum moss and refrigerated at 32° - 40° F. The over wintering of field planted seeds normally accomplishes this stratification requirement. Germination of pawpaw seed is hypogeal--the shoot emerges without any cotyledons. Under ideal greenhouse culture, germination can be expected in about seven weeks. Seeds field-planted in the fall will emerge the following July or August. But before the shoot emerges, the seed will he sent down a 10 inch long tap root. Hardwood cuttings are essentially impossible to root, while root cuttings he been variable to disappointing. Some success has been reported using softwood cuttings under intermittent mist with bottom heat (80° F) and supplemental light (14 hours). All grafting and budding techniques can be performed on the pawpaw, but T-budding is not recommended. Chip-budding has been reported to be successful. Scion wood should be gathered while the tree is dormant and kept refrigerated. Grafting can be done in the spring after vegetative growth begins. Young pawpaw plants he fleshy, brittle roots with few fine root hairs, making them difficult to transplant. It is important to follow these helpful rules:
  • Use seedlings, not root suckers.
  • Move the tree with roots and soil intact. A container grown specimen is best.
  • Transplant the tree in the spring after bud break.
  • Give the plant good drainage and keep it well watered the first year.
Pests and diseases: Pawpaw trees are relatively disease free, including a resistance to Oak Root Fungus (Armillaria). A number of vertebrates such as foxes, opossums, squirrels and raccoons will eat the fruit, although deer, goats and rabbits will not eat the lees or twigs. The attraction of pawpaw roots to gophers is a somewhat unknown factor, but it seems likely that they would not be the gopher's first choice. The Zebra Swallowtail butterfly's larvae feed exclusively on young, pawpaw foliage, but never in great numbers. On the West Coast, slugs, snails and earwigs can be easily controlled by the application of Tanglefoot to a band around the pawpaw tree trunk. It is important not to apply Tanglefoot directly to the bark, however. Pollination: Poor pollination has always plagued the pawpaw in nature, and the problem has followed them into domestication. Pawpaw flowers are perfect, in that they he both male and female reproduction parts, but they are not self-pollinating. The flowers are also protogynaus, i.e., the female stigma matures and is no longer receptive when the male pollen is shed. In addition pawpaws are self-incompatible, requiring cross pollination from another unrelated pawpaw tree. Bees show no interest in pawpaw flowers. The task of pollenization is left to unenthusiastic species of flies and beetles. A better solution for the home gardener is to hand pollinate, using a small, soft artist's brush to transfer pollen to the stigma. Pollen is ripe for gathering when the ball of anthers is brownish in color, loose and friable. Pollen grains should appear as small beige-colored particles on the brush hairs. The stigma is receptive when the tips of the pistils are green, glossy and sticky, and the anther ball is firm and greenish to light yellow in color. Harvest: Pawpaw fruit ripens during a four-week period between mid August and into October, depending on various factors. When ripe, it is soft and yields easily to a gentle squeeze, and has a pronounced perfumed fragrance. The skin of the green fruit usually lightens in color as it ripens and often develops blackish splotches which do not affect the flor or edibility. The yellow flesh is custard like and highly nutritious. The best fruit has a complex, tropical flor unlike any other temperate zone fruit. At present, the primary use of pawpaws is for fresh eating out of hand. The ripe fruit is very perishable with a shelf life of 2 or 3 days, but will keep up to 3 weeks if it is refrigerated at 40° - 45° F. Commercial potential: Although pawpaw fruit is not yet a commercially viable commodity, the domestication process is well underway. Several academic institutions are setting up seventeen Regional Variety Trial sites. Kentucky State University is the site of Pawpaw National Clonal Germ-plasm Repository. The pawpaw has also found its way to several overseas countries, and a few of these are actively engaged in research. Pawpaw lees and twigs contain substances with promising anti-cancer and pesitcidal properties. Plant selection: A number of mail-order sources of pawpaw plants now offer both grafted cultivars and seedlings. Most seedling plants he been propagated from mixed seeds and will eventually end up producing undesirable fruit. Purchasers are advised to graft such plants to a known cultivar or order grafted plants initially. Container grown plants are much more likely to survive transplanting. When placing an order for a pawpaw plant, it is helpful to he the Pawpaw Selection Option Chart below handy. Phoning in the order gives the opportunity to ask questions and substantiate it.
PAWPAW PLANT SELECTION OPTIONS
Container Grown (1) Bare Root (2)
CULTIVAR - on seedling root stocksome sourcesmost sources
CULTIVAR - from shoot/root on own root stockrarely ailablerarely ailable
SEEDLING - from seed of mixed seed (risky fruit quality)some sourcesmost sources
SEEDLING - from seed of cultivar fruit (usually comes fairly true)rarely ailablerarely ailable
(1) easier to get established, good survival rate
(2) slower to get established, reduced survival rate
CULTIVARSCallaway (1990)lists over 60 pawpaw cultivars, many of which are not ailable in the nursery trade. The Kentucky State list of cultivars, while not as extensive, is more current. The following cultivars are among the best with regard to fruit quality:
Dis Fruit small. Flesh yellow, green skin. Seeds large. Flor good. Mary Foos Johnson Similar to Sunflower. Mitchell Fruit medium. Flesh golden, slightly yellow skin. Flor excellent. Overleese Fruit large. Fewer seed but large. Flesh yellow. Flor excellent. Prolific Fruit large. Flesh yellow. Flor excellent. Sunflower Fruit medium large. Flesh golden, yellowish skin. Few seeds. Flor good. Purported to be self-fertile. Sweet Alice Fruit medium large. Prolific bearer. Flesh yellow. Flor good. Taylor Fruit small. Flesh yellow, green skin. Flor mild, excellent. Taytoo Fruit medium. Flesh yellow, light green skin. Flor excellent. Prolific bearer. Wells Fruit quite large. Flesh orange, green skin. Flor superb. FURTHER READING
  • Callaway, M. Brett. Pawpaw (Asimina triloba): a "Tropical" Fruit for Temperate Climates. New Crops. 1993.
  • Callaway, M. Brett. The Pawpaw (Asimina triloba). Kentucky State University, Frankfort, KY. 1990.
  • Callaway, M. Brett and Dorothy J. Callaway. Our Native Pawpaw: The Next New Commercial Fruit? Arnold Arboretum, Harvard University. Fall 1992, pp 20-29.
  • Layne, D. R. Pawpaws. In: Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties, 3d ed. A.S.H.S. Press, Alexandria, VA, 1996.
  • Layne, D.R. The Pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal]: A New Fruit Crop for Kentucky and the United States. HortScience vol. 31, 1996, pp. 15-22.
  • Peterson, R. Neal. Pawpaws in the Garden, and Pawpaws in the Nursery Trade. Pawpaw Foundation, 1990.
  • Peterson, R. Neal. Pawpaw (Asimina). Acta Horticulture, ISHS. Feb.1991, pp. 569-600.
  • Reich, Lee. Uncommon Fruits Worthy of Attention. Addison-Wesley, 1991. pp. 3-13.
  • Kentucky State University Pawpaw Research Project
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 楼主| 发表于 2007-12-6 18:20 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 中国新疆和田地区
Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal
Annonaceae
Pawpaw
Indiana Banana
Hoosier Banana
Poor Man's Banana
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Pages on our server

Outside links

Articles in other publications


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Pages on our server
Pawpaw FactSHEET contributed by Desmond R. Layne

Pawpaw (Asimina triloba): a "Tropical Fruit for Temperate Climates" by M. Brett Calloway. From: New Crops (Janick and Simon eds.) Wiley, New York, 1993.

Pawpaw from: Magness, J.R., G.M. Markle, C.C. Compton. 1971. Food and feed crops of the United States.

Nuts with Commercial Potential for America's Heartland

Pawpaws Provide Potential

Growing Pawpaws—Cooperative Extension Service, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana. PDF version

The Pawpaw Regional Variety Trial—Kirk W. Pomper, Desmond R. Layne, and R. Neal Peterson

Articles on Insecticidal Acetogenins contained in Pawpaw Bark:
Evaluation of Various Parts of the Paw Paw Tree, Asimina triloba (Annonaceae), as a Commercial Source of the Pesticidal Annonaceous Acetogenins—Sunil Ratnayake, J. Kent Rupprecht, William M. Potter, and Jerry L. McLaughlin

Monthly Variations in Biological Activity of Asimina triloba—Holly. A. Johnson, J. Gordon, and Jerry .L. McLaughlin


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Outside links
The PawPaw Foundation Devoted to the Advancement of Asimina triloba, North America's Largest Native Edible Fruit

Kentucky State University Pawpaw Research Project

PAWPAW "FRUIT FACTS" (Fruit Facts are a series of publications of the the California Rare Fruit Growers, Inc. that contain information on individual fruits, including botanical identification, description and culture notes based on California research, and characteristics of cultivars).

About Pawpaws in Oregon

From the Northern Nut Growers Association, Articles about Pawpaw

Fruit Explorer's MidFEx Pawpaw page

The GardenWeb's page on Pawpaw

Peterson Pawpaws

Canada Gardens! Pawpaw page


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Link to information and image of Asimina tetramera (Opossum Pawpaw), a rare and endangered species from southern Florida.


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Articles in other publications
Jones, S.C., R.N. Peterson, T.-A. Turner, K.W. Pomper, and D.R. Layne. 1998. Pawpaw Planting Guide Cultivars and Nursery Sources. KSU PIB 002.

Layne, D.R. and L.N. Peters. 1997. Early growth and development of pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal] seedlings in the greenhouse as influenced by shade and root-zone modification. HortScience 32:532 (PA).

Huang, H., D.R. Layne, and T.L. Kubisiak. 1997. Pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal] germplasm evaluation using RAPD markers. HortScience 32:513 (PA).

Finneseth, C.L.H., D.R. Layne and R.L. Geneve. 1997. Influence of ontological age on adventitious bud and shoot formation of pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal] nodal explants. HortScience 32:441 (PA).

Huang, H., D.R. Layne, and R.N. Peterson. 1997. Isozyme polymorphisms for identification and assessment of genetic variation in cultivated pawpaws [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal]. J. Amer. Soc. Hort. Sci. 122(4):504-511. (RJA).

Layne, D.R. 1997. The influence of shade and root-zone modification on early growth and development of pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal] seedlings grown in the greenhouse. Trans. KY. Acad. Sci. 58(1):37. (PA).

Huang, H. and D.R. Layne. 1997. Geographic differentiation and allozyme variation in pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal]. Trans. KY. Acad. Sci. 58(1):37. (PA).

Finneseth, C.L.H., D.R. Layne and R.L. Geneve. 1997. Pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal] morphological development during seed germination and seedling emergence. Trans. KY. Acad. Sci. 58(1):37-38. (PA).

Layne, D.R. 1997. Pawpaws, p. 403-404. In: The Brooks and Olmo Register of Fruit and Nut Varieties, Third Edition, A.S.H.S. Press, Alexandria, VA (BC).

S.C. Jones and D.R. Layne. 1997. Cooking with pawpaws. KSU Pawpaw Ext. Bull.-001. 12 p. (EA).

Finneseth, C.L.H., D.R. Layne, and R.L. Geneve. 1996. Germination and seedling emergence in pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal]. Proc. So. Nurs. Assoc. Conf. 41:61-64. (NCP).

Layne, D.R. 1996. Development of pawpaw as a new fruit crop: research update from KSU. Pomona: 29(4):37-47. (NPA).

Layne, D.R. and R.N. Peterson. 1996. The pawpaw regional variety trial (RVT): Background, rationale and early data. HortScience 31:667 (PA).

Finneseth, C.L.H., D.R. Layne, and R.L. Geneve. 1996. Morphological development of pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal] during seed germination and seedling emergence. HortScience 31:633 (PA).

Huang, H. and D.R. Layne. 1996. Allozyme variation and geographic differentiation in pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal]. HortScience 31:592 (PA).

Layne, D.R. 1996. The Pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal]: A new fruit crop for Kentucky and the United States. HortScience 31:777-784 (RCP).

Polomski, R. and D.R. Layne. 1996. Pawpaws: A potential new fruit crop. American Small Farm Magazine: 5(7):27-28. (NPA).

Layne, D.R. 1996. The pawpaw: promising future for an American tree crop. The Temperate Agroforester 4(3):4-6. (NPA).

Layne, D.R. 1996. The all-American pawpaw. Part 2: Research, cultivation, and the future. The Fruit Gardener magazine, July/August Issue p. 6-9, 26. (NPA).

Layne, D.R. 1996. The all-American pawpaw. Part 1: Revival efforts may bear much 'fruit'. The Fruit Gardener magazine, May/June Issue Cover photo and article on p.12-14. (NPA).

Layne, D.R. 1996. Domestication of the pawpaw or 'Kentucky Banana'. The Green Thumb, University of Kentucky Cooperative Extension Service Publication, March-April Issue, p.12-17 (EA).

Layne, D.R. 1996. Pawpaw research at Kentucky State University: An update. Trans. KY. Acad. Sci. 57:49-50 (PA).

Layne, D.R. 1995. NewCrops FactSheet: Pawpaw, 6p. NewCROP New Crop Resource Online Program, Indiana Center for New Crops and Plant Products, Purdue University. WWW url address: http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/cropfactsheets/pawpaw.html(OLP).

Layne, D.R. and M.G. Kwantes. 1995. Growth enhancement of pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal] seedlings as influenced by root-zone temperature and fertilization regime. Proc. 3rd Nat. Symp. New Crops: New Opportunities, New Technologies. Oct. 22-25, 1995, Indianapolis, IN, p.93 (PA).

Layne, D.R. and M.G. Kwantes. 1995. The influence of root-zone temperature and fertilization regime on early growth and development of pawpaw (Asimina triloba Dunal) seedlings. HortScience 30(4):870 (PA).

Jones, L., D.R. Layne, and M.G. Kwantes. 1995. Pawpaw (Asimina triloba) seedling growth and development: Influence of incident light intensity and fertilization regime. HortScience 30:437 (PA).

Jones, L., D.R. Layne, and M.G. Kwantes. 1995. Influence of incident light intensity and fertilization on growth and development of pawpaw [Asimina triloba (L.) Dunal] seedlings. Trans. KY. Acad. Sci. 56:81-82 (PA).

Layne, D.R. 1994. The horticulture research program at Kentucky State University: An introduction. Trans. KY. Acad. Sci. 55:78-79 (PA).

Publication Classification Code:
BC=Book Chapter; RJA=Referreed Journal Article; RCP=Refereed Conference Proceedings; NCP=Nonrefereed Conference Proceedings; NPA=Nonrefereed Popular Article; EA=Extension Article; OLP=On-line Publication; PA=Published Abstract.
Popular Press
I. International

"Pawpaw Article". Popular Science Magazine, August 1997 Issue, in press.

"Grow grow paw

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 楼主| 发表于 2007-12-6 18:25 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 中国新疆和田地区
PawpawFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to:nigation,search
This page refers to the U.S. pawpaw in the genus Asimina. In some other parts of the world, the name pawpaw is applied to the unrelated tropical fruitpapaya(Carica papaya).
Pawpaw

Common Pawpaw in fruit

Scientific classification
Kingdom:Plantae
Division:Magnoliophyta
Class:Magnoliopsida
Order:Magnoliales
Family:Annonaceae
Genus:Asimina
Adans.
Species
See text
Pawpaw (Asimina) is a genus of eight or nine species of smalltreeswith large lees and fruit, native to easternNorth America. The genus includes the largest ediblefruitindigenous to the continent. They areunderstorytrees found in deep fertile bottomland and hilly upland habitat. Pawpaw is in the same family (Annonaceae) as thecustard-apple,cherimoya,sweetsop, andsoursop, and it is the only member of that family not confined to thetropics.
Contents

[edit] NamesThe name, also spelled paw paw, paw-paw, and papaw, probably derives from the Spanish papaya, perhaps due to the superficial similarity of their fruit. Pawpaw has numerous other common names, often very local, such as prairie banana, Indiana (Hoosier) banana, Kentucky banana, Michigan banana, and Ozark banana.

[edit] DescriptionThe pawpaws are shrubs or small trees, reaching heights of 2 to 12 m tall. The northern, cold-tolerant common pawpaw (Asimina triloba) isdeciduous, while the southern species are oftenevergreen.
Theleesare alternate, simple ovate, entire, 20 to 35 cm long and 10 to 15 cm broad.
Thefetidflowersare produced singly or in clusters of up to eight together; they are large, 4 to 6 cm across, perfect, with six sepals and petals (three large outer petals, three smaller inner petals). The petal color varies from white to purple or red-brown.
Thefruitis a large edibleberry, 5 to 16 cm long and 3 to 7 cm broad, weighing from 20 to 500 g, with numerousseeds; it is green when unripe, maturing to yellow or brown. It has a flor somewhat similar to bothbananaandmango, varying significantly by cultivar, and has moreproteinthan most fruits.
  • Bark: Dark brown, blotched with gray spots, sometimes covered with small excrescences, divided by shallow fissures. Inner bark tough, fibrous. Branchlets light brown, tinged with red, marked by shallow grooves.
  • Wood: Pale, greenish yellow, sapwood lighter; light, soft, coarse-grained and spongy. Sp. gr., 0.3969; weight of cu. ft. 24.74 lbs.
  • Winter buds: Small, brown, acuminate, hairy.
  • Lees: Alternate, simple, feather-veined, obovate-lanceolate, ten to twelve inches long, four to five broad, wedge-shaped at base, entire, acute at apex; midrib and primary veins prominent. They come out of the bud conduplicate, green, covered with rusty tomentum beneath, hairy above; when full grown are smooth, dark green above, paler beneath. In autumn they are a rusty yellow. Petioles short and stout with a prominent adaxial groove. Stipules wanting.
  • Flowers: April, with the lees. Perfect, solitary, axillary, rich red purple, two inches across, borne on stout, hairy peduncles. Ill smelling.
  • Calyx: Sepals three, valvate in bud, ovate, acuminate, pale green, downy.
  • Corolla: Petals six, in two rows, imbricate in the bud. Inner row acute, erect, nectariferous. Outer row broadly ovate, reflexed at maturity. Petals at first are green, then brown, and finally become dull purple and conspicuously veiny.
  • Stamens: Indefinite, densely packed on the globular receptacle. Filaments short; anthers extrorse, two-celled, opening longitudinally.
  • Pistils: Several, on the summit of the receptacle, projecting from the mass of stamens. Ovary one-celled; stigma sessile; ovules many.
  • Fruit: September, October. Cotyledons broad, five-lobed.[1]

[edit] CultivationPollinatedby scengingcarrion fliesandbeetles, the flowers emit a weak scent which attracts fewpollinators, thus limiting fruit production.
Larger growers sometimes locate rotting meat near the trees at bloom time to increase the number of blowflies. Asimina triloba is the only larval host of theZebra Swallowtail Butterfly.

[edit] Species
[edit] Cultivation and uses
Asimina triloba is often called Prairie Banana because of its banana-like creamy texture and flor.


The pawpaw's chosen home is in the shade of the rich bottom lands of the Mississippi valley, where it often forms a dense undergrowth in the forest. Where it dominates a tract it appears as a thicket of small slender trees, whose great lees are borne so close together at the ends of the branches, and which cover each other so symmetrically, that the effect is to give a peculiar imbricated appearance to the tree.[1]
Although it is a delicious and nutritious fruit, it has never been cultivated on the scale of apples and peaches, primarily because it does not store or ship well. It is also difficult to transplant due to its longtaproot.Cultivarsare propagated by chip budding or whipgrafting.
In recent years the pawpaw has attracted renewed interest, particularly amongorganic growers, as a native fruit which has few pests, and which therefore requires littlepesticideuse for cultivation. The shipping and storage problem has largely been addressed by pulping the fruit and freezing the pulp. Among backyard gardeners it also is gaining in popularity because of the appeal of fresh fruit and because it is relatively low maintenance once planted. The pulp is used primarily in baked dessert recipes, as well as for brewing pawpaw beer.
The commercial growing and harvesting of pawpaws is strongest in southeast Ohio. TheOhio Pawpaw Growers' Associationannually sponsors theOhio Pawpaw Festivalat Lake Snowden nearAlbany, Ohio.
The flowers are self-incompatible, requiring crosspollination; at least two different varieties of the plant are needed aspollenizers. The flowers produce an odor similar to that ofrottingmeatto attractblowfliesorcarrion beetlesfor cross pollination. Lack of pollination is the most common cause of poor fruiting, and growers resort to hand pollination or to hanging chicken necks or other meat to attractpollinators.
The lees, twigs, and bark of the tree also contain natural insecticides known asacetogenins, which can be used to make an organic pesticide[citation needed]. Acetogenins from pawpaw he also been investigated for their potent anticancer effects stemming from their ability to inhibit NADH oxidase.
Thiscolonialtree has a strong tendency to form colonial thickets if left unchecked.

[edit] HistoryThe earliest documentation of pawpaws is in the 1541 report of thede Sotoexpedition, who foundNative Americanscultivating it east of theMississippi River. TheLewis and Clark Expeditiondepended and sometimes subsisted on pawpaws during their trels. Chilled pawpaw fruit was a foritedessertofGeorge Washington, andThomas Jeffersonwas certainly familiar with it as he planted it atMonticello. In 2006, following lobbying by the Ohio Pawpaw Growers' Association, theOhio House of Representativespassed a law that would he declared the pawpaw to be the state native fruit of Ohio. However, theOhio Senatefailed to act on the bill, resulting in its death.

[edit] Medicinal propertiesCompoundsfound in the bark and lees of the pawpaw tree he been investigated and tested for anti-cancerproperties because of the chemicals' effect on cell metabolism[1], particularly by Dr Jerry McLaughlin and his team at Purdue University[2]. Growers hope that potential medical use will eventually lead to increased market demand from thepharmaceuticalindustry.
Inhomeopathy, Asimina triloba is used as remedy forscarlet feverand red skin rashes.[citation needed]
The seeds also he insecticidal properties. The Native Americans dried and powdered them and applied the powder to children's heads to control lice; specialized shampoos now use compounds from pawpaw for the same purpose.
Recent research has shown that the consumption of Annonaceous fruit may lead to the onset of atypicalParkinson's Diseasein human, and a subsequent study has suggested a possible involvement of phytochemicals in the onset of symptoms in rats. Further research is currently underway to investigate the relationship between Annonaceous compounds and neurodegeneration.[2][3][4][5]
[url=][/url]
[edit] References
    ^abKeeler, Harriet L. (1900). Our Native Trees and How to Identify Them. New York: Charles Scriber's Sons, 20-23.
    ^ Kevin Rayburn. "Just A Little Tremble", Impact, University of Louisville, Fall 2006.
    ^Parkinson's Disease: Is It Something in the Air?. Health News. WebMD (Nov. 5, 2000). ^ Lannuzel A, Höglinger GU, Champy P, Michel PP, Hirsch EC, Ruberg M. (2006). "Is atypical parkinsonism in the Caribbean caused by the consumption of Annonacae?". J Neural Transm Suppl. (70): 153-7.PMID 17017523.
  • ^ Caparros-Lefebvre D, Elbaz A. (1999 Jul 24). "Possible relation of atypical parkinsonism in the French West Indies with consumption of tropical plants: a case-control study" 354 (9175): 281-6.PMID 10440304.


[edit] External links.

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 楼主| 发表于 2007-12-6 18:27 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 中国新疆和田地区
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The BYFG Pawpaw Page The Pawpaw is a fruit that's near and dear to many Backyard Fruit Growers, and is deserving of the additional attention it's finally starting to get among fruit lovers.  The fruit is juicy and delicious, with a unique flor and texture.  Trees are generally pest-free, and once established are easy to grow and maintain.  Efforts are underway to breed improved varieties, a few of which he been recently released and are proving highly desirable.  While this page won't give you all there is to know about the Pawpaw, we hope it points you in the right direction and gets you interested in a delicious fruit worthy of your attention!
General Pawpaw Information
  • The pawpaw is the largest edible fruit native to America.  Fruit can range from 2 to 5 or more inches long(see photos)and can weigh as much as a pound, though they're usually a half pound or less in the wild
  • Flor is likened to banana, mango, and pineapple, with a custard-like texture
  • Fruit often hangs in clusters or two or more
  • Pawpaws are usually found as understory trees in moist areas with rich soil
  • Pawpaw roots aren't very "hairy," and trees he a large taproot, making them difficult to transplant
  • Pawpaws sucker in the wild, resulting in pawpaw "patches" of clone trees
  • Pawpaw seeds must be kept moist and require a "stratification" (chilling) period in order to germinate
  • Rarely, some people develop an allergic dermatitis reaction like poison ivy to pawpaw fruit
Named Cultivars
ailable
Missing!  Do you know where a tree of any of these cultivars can be found?
BYFG Pawpaw Activites
  • Annual Pawpaw Tour - Backyard Fruit Growers holds an annual Pawpaw Tour of a number of wild pawpaw "patches" along the Susquehanna river in Lancaster county.
  • Annual Fall Tasting - During our annual fall (apple) tasting event, sometimes pawpaws or other interesting fruit show up to taste as well.  This past fall the tasting included apples, pawpaws, persimmons (Kaki and Common), Kiwifruit, apple butter, and cider from a number of member orchards.
[size=+3]Pawpaw links
[size=+1]Pawpaw Information
Pawpaw Events
Pawpaw Fact Sheets and Guides
[size=+1]Pawpaw Sources Online
  • Blossom Nursery- Nearly a dozen Pawpaw varieties ailable as small grafted trees shipped in the containers they were grown in.  Per their web site, prices include shipping.
  • Burnt Ridge Nursery & Orchards- Five named varieties plus seedlings
  • Nolin River Nursery- More than a dozen Pawpaw varieties ailable as small grafted trees in a number of sizes.
  • One Green World- Not sure as their catalog is offline
  • Peterson Pawpaws- Neal Peterson's pawpaw site - the originator and source of the "Susquehanna," "Shenandoah," and "Rapahannock" pawpaw cultivars.
  • Raintree- More than a half dozen Pawpaw varieties ailable as small grafted trees in a one gallon size.
  • Trees of Antiquity- A few select varieties shipped in containers
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 楼主| 发表于 2007-12-6 18:31 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 中国新疆和田地区
Pawpaw[size=+1][size=+1][size=+1][size=+1][size=+1][size=+1][size=+1] [size=+3]
[size=+2][size=+3]Asimina triloba
a.k.a Michigan Banana, Paw Paw
[size=+2]
Sunset Zones: 2-9, 14, 18-21, 28-41 USDA: 5-9

buy seeds
[size=+1]
The largest native North American fruit, the pawpaw has a soft, creamy texture and a flor reminiscent of a custardy banana-mango. Fruits do not store or ship well, likely resulting in the scarcity of the pawpaw in markets.


[size=+2]Uses

The fruits are typically eaten fresh. They can also be used to make preserves, ice cream, and a variety of other desserts.

[size=+2]Plant Cultivation

Description: Low growing tree, usually to 15-20ft, but occasionally to 30ft.
Growing Environment: Pawpaws grow best in climates recieving some frost, and need at least 400 chilling hours to flower and set fruit. They require regular watering, particularly during spring and summer months. Trees seem to do fine in both sunny, and part-shade locations.
Hardiness: Hardy to -25F.
Propagation: By seed. The numerous named varieties are propagated by grafts.

[size=+2]Origin and Distribution
Native Range: Wild throughout the southeastern United States, with some populations reaching as far north as southern Canada.
Local Adaptation: A native U.S. fruit, the pawpaw will fruit in most locations of the United States, although drier and Mediterranean climate areas may need additional watering support.


[size=+1][size=+1][size=+2]Related Species
Family: Annonaceae
Annona cherimola
Cherimoya

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 楼主| 发表于 2007-12-6 18:34 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 中国新疆和田地区
Asimina triloba
Common Names: pawpaw, Indiana banana, Hoosier banana
Family: Annonaceae (annona Family)
Get linkto this Profile orclick for data record #291e-mail this page

This cluster of pawpaw fruit is not yet ripe but when it is there will be a race between man and beast to see who will claim this delicious prize.
The cluster survived to maturity andSteveclaimed his prize soon after this picture was taken. He reports that they are "incredibly delicious"!Click to downloada large version (800x600).
[size=+1]Description
Common pawpaw is a small tree to 25 ft (7.6 m) tall with big drooping, tropical-looking lees. These are up to a 1 ft (0.3 m) long and turn brown and gold in autumn. The maroon flowers, about 1-2 in (2.5-5 cm) across appear before the lees in spring, growing right out of the smooth, gray bark of the previous season's growth. The greenish fruits are shaped like bananas or mangos. They are 3-6 in (7.6-15 cm) long and hang in clusters with 2 to 9 pawpaws per cluster. When ripe, the fruit tastes like a creamy mixture of banana and pineapple. Pawpaws are prone to suckering (sending up shoots), and the proverbial pawpaw patch is often a clone arising from a single individual.

[size=+1]Location
Pawpaw is native to the Eastern United States where it grows in the understory of mixed hardwood forests, on slopes and in rarely flooded bottomlands.
This is a closeup of a pawpaw flower. They appear in April before the tree leafs out. [Click to downloada large version (800x600).]
[size=+1]Culture
The Pawpaw likes rich, well-drained soil. It requires filtered sun or shade for its first year or two, but can be allowed full sun after that. Its roots depend on a symbiotic relationship with soil bacteria, so keep the soil healthy.
Light: Partial sun or filtered shade is best for young trees. Older trees thrive in full sun.
Moisture: Pawpaw needs erage watering.
Hardiness: USDA Zones 5 - 9.
Propagation: Grow pawpaw from seed. In order to insure that the proper soil microbes are present, get a few tablespoonfuls of soil from the root area of a wild pawpaw to inoculate the soil where your seedling pawpaw is planted. Named cultivars are grafted onto seedling rootstock. The suckers won't survive transplanting and cuttings won't take root. Pawpaw has a long taproot that makes it difficult to transplant (container grown specimens are the exception).
[size=+1]Usage
With its drooping, tropical looking lees and shade loving temper, pawpaw is a good choice for a small specimen tree in a shady landscape.
The pawpaw has beautiful form and foliage and makes a very handsome small specimen tree.
[size=+1]Features
There are 7 other species of Asimina, all of which occur in the eastern US, and all of which are smaller and he smaller fruits than common pawpaw. One species (A. tetrapetalum) is an endangered species restricted toscrubin coastal SE Florida. Other members of the custard apple family include the cherimoya, the custard apples, sweetsop and soursop (all in the genus Annona), which are tropical trees grown for their edible dessert fruits.
Pawpaw has the largest edible fruit of any North American plant. The pawpaws are up to 6 in (15 cm) long and weigh about 1 lb (0.5 kg). Researchers at Purdue University, Kentucky State University and other institutions are trying to develop cultivars for the home orchard and commercial production. To learn more about pawpaws and recent developments in pawpaw culture and research, visit thePawpaw Research Projectat Kentucky State University.
Sing A

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 楼主| 发表于 2007-12-6 18:47 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 中国新疆和田地区
Missouri Native Plants

Pawpaw Asimina triloba
If you look closely in the moist bottomlands of woodsy gullies, you are apt to see loose groves of small gangly trees with immense lees up to a foot long and 5 inches wide. They are pawpaws, the northernmost representatives of Annonaceae, a tropical plant group known as the custard apple family.
The alternate oblong lees.are light green on top, paler on the undersides-they turn yellow in the fall. Small greenish yellow flowers appear in clusters along the branches, giving way to half-inch scarlet fruits that are quite showy once the lees drop. This is a dioecious plant therefore the fruits appear only on the females.
The spring flowers are an inch in diameter, brown to maroon, and remind me of the flowers of wild ginger. The fruit that follows in summer is tasty, similar to bananas-thus the common name custard apple. I he only enjoyed the fruit on a couple of occasions. Usually the raccoons and possums beat me to it.
The lees are alternate, entire and obovate-oblong. Lees are a strong green that turns yellow in the fall. The tree, usually only 15 or so feet in height, can grow up to 35 feet or more in height if climate and soil conditions are unusually forable. Pawpaws are not likely to he any serious problems with either pests or diseases.
When grown in highly organic, deep, moist, acidic soil, pawpaws will tolerate exposures ranging from shade to full sun. If you want to grow your own pawpaws, look for containerized or balled and burlapped specimens as they are difficult to transplant from the wild.
If you can't find pawpaws in local nurseries, they are ailable mail order from Forest Farm, 990 Tetherow Road, Williams, Oregon, 97544-9599 (Tel. 541-846-7269).   Forest Farm has just about any ornamental or useful plant you could ever
want.

   
Images are the courtesy of Dendrology at Virginia Tech  
A couple of good cultivars are ailable: 'Rubra' is a male-flowered variety that was discovered in Rhode Island and features brick-red flowers. Its winter buds are reddish-brown. 'Xanthocarpa' is a selection that was discovered at Arnold Arboretum and is noted for its orange-yellow fruit.
Barbara is a Master Gardener, author and columnist and former President of the Garden Writers of America - and a member of FGCM. Her new book "Mints: A Family of Herbs and Ornamentals" is due out in April of 2002.
Federated Garden Clubs of Missouri

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 楼主| 发表于 2007-12-6 19:04 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 中国新疆和田地区
There's Something We He to Tell You Pawpaw, left; Papaya, right。
Left photo credit: Photo by K. Pomper Right photo credit: istockphoto.com / felinda

Those tropical fruits: Like us, they're easily confused. Loyal reader Neil Peterson, of Peterson Pawpaws in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, writes in to say that we committed a gre mistake in the illustration of ourrecent post on pawpaws: "That fruit is not a pawpaw (Asimina triloba), the native American fruit, but a papaya (Carica papaya), the tropical fruit of the Caribbean. I understand the confusion because in the tropics many people call papaya pawpaw." Apples and oranges, folks, apples and oranges. We regret the error.


More: The In-box  »papaya,pawpaw
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 楼主| 发表于 2007-12-6 19:14 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 中国新疆和田地区
Asimina triloba
Common Name: Pawpaw
Multistemmed shrub or small tree with tropical-looking, 6-12" long lees. Edible, 2-5" yellowish fruit is relished by many birds and small mammals. Plant is larval food of Zebra Swallowtail butterfly. Spreads slowly to form small colonies or thickets.

Culture
Plant in partial shade in deep, rich,damp soil.

Use
Naturalize near streams or along the edge of woodlands. Plant as host plant for zebra swallowtail butterfly and to attract songbirds and small mammals. Provides cover for wildlife.


Height
15-20 Feet


Spread
30-40 Feet


Color
Green


USDA Hardiness Zone
5-8

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发表于 2007-12-7 21:35 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 中国四川成都

原文 (翻译版)

原帖由 陆承志 于 2007-12-6 18:10 发表
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PAWPAW-泡泡树
Asimina trilobaAnnonaceaeCommon Name:Pawpaw, Paw Paw, Papaw, Poor Man's Banana, Hoosier Banana, etc. (In Australia the tropical papaya, Carica  ...


名称: 泡泡 穷人香蕉 印第安纳州原住民香蕉(澳大利亚的 papaya也是泡泡)
相关物种(近亲): Asimina incarna, A. longifolia, A. obovata, A. parviflora, A. pygmaea, A. reticulata, A. tetramera, A. X nashii. These eight Asimina species grow in the southeastern United States. 这八种asimina物种生长在美国东南部。
远亲: Cherimoya (Annona cherimola), Soursop (Annona muricata), Custard Apple (Annona reticulata), Sugar Apple, Sweetsop (Annona squamosa), Atemoya (Annona squamosa X A. cherimola).

起源:美国东部温带林地,是泡泡的起源地.当地印第安人把它传播到了整个美国东部,包括堪萨斯州和得克萨斯州的东部、大湖地区,甚至到波斯湾。有化石可以证明泡泡源于美国。

气候习性:泡泡适应湿润大陆性气候,这种自然条件形成了它的天然栖息地。很少在大西洋或波斯湾海岸附近发现有泡泡生长。泡泡每年需要至少400小时的冬冷时间,至少160天无霜期。泡泡对以下三种气候条件很敏感:低湿度、干燥的大风和海洋性凉爽夏季。在部分加州和西北太平洋地区能满足其日益增长的需求,它在这些的地方长势良好。在圣何塞地区(美国农业部的气候9区或日落气候带15区)它们长势良好 。南加州的气候条件不适合种植泡泡。深冬季休眠的树耐霜冻,能在-25 ° F或更低的温度下生长(美国农业部的气候带5区更冷 ) 。 虽然很少见,但泡泡可以做成活的容器标本,这时,需要一个深容器来装下泡泡的根系。

生长习性:泡泡是一种落叶树,树干往往是圆锥状的,一般12英尺到20英尺粗。泡泡树也容易从距离树干几英尺处产生根系吸孔。当吸孔开始生长,单体克隆泡泡开始形成。按照经验,许多人认为,泡泡生长缓慢,特别是幼苗时期。不过,根据最优温室条件下,其中包括光电期延长大约16个小时,在三个月内最高的增长了5英尺。

叶子:深绿,阔卵形,披垂叶约12英寸长,让泡泡拥有一个有趣的热带植物外观。中秋时节,叶片变黄并开始凋落,暮春后再次披上绿装。

花:在前几年的叶痕里有正在休眠的紫色、深棕色花芽。这些花芽最后能变成团蔟倒置的花儿,大概有了2英寸长。泡泡正常的开花期约有6个星期,一般在3月至5月之间;根据品种、纬度和气候条件各有不同。泡泡的花有2个螺层,每层3个花瓣,每个花萼有3个萼片。每个花包含几个子房,这解释了为什么一个单一的花可以生产多个水果。

果实:泡泡是美国本土果树里最大的食用水果。个别水果重量5至16盎司,大概 3至6英寸长。较大尺寸的比较饱满,类似芒果。两排水果通常有10到14个。棕黑色种子形如利马豆,以长度为1 / 2至1-1/2英寸。泡泡果实往往出现集群现象,有时 多达9个。成熟果实柔软、皮薄。

地点:幼苗对阳光非常敏感,在第一年或前两年需要遮阴。用大树做庇护,是一种理想的解决办法。允许幼苗以接受一整天的过滤阳光。一旦适应后, 泡泡喜欢阳光而不用遮阴。摇摇欲坠的大叶子,经不起强风刮。从整体上看,泡泡树是一个很好的可食性景观树。

土壤: 泡泡最适宜在在较深的、肥沃的潮湿土壤生长,要有良好的排水系统,土壤PH稍酸( ph值5-7 ) 。堆肥后的西部土壤适合泡泡生长。要避免板结,潮湿和碱性的土壤。

灌溉:在生长季节,泡泡需要定期浇水。土壤应保持湿润,但避免内涝。

施肥:每年两次有机或颗粒状高钾肥料,会让泡泡长势良好。对于容器里生长的泡泡,在生长阶段最佳的施肥方案是250 -5 00PPM的 2 0-20-20氮磷钾加可溶性微量元素。

修剪:通常很少修剪,除非是去除死的、损坏的或分行的枝条。定期修剪,两个目的,一是刺激老树进行新的生长,二是为了以后增加水果的产量。

繁殖:要让休眠泡泡种子发芽,必须进行90至120天的分层,即暴露在寒冷的温度下。要做到这一点,种子应放置在含有少数潮湿的泥炭藓苔的塑料拉链袋里,冷藏在32 ° -4 0°F的温度下。田间种植的种子,它们通过越冬完成这项分层要求。

泡泡种子的发芽是出土萌发―――它的芽不带任何子叶。在理想的温室栽培状态下,发芽过程需要约七个星期。种子在秋天种植,将在下一年的7月或8月发芽。但在露芽之前,种子长大约10英寸长的主根。

硬枝扦插基本上是无法生根,硬枝扦插变量大不稳定,这点让人有些失望。有报道说采用嫩枝扦插可以成功,具体操作是:在间歇性喷雾状态下,采用底部加热( 80 ℉ )和辅助光( 14小时)的方式 。除了 T -芽接技术外,其他嫁接和芽接技巧,都对泡泡树都有效。采用削芽接的方法,已有成功案例的报导。泡泡树是冬眠和冷冻保存时,就应该收集接穗枝条。嫁接可以在春天来临植物生长时开始进行。

泡泡幼苗的细根脆软,只有少量长好的根毛,这使移植泡泡很困难。要遵循下面一些有用的规则:
1 .利用幼苗,而不是根吸孔。
2 .和土壤一起移栽,保证移栽的泡泡完好无损。容器培植的泡泡标本是最好的。
3 .在春季萌芽后移植。
4 .给泡泡进行良好的排水,并在第一年保持及时浇水。

虫害和疾病:一般情况下,泡泡树没有病害,它还有橡树根真菌(奥氏蜜环菌)的抗体 。虽然鹿,山羊和兔子不会吃泡泡树的树叶或树枝,但许多脊椎动物如狐狸,鼬,松鼠和浣熊会吃泡泡树的果实。泡泡的根能吸引地鼠的原因尚不知到,但情况表明,作为食物它的根不是地鼠的第一选择。斑马线燕尾蝴蝶的幼虫仅以泡泡幼树的树叶为食,但食用数量不大。对西海岸,蛞蝓,蜗牛和蠼螋可以用涂在树干的无毒坦克尔粘胶来对付。重要的是,粘胶不宜直接在树皮上使用。

授粉:授粉差的现象始终困扰自然生长的泡泡树,这对人工栽培来说也是个问题。泡泡花雌雄同株,但它们却不能自花授粉。当花儿的雌性柱头成熟,不再接受授粉时,雄性花粉便纷纷脱落。此外,泡泡需要从另一个无关的泡泡树进行交叉授粉。

蜜蜂对泡泡的花没有兴趣。传粉的任务是交给对采蜜不热情的蝇类和甲虫。对园丁来说,一个更好的解决办法是手动授粉:使用一种软小的画笔,将花粉转移到柱头。当花球变成棕颜色,松散且易碎时,花粉成熟。在刷毛上,小褐色颗粒就是花粉粒。当柱头是绿色,有光泽和粘性,花球是绿色至浅的颜色并且坚硬时,雌蕊才接受授粉。

收获:泡泡果实成熟在8月中旬到10月之间,约四个星期时间,这取决于多方面的因素。当成熟时,它是软的,很容易轻轻挤压出来,并具有浓厚的香味芬芳。通常果皮的绿色淡化了,成熟后往往有黑色斑点,这并不影响口味,也不代表其果实不可食用。黄肉象蛋挞一样,高营丰富。最好的泡泡水果有夹杂着热带风味,不同于其他任何的温带水果。目前,主要泡泡果主要用作是鲜食。成熟的泡泡果实,是很容易在上货架后第2或第3天腐坏,但如果是冷藏在40 ° -4 5°F下,可以保存3个星期。

商业潜力:虽然泡泡果实,目前还不是一个商品化程度高的果品,但它的栽培过程正在顺利进行。一些学术机构已经设立了17个区域品种试验地点。肯塔基州立大学,建立了国家级泡泡果无性系种质库。研究人员把泡泡树移栽到数个海外国家,一些泡泡树已经被当地研究人员积极地进行研究。泡泡树树叶和树枝,包含有一些有希望防癌的物质和驱杀虫的物质。

植物的选择:可以通过邮购方式提供泡泡树苗,有些邮寄方现在可以同时提供嫁接品种和苗木。大多数泡泡树的的种苗在不同品种种子混杂的情况下被推广,这会导致它们最终产生不良的果实。买家宜移植已知的泡泡树品种或定购嫁接初期的泡泡苗。容器培植的泡泡苗更容易移栽成活。

当定购泡泡树苗时,下面的泡泡树苗选择表会很有用。电话定购的方式,可以得到一些问题的解答。
PAWPAW PLANT SELECTION OPTIONS
如何选择泡泡树
Container Grown (1) 容器培植
Bare Root (2) 裸根
CULTIVAR - on seedling root stock
品种-对秧苗根系
some sources
一些货源
most sources
很多货源
CULTIVAR - from shoot/root on own root stock品种-从芽/根对自己的砧木
rarely ailable
货源很少
rarely ailable货源很少
SEEDLING - from seed of mixed seed (risky fruit quality)
幼苗-从混合种子里发芽的幼苗(冒险―――果实品质)
some sources
一些货源
most sources
很多货源
SEEDLING - from seed of cultivar fruit (usually comes fairly true)
幼苗-从品种货里选种子(品质有保障)
rarely ailable
货源很少
rarely ailable货源很少
(1) easier to get established, good survival rate 易得,良好的存活率
(2) slower to get established, reduced survival rate 难得,存活率低



callaway 1990 )名单里, 60种以上的泡泡树品种,其中很多是不具备贸易条件。肯塔基州的名单中的品种,不是最全面的,但是现在流行的一些品种。下列品种的品质均名列前茅:
Dis
Fruit small. Flesh yellow, green skin. Seeds large. Flor good.
Mary Foos Johnson
Similar to Sunflower.
Mitchell
Fruit medium. Flesh golden, slightly yellow skin. Flor excellent.
Overleese
Fruit large. Fewer seed but large. Flesh yellow. Flor excellent.
Prolific
Fruit large. Flesh yellow. Flor excellent.
Sunflower
Fruit medium large. Flesh golden, yellowish skin. Few seeds. Flor good. Purported to be self-fertile.
Sweet Alice
Fruit medium large. Prolific bearer. Flesh yellow. Flor good.
Taylor
Fruit small. Flesh yellow, green skin. Flor mild, excellent.
Taytoo
Fruit medium. Flesh yellow, light green skin. Flor excellent. Prolific bearer.
Wells
Fruit quite large. Flesh orange, green skin. Flor superb.

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发表于 2011-10-6 17:12 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 中国浙江金华
将泡泡果进行到天亮!
时间:快三年了 土地提供了果树生长的必须条件 有几株明显旺!但是我、我能把果树当做盈利生意耐心经营吗?

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发表于 2014-5-12 08:51 | 显示全部楼层 来自: 中国浙江嘉兴
belgium 发表于 2011-10-6 17:12
将泡泡果进行到天亮!

陆老师的资料还是很丰富的,你的泡泡果结果了吗?
自己种果,其乐融融  

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