Citrus L. Citrus medica, L.
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.293200 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B0402C-FF3A-E393-FD16-F4ADD0E8F7CC |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Citrus L. Citrus medica |
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4. Citrus L. View in CoL 1
Small trees. Young twigs with single spines in the leaf-axils, but older branches often unarmed. Leaves alternate, simple, coriaceous, thin; lateral veins few. Petioles often more or less winged or margined and articulated with the lamina. Flowers white, solitary and axillary or in short axillary racemes. Sepals 4-5; petals (4-)5-(8). Stamens 4-10 times as many as the petals. Ovary usually 10- to 14-locular; ovules in 2 rows. Seeds surrounded by stipitate, fusiform pulp-vesicles.
Literature: W. T. Swingle, The Botany o f Citrus and its wild relatives, in H. J. Webber & L. D. Batchelor, The Citrus Industry 1: 129-474. Berkeley and Los Angeles. 1943. T. Tanaka, The species problem in Citrus {Revisio Aurantiacearum IX). Tokyo. 1954.
A genus of considerable taxonomic difficulty. The present account is based on the work of the above two authorities. The species described are those most commonly cultivated for their fruit and essential oils in the Mediterranean region. In addition, C. bergamia Risso & Poiteau , Hist. Nat. Orang. I l l (1818), is cultivated in Calabria for the essential oil yielded by its rind. It is a small tree with winged petioles and oblong-ovate leaves, and has a pale yellow, pyriform fruit 7-5-10 cm in diameter. All the cultivated species are probably derived from plants which are native in tropical and subtropical parts of S.E. Asia.
1 Petiole terete or carinate-margined but not winged; fruit 15-25 cm in diameter 1. medica 1 Petiole distinctly winged; fruit not more than 15 cm in diameter
2Stamens generally more than 4 times as many as the petals; flowers of two sorts, hermaphrodite and functionally male;
ripe fruit light yellow, with a mammilliform process at apex
3 Fruit acid; flowers tinged or streaked with purple 2. limon 3 Fruit insipidly sweet; flowers pure white 3. limetta 2 Stamens about 4 times as many as the petals; flowers usually
all hermaphrodite; fruit yellow or orange without a mamilliform process at apex
4 Leaves narrowly elliptical; fruit rarely more than 6-5 cm, depressed; rind very easily detached from the segments
4. deliciosa 4 Leaves broadly elliptical; fruit 7-15 cm, spherical or broadly ovoid, not or only slightly flattened above and below; rind adhering to the segments
5 Fruit 10-25 cm in diameter; rind yellow; petiole usually
broadly winged
6 Twigs and underside of midrib glabrous 5. paradisi 6 Twigs and underside of midrib sparsely hairy 6. grandis 5 Fruit usually 7-9 cm; rind orange or orange-yellow; petiole
rather narrowly winged, obovate to oblanceolate, usually
at least twice as long as wide
7 Fruit with a rough rind and bitter sour pulp; petioles
obovate in outline 7. aurantium 7 Fruit with a sweet taste and nearly smooth rind; petioles
oblanceolate in outline 8. sinensis
1. C. medica L. View in CoL , Sp. Pl. 782 (1753)
(Citron). Small tree. Twigs angular when young, soon terete, glabrous, with short, stout axillary spines. Leaves glabrous, elliptic-ovate to ovatelanceolate, crenate to serrate; veins prominent on both surfaces. Petiole terete or narrowly margined. Flowers in short, fewflowered racemes, hermaphrodite or functionally male; petals often pink or purplish on the outer surface. Stamens very numerous, coherent in groups of four or more. Fruit 15-25 cm 10- to 13-locular; rind very thick, often rough and warty, yellow when ripe; pulp pale green or yellow, acid or sweetish.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Citrus L. Citrus medica
Tutin, T. G., Heywood, V. H., Burges, N. A., Moore, D. M., Valentine, D. H., Walters, S. M. & Webb, D. A. 1981 |
C. medica
L. 1753: 782 |