Washington
Navel Oranges By
Harry Dedini, Valley Lode District
I was eating an orange last night and I
started to wonder about where did it come from? Then I realized it
was seedless, and how could it even exist? Was it a male orange? Was
it a female orange? This is like who was first, the chicken or the
egg? If it wasn’t male or female then it might be parthenogenesis
and that’s too big a word to taste good, but some oranges do
taste good. Oh no, this is one of those plant sex things. Sometimes
I got so confused in plant propagation classes I just didn’t
know what to do or not do.Citrus originated in the area of Eastern
China to India. Traders brought them to the Middle East, then to North
Africa and finally southern Europe. From there the Portuguese sailors
brought them to Brazil around 1530. The English had lime on their
ships and were nick named limeys. Brazil is one of the top three citrus
producers in the world.New citrus trees were propagated from seeds
carried on the ship. When one grows plants from seed there is usually
a lot of difference, variability, in the seedlings. So one tree had
good fruit and others had good thorns.In 1873, a shipment of Bahia
eating oranges arrived in Riverside California from Brazil. In that
shipment, three trees were noticed to not have seeds like the Bahai
variety. They were named the Washington Navel Orange. All of the Washington
Navel trees in the world come from these three trees. But no one knows
why these trees decided to genetically alter themselves to become
seedless.
One of the original trees is still alive in Riverside. The UC Riverside
campus area is home to over 700 different citrus varieties and supplies
genetic materials that are tested disease free to the rest of the
world. In 1969, in my advanced propagation class I saw an orange tree
seedling, growing in a flask of auger media that was started with
the white pith cells from an orange using meristematic culture method.
It was one of the most amazing things I have ever seen. This plant
was exactly like its mother and virus free.Nature has been doing genetic
engineering from day one. That’s why new plants come about and
some disappear. Man is just starting to learn how to help nature along
so it might happen in our children’s lifetimes. The major unknown
diseases and pest problem areas are virus, genetic and sub cellular.
This is the frontier of new research. Researchers are propagating
plants by changing gene parts that no one has ever seen, with chemicals
in laboratories, which eventually have test tubes of seedlings that
have never been in real sunlight.You are already benefiting from this
work and this is how we will feed the world in the future. I Think
I will get another orange to eat. Do I want a navel innie or an outie?
Why do they have navels? Santa will be coming soon, say Good Night,
Harry....
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