Seedless Pineapple

Synonyms

None

Cultivar or taxon

Citrus x aurantium L., pro sp. [Sweet Orange Group] (sensu Mabberley 1997, Bayer et al. 2009); Citrus sinensis (L.) Osbeck (sensu Swingle and Reece 1967; sensu Tanaka sec. Cottin 2002)

Origin

Hodgson (1967) noted that Seedless Pineapple was a nearly seedless limb sport found in 1932 on Merritt Island, Florida (U.S. Plant Patent 477).

The Chiefland Budwood Facility (2010) provided the following notes on the cultivar (clone DPI-842-30): "A USDA selection released in 2009."

Description

Crown compact or dense, not weeping. First-year twig surface glabrous; second- or third-year twig surface striate; thorns absent or not persistent; prickles absent or not persistent. Petiole glabrous, length medium; wings narrow or medium, adjoining the blade. Leaflets one, margin bluntly toothed, shade leaflet blades flat or weakly conduplicate, sun leaflet blades weakly or strongly conduplicate. Scent of crushed leaflets sweetly orange-like. Fruit as broad as long or longer than broad; rind green-yellow (6), yellow (7-10), yellow-orange (11), or orange (12); rind texture slightly rough (4-5); firmness leathery; navel absent; flesh orange; taste acidic-sweet.

The Chiefland Budwood Facility (2010) provided the following additional notes on the cultivar (clone DPI-842-30): "This selection is similar to Pineapple but has fewer seeds (0-2) and is less prone to preharvest fruit drop."

References

Bayer, R.J., D.J. Mabberley, C. Morton, C.H. Miller, I.K. Sharma, B.E. Pfeil, S. Rich, R. Hitchcock, and S. Sykes. 2009. A molecular phylogeny of the orange subfamily (Rutaceae: Aurantioideae) using nine cpDNA sequences. American Journal of Botany 96: 668–685.

Chiefland Budwood Facility. 2010. 2010 Annual report July 1, 2009 - June 30, 2010. Bureau of Citrus Budwood Registration, Florida Department of Agriculture & Consumer Services, Winter Haven.

Cottin, R. 2002. Citrus of the World: A citrus directory. Version 2.0. France: SRA INRA-CIRAD.

Mabberley, D.J. 1997. A classification for edible Citrus (Rutaceae). Telopea 7: 167–172.

Swingle, W.T. and P.C. Reece. 1967. The botany of Citrus and its wild relatives. In: Reuther, W., H.J. Webber, and L.D. Batchelor (eds.). The Citrus industry. Ed. 2. Vol. I. University of California, Riverside. http://lib.ucr.edu/agnic/webber/Vol1/Chapter3.html.

Resources

Search for this cultivar in NCBI Entrez

           Habit (Winter Haven, FL)

Habit (Winter Haven, FL)

           Bark (Winter Haven, FL)

Bark (Winter Haven, FL)

             Second - third year twig (Winter Haven, FL)

Second - third year twig (Winter Haven, FL)

             Unifoliolate leaf (Winter Haven, FL)

Unifoliolate leaf (Winter Haven, FL)

             Unifoliolate leaf (Winter Haven, FL)

Unifoliolate leaf (Winter Haven, FL)

             Margin (Winter Haven, FL)

Margin (Winter Haven, FL)

             Margin (Winter Haven, FL)

Margin (Winter Haven, FL)

             Shade leaves (Winter Haven, FL)

Shade leaves (Winter Haven, FL)

             Sun leaves (Winter Haven, FL)

Sun leaves (Winter Haven, FL)

             Sun leaves (Winter Haven, FL)

Sun leaves (Winter Haven, FL)

           Fruit (Winter Haven, FL)

Fruit (Winter Haven, FL)

           Fruit (Winter Haven, FL)

Fruit (Winter Haven, FL)

           Fruit (Winter Haven, FL)

Fruit (Winter Haven, FL)

           Fruit (Winter Haven, FL)

Fruit (Winter Haven, FL)

           Fruit (Winter Haven, FL)

Fruit (Winter Haven, FL)

           Fruit (Winter Haven, FL)

Fruit (Winter Haven, FL)

           Fruit cross-section (Winter Haven, FL)

Fruit cross-section (Winter Haven, FL)