Watermelon

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Watermelon

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For other uses, see Watermelon (disambiguation).
Watermelon
Taiwan 2009 Tainan City Organic Farm Watermelon FRD 7962.jpg
Watermelon
Watermelon cross BNC.jpg
Watermelon cross section
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Cucurbitales
Family: Cucurbitaceae
Genus: Citrullus
Species: C. lanatus
Binomial name
Citrullus lanatus
(Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai
2005watermelon.PNG
Watermelon output in 2005
Synonyms[1]
List[show]

A tsamma in the Kalahari Desert

Naturalized in Australia
Citrullus lanatus is a plant species in the family Cucurbitaceae, a vine-like
(scrambler and trailer) flowering plant originally from Africa. It is cultivated
for its fruit. The subdivision of this species into two varieties, watermelons
(Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) var. lanatus) and citron melons (Citrullus lanatus var.
citroides (L. H. Bailey) Mansf.), originated with the erroneous synonymization of
Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai and Citrullus vulgaris Schrad. by L.H.
Bailey in 1930.[2] Molecular data including sequences from the original collection
of Thunberg and other relevant type material, show that the sweet watermelon
(Citrullus vulgaris Schrad.) and the bitter wooly melon Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.)
Matsum. & Nakai are not closely related to each other.[3] Since 1930, thousands of
papers have misapplied the name Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai for the
watermelon, and a proposal to conserve the name with this meaning was accepted by
the relevant nomenclatural committee and confirmed at the International Botanical
Congress in Shenzhen.[4]

The bitter South African melon first collected by Thunberg has become naturalized
in semiarid regions of several continents, and is designated as a "pest plant" in
parts of Western Australia where they are called pig melon.[5]

Watermelon (Citrullus lanatus) is a scrambling and trailing vine in the flowering


plant family Cucurbitaceae. The species was long thought to have originated in
southern Africa, but this was based on the erroneous synonymization by L. H. Bailey
(1930) of a South African species with the cultivated watermelon.[6] The error
became apparent with DNA comparison of material of the cultivated watermelon seen
and named by Linnaeus and the holotype of the South African species.[7] There is
evidence from seeds in Pharao tombs of watermelon cultivation in Ancient Egypt.
Watermelon is grown in tropical and subtropical areas worldwide for its large
edible fruit, also known as a watermelon, which is a special kind of berry with a
hard rind and no internal division, botanically called a pepo. The sweet, juicy
flesh is usually deep red to pink, with many black seeds, although seedless
varieties have been cultivated. The fruit can be eaten raw or pickled and the rind
is edible after cooking.

Considerable breeding effort has been put into disease-resistant varieties. Many
cultivars are available that produce mature fruit within 100 days of planting the
crop.

Contents
1 Common names
2 Description
3 Taxonomy
4 History
5 Cultivation
6 Cultivar groups
6.1 Citroides group
6.2 Lanatus group
6.3 Vulgaris group
6.4 Varieties
6.5 Variety improvement
7 Production
8 Food and beverage
8.1 Nutrients
9 Gallery
10 See also
11 References
12 External links
Common names

Makataan grown alongside maize in South Africa


In Botswana, this is known as lerotse[8] and an ingredient in the local dish bogobe
jwa lerotse.

Tswana: Lekatane (s), Makatane (pl)


Afrikaans: Karkoer, Bitterboela, Bitterwaatlemoen, Tsamma,[9] Kolokwint, etc.[10]
English: Tsamma melon, Wild watermelon,[9] Colocynth, etc.[10]
Nama: T�sama
Zulu: Ikhabe, etc.[10]
Southern Sotho: Lehapu, etc.[10]
Former names:

Kaffir melon
Description

Watermelon slices
The watermelon is an annual that has a prostrate or climbing habit. Stems are up to
3 m long and new growth has yellow or brown hairs. Leaves are 60 to 200 mm long and
40 to 150 mm wide. These usually have three lobes which are themselves lobed or
doubly lobed. Plants have both male and female flowers on 40-mm-long hairy stalks.
These are yellow, and greenish on the back.[11]

This plant is listed on the Threatened Species Programme of the South African
National Biodiversity Institute.[10]

The watermelon is a large annual plant with long, weak, trailing or climbing stems
which are five-angled (five-sided) and up to 3 m (10 ft) long. Young growth is
densely woolly with yellowish-brown hairs which disappear as the plant ages. The
leaves are large, coarse, hairy pinnately-lobed and alternate; they get stiff and
rough when old. The plant has branching tendrils. The white to yellow flowers grow
singly in the leaf axils and the corolla is white or yellow inside and greenish-
yellow on the outside. The flowers are unisexual, with male and female flowers
occurring on the same plant (monoecious). The male flowers predominate at the
beginning of the season; the female flowers, which develop later, have inferior
ovaries. The styles are united into a single column. The large fruit is a kind of
modified berry called a pepo with a thick rind (exocarp) and fleshy center
(mesocarp and endocarp).[12] Wild plants have fruits up to 20 cm (8 in) in
diameter, while cultivated varieties may exceed 60 cm (24 in). The rind of the
fruit is mid- to dark green and usually mottled or striped, and the flesh,
containing numerous pips spread throughout the inside, can be red or pink (most
commonly), orange, yellow, green or white.[13][14]

Taxonomy
The bitter wooly melon was formally described by Carl Peter Thunberg in 1794 and
given the name Momordica lanata.[15] It was reassigned to the genus Citrullus in
1916 by Japanese botanists ooJinzo Matsumura and Takenoshin Nakai.[16]

The sweet watermelon was formally described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 and given the
name Cucurbita citrullus. It was reassigned to the genus Citrullus in 1836 by the
German botanist Heinrich Adolf Schrader.

The bitter wooly melon is the sister species of Citrullus ecirrhosus Cogn. from
South African arid regions, while the sweet watermelon is closer to Citrullus
mucosospermus (Fursa) Fursa from West Africa and populations from Sudan.[17]

History

Still Life with Watermelons, Pineapple and Other Fruit by Albert Eckhout, a Dutch
painter active in 17th century Brazil
The watermelon is a flowering plant that originated in northeast Africa, where it
is found growing wild.[18] Citrullus colocynthis has sometimes been considered to
be a wild ancestor of the watermelon; its native range extends from north and west
Africa to west India.

Evidence of the cultivation of both C. lanatus and C. colocynthis in the Nile


Valley has been found from the second millennium BC onward, and seeds of both
species have been found at Twelfth Dynasty sites and in the tomb of Pharaoh
Tutankhamun.[19]

In the 7th century, watermelons were being cultivated in India, and by the 10th
century had reached China, which is today the world's single largest watermelon
producer. The Moors introduced the fruit into Spain and there is evidence of it
being cultivated in C�rdoba in 961 and also in Seville in 1158. It spread
northwards through southern Europe, perhaps limited in its advance by summer
temperatures being insufficient for good yields. The fruit had begun appearing in
European herbals by 1600, and was widely planted in Europe in the 17th century as a
minor garden crop.[13]

European colonists and slaves from Africa introduced the watermelon to the New
World. Spanish settlers were growing it in Florida in 1576, and it was being grown
in Massachusetts by 1629, and by 1650 was being cultivated in Peru, Brazil and
Panama, as well as in many British and Dutch colonies. Around the same time, Native
Americans were cultivating the crop in the Mississippi valley and Florida.
Watermelons were rapidly accepted in Hawaii and other Pacific islands when they
were introduced there by explorers such as Captain James Cook.[13]

Seedless watermelons were initially developed in 1939 by Japanese scientists who


were able to create seedless triploid hybrids which remained rare initially because
they did not have sufficient disease resistance.[20] Seedless watermelons became
more popular in the 21st century, rising to nearly 85% of total watermelon sales in
the United States in 2014.[21]

Cultivation
Watermelons are tropical or subtropical plants and need temperatures higher than
about 25 �C (77 �F) to thrive. On a garden scale, seeds are usually sown in pots
under cover and transplanted into well-drained sandy loam with a pH between 5.5 and
7, and medium levels of nitrogen.

Major pests of the watermelon include aphids, fruit flies and root-knot nematodes.
In conditions of high humidity, the plants are prone to plant diseases such as
powdery mildew and mosaic virus.[22] Some varieties often grown in Japan and other
parts of the Far East are susceptible to fusarium wilt. Grafting such varieties
onto disease-resistant rootstocks offers protection.[13]

Seedless watermelon
The US Department of Agriculture recommends using at least one beehive per acre
(4,000 m2 per hive) for pollination of conventional, seeded varieties for
commercial plantings. Seedless hybrids have sterile pollen. This requires planting
pollinizer rows of varieties with viable pollen. Since the supply of viable pollen
is reduced and pollination is much more critical in producing the seedless variety,
the recommended number of hives per acre (pollinator density) increases to three
hives per acre (1,300 m2 per hive). Watermelons have a longer growing period than
other melons, and can often take 85 days or more from the time of transplanting for
the fruit to mature.[23]

Farmers of the Zentsuji region of Japan found a way to grow cubic watermelons by
growing the fruits in metal and glass boxes and making them assume the shape of the
receptacle.[24] The cubic shape was originally designed to make the melons easier
to stack and store, but cubic watermelons may be triple the price of normal ones,
so appeal mainly to wealthy urban consumers.[24] Pyramid-shaped watermelons have
also been developed and any polyhedral shape may potentially be used.[25]

Cultivar groups
A number of cultivar groups have been identified:[26]

Citroides group
(syn. C. lanatus subsp. lanatus var. citroides; C. lanatus var. citroides; C.
vulgaris var. citroides)[26]

DNA data reveal that C. lanatus var. citroides Bailey is the same as Thunberg's
bitter wooly melon, C. lanatus and also the same as C. amarus Schrad. It is not a
form of the sweet watermelon C. vulgaris and not closely related to that species.

The citron melon or makataan - a variety with sweet yellow flesh that is cultivated
around the world for fodder, and the production of citron peel and pectin.[11]

Lanatus group
(syn. C. lanatus var. caffer)[26]

C. caffer Schrad. is a synonym of C. amarus Schrad.

The variety known as tsamma is grown for its juicy white flesh. The variety was an
important food source for travellers in the Kalahari Desert.[11]

Another variety known as karkoer or bitterboela is unpalatable to humans, but the


seeds may be eaten.[11]
A small-fruited form with a bumpy skin has caused poisoning in sheep.[11]

Vulgaris group
This is Linnaeus's sweet watermelon; it has been grown for human consumption for
thousands of years.[11]

C. lanatus mucosospermus (Fursa) Fursa


This West African species is the closest wild relative of the watermelon. It is
cultivated for cattle feed.[11]

Additionally, other wild species have bitter fruit containing cucurbitacin.[27] C.


colocynthis (L.) Schrad. ex Eckl. & Zeyh., C. rehmii De Winter, and C. naudinianus
(Sond.) Hook.f.

Varieties
The more than 1200[28] cultivars of watermelon range in weight from less than 1 kg
to more than 90 kilograms (200 lb); the flesh can be red, pink, orange, yellow or
white.[23]

The 'Carolina Cross' produced the current world record for heaviest watermelon,
weighing 159 kilograms (351 pounds).[29] It has green skin, red flesh and commonly
produces fruit between 29 and 68 kilograms (65 and 150 lb). It takes about 90 days
from planting to harvest.[30]
The 'Golden Midget' has a golden rind and pink flesh when ripe, and takes 70 days
from planting to harvest.[31]
The 'Orangeglo' has a very sweet orange flesh, and is a large, oblong fruit
weighing 9�14 kg (20�31 lb). It has a light green rind with jagged dark green
stripes. It takes about 90�100 days from planting to harvest.[32]
The 'Moon and Stars' variety was created in 1926.[33] The rind is purple/black and
has many small yellow circles (stars) and one or two large yellow circles (moon).
The melon weighs 9�23 kg (20�51 lb).[34] The flesh is pink or red and has brown
seeds. The foliage is also spotted. The time from planting to harvest is about 90
days.[35]
The 'Cream of Saskatchewan' has small, round fruits about 25 cm (9.8 in) in
diameter. It has a thin, light and dark green striped rind, and sweet white flesh
with black seeds. It can grow well in cool climates. It was originally brought to
Saskatchewan, Canada, by Russian immigrants. The melon takes 80�85 days from
planting to harvest.[36]
The 'Melitopolski' has small, round fruits roughly 28�30 cm (11�12 in) in diameter.
It is an early ripening variety that originated from the Astrakhan region of
Russia, an area known for cultivation of watermelons. The Melitopolski watermelons
are seen piled high by vendors in Moscow in the summer. This variety takes around
95 days from planting to harvest.[37]
The 'Densuke' watermelon has round fruit up to 11 kg (24 lb). The rind is black
with no stripes or spots. It is grown only on the island of Hokkaido, Japan, where
up to 10,000 watermelons are produced every year. In June 2008, one of the first
harvested watermelons was sold at an auction for 650,000 yen (US$6,300), making it
the most expensive watermelon ever sold. The average selling price is generally
around 25,000 yen ($250).[38]
Many cultivars are no longer grown commercially because of their thick rind, but
seeds may be available among home gardeners and specialty seed companies. This
thick rind is desirable for making watermelon pickles, and some old cultivars
favoured for this purpose include 'Tom Watson', 'Georgia Rattlesnake', and 'Black
Diamond'.[39]

Watermelon (an old cultivar) as depicted in a 17th-century painting, oil on canvas,


by Giovanni Stanchi
Variety improvement
Charles Fredric Andrus, a horticulturist at the USDA Vegetable Breeding Laboratory
in Charleston, South Carolina, set out to produce a disease-resistant and wilt-
resistant watermelon. The result, in 1954, was "that gray melon from Charleston".
Its oblong shape and hard rind made it easy to stack and ship. Its adaptability
meant it could be grown over a wide geographical area. It produced high yields and
was resistant to the most serious watermelon diseases: anthracnose and fusarium
wilt.[40]

Others were also working on disease-resistant varieties; J. M. Crall at the


University of Florida produced "Jubilee" in 1963 and C. V. Hall of Kansas State
University produced "Crimson sweet" the following year. These are no longer grown
to any great extent, but their lineage has been further developed into hybrid
varieties with higher yields, better flesh quality and attractive appearance.[13]
Another objective of plant breeders has been the elimination of the seeds which
occur scattered throughout the flesh. This has been achieved through the use of
triploid varieties, but these are sterile, and the cost of producing the seed by
crossing a tetraploid parent with a normal diploid parent is high.[13]

Today, farmers in approximately 44 states in the United States grow watermelon


commercially. Georgia, Florida, Texas, California and Arizona are the United
States' largest watermelon producers. This now-common fruit is often large enough
that groceries often sell half or quarter melons. Some smaller, spherical varieties
of watermelon�both red- and yellow-fleshed�are sometimes called "icebox melons".
[41] The largest recorded fruit was grown in Tennessee in 2013 and weighed 159
kilograms (351 pounds).[29]

Major watermelon producers, 2016 (millions of tonnes)[42]


China
79.2
Turkey
3.9
Iran
3.8
Brazil
2.0
World
111.0
Production
In 2016, global production of watermelons was 117 million tonnes, with China alone
accounting for 68% of the total.[42] Secondary producers with more than 1% of world
production included Turkey, Iran, Brazil, Uzbekistan, Algeria, the United States,
Russia, Egypt, Mexico, and Kazakhstan.[42]

Food and beverage


Watermelon flesh, raw
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy 127 kJ (30 kcal)
Carbohydrates
7.55 g
Sugars 6.2 g
Dietary fiber 0.4 g
Fat
0.15 g
Protein
0.61 g
Vitamins Quantity %DV�
Vitamin A equiv.
beta-Carotene
4% 28 �g
3%303 �g
Thiamine (B1) 3% 0.033 mg
Riboflavin (B2) 2% 0.021 mg
Niacin (B3) 1% 0.178 mg
Pantothenic acid (B5) 4% 0.221 mg
Vitamin B6 3% 0.045 mg
Choline 1% 4.1 mg
Vitamin C 10% 8.1 mg
Minerals Quantity %DV�
Calcium 1% 7 mg
Iron 2% 0.24 mg
Magnesium 3% 10 mg
Manganese 2% 0.038 mg
Phosphorus 2% 11 mg
Potassium 2% 112 mg
Sodium 0% 1 mg
Zinc 1% 0.1 mg
Other constituents Quantity
Water 91.45 g
Lycopene 4532 �g
Link to USDA Database entry
Units
�g = micrograms � mg = milligrams
IU = International units
�Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA Nutrient Database
Watermelons are a sweet, popular fruit of summer, usually consumed fresh in slices,
diced in mixed fruit salads, or as juice.[43][44] Watermelon juice can be blended
with other fruit juices or made into wine.[45]

The seeds have a nutty flavor and can be dried and roasted, or ground into flour.
[14] In China, the seeds are eaten at Chinese New Year celebrations.[46] In
Vietnamese culture, watermelon seeds are consumed during the Vietnamese New Year's
holiday, T?t, as a snack.[47]

Watermelon rinds may be eaten, but most people avoid eating them due to their
unappealing flavor. They are used for making pickles,[39] sometimes eaten as a
vegetable, stir-fried or stewed.[14][48]

The Oklahoma State Senate passed a bill in 2007 declaring watermelon as the
official state vegetable, with some controversy about whether it is a vegetable or
a fruit.[49]

Citrullis lanatus, variety caffer, grows wild in the Kalahari Desert, where it is
known as tsamma.[14] The fruits are used by the San people and wild animals for
both water and nourishment, allowing survival on a diet of tsamma for six weeks.
[14]

In Southern Russia, they are sometimes preserved by fermenting them together with
sauerkraut, much like the apples.[citation needed]

Nutrients
Watermelon fruit is 91% water, contains 6% sugars, and is low in fat (table).[50]

In a 100 gram serving, watermelon fruit supplies 30 calories and low amounts of
essential nutrients (table). Only vitamin C is present in appreciable content at
10% of the Daily Value (table). Watermelon pulp contains carotenoids, including
lycopene.[51]

The amino acid citrulline is produced in watermelon rind.[52][53]

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