tropical fruit crops Flashcards

1
Q

Avocado production stats

A

$104m export value

local = 6 M

22000 tones produced

3,782,000 trays exported

over 4,000 ha of trees planted

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2
Q

avocado grower considerations

A

biennial profile of the avocado crop where the volume in successive seasons can vary significantly

site selection: aspect, wind, water, soil, winter temperature and light intensity

disease-free and true to planting material

export requirements

packaging

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3
Q

avocado canopy management

A

effective pruning:

help manage and balance between leaf growth, fruiting and root growth on trees.

create light and ensure ages of wood second-year wood more likely to flower

ease of access

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4
Q

what contributes to tree decline in avocados

A

pathogens: conditions favourable for pathogens, defective phosphorous acid injection methods, increased pathogen virulence, pest pressure (mites)
environment: excessive soil moisture, unfavourable temperatures, lack of adequate mulch

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5
Q

how to prevent tree decline in avocados

A

soil selection: well-drained, well-aerated

phytophthora resistant rootstocks

irrigation management: don’t over water

chemical control: young trees, foliar phosphate application

in organic nutrition/ fertiliser: balance vegetative growth with reproductive N

organic amendments: mulching essential

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6
Q

where are oranges grown

A

Kerikeri and Gisborne

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7
Q

when are oranges available

A

fresh june - February

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8
Q

feature of naval orange

A

the fruit inside the fruit

seedless

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9
Q

when is lemon available

A

fresh June- march

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10
Q

what rootstock is used for citrus

A

NZ is dependant on the one type trifoliate orange or tri

fruit quality is influenced by the rootstock

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11
Q

what factors is essential for the rootstock

A

genetic compatibility with plant and rootstock

resistance to CTV and tolerance to phytophthora

resistance to cold and wet soil

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12
Q

desired rootstock effects for citrus

A

improved sugar-acid ratios

larger fruit

thinner rinds

increased or decreased tree vigour

improved yield efficiency and larger storage life

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13
Q

what are site factors for citrus

A

the occurrence of heavy frosts, kills young trees and severely damage the fruit.

microclimate of the site is crucial. frost pockets ECT

gentle north-facing slope well-drained

higher heat unit accumulation in northern areas can bring forward ripening and quality.

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14
Q

key crop establishment factors for citrus

A

shelter

drainage

cultivar

soil testing

tree spacing

irrigation

nutrition

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15
Q

citrus health problem

A

the citrus Tristeza virus CTV is the biggest threat to worldwide citrus production

1940 it resulted in a quick decline in citrus on sour orange rootstocks

its spread by field aphids and infected bud wood

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16
Q

how to deal with pests in citrus

A

IPM

its demanded by markets to get rd of pests while improving environmental sustainability.

17
Q

key elements to any IPM system

A

monitoring - the pests present, abundance and crop stage

threshold- the point at which losses are occurred

selective controls - controls that affect the target pest and not other organisms

biological control is favoured as it is natural

use of broad sprays must be minimised where possible

avoidance - managing the crop to avoid outbreaks

18
Q

key produces of mangos

A

India, China and Thailand Mexico

19
Q

factors of a mango tree

A

long lived

35 meters tall in tropics 10m in subtropics

straight trunk with grey coffe bark cracks

leaves evergreen, alternate,simple

20
Q

growing conditions for mango

A

tropical conditions

requires low temprature to influence flowering

deep, fertile and well drained soil

full sunlight.

low management crop

fert 2-3 times per year

21
Q

harvesting factors for a mango

A

mature 4-5 months after flowering

once fully mature stem will snap easily with a slight pull

maturity identified by the development of shoulders

22
Q

post harvest factors for mangos

A

have to de sap the mango

hot water treatment if going to the USA for control of fruit fly

hydro cooling after a hot bath to guard against hot water damage

then packed or stored at 12 degrees until packed

mango waxed for appearance

23
Q

storage factors for mango

A

controlled atmosphere

CA of 3-5% oxygen and 5-8% CO2

postharvest life is 2-4 weeks in air and 3-6 weeks of CA

24
Q

problems with mangos

A

sap-burn - solved by dipping in lime

jelly seed - solved by proper pre-harvest calcium applications

chilling injury - green mangos exposed below 12 and rioe below 10