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  2. Murcott (fruit) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murcott_(fruit)

    Hoyt in turn gave budwood to his nephew, Charles Murcott Smith, for whom the variety was named. Smith was growing the resulting trees in 1922 at his nursery in Bayview, Pinellas County, Florida, now a neighborhood in Clearwater. [1] [5] The trees grow upright, but often have branches bent or broken by heavy fruiting at the ends. [1]

  3. Mandarin orange varieties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandarin_orange_varieties

    Murcott, a mandarin × sweet orange hybrid, [9] [18] one parent being the King. [ 12 ] Tango is a proprietary seedless mid-late season irradiated selection of Murcott developed by the University of California Citrus Breeding Program.

  4. University of California, Riverside Citrus Variety Collection

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_California...

    The collection is composed of over 1000 accessions, planted as two trees of each of various types of citrus and citrus relatives. The collection largely comprises accessions within the genus Citrus, the remaining types are included among 28 other related genera in the Rutaceae subfamily Aurantioideae.

  5. File:Citrus x nobilis 'W. Murcott' - Tangor.jpg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Citrus_x_nobilis_'W...

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  6. Dekopon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dekopon

    The rights to the sterilized budwood were purchased in 2005 by the Griffith family, owners of the nursery TreeSource and packing facility Suntreat. [13] The dekopon was released as a commercial product in the US under the name "Sumo Citrus" in early 2011. [14] [15]

  7. Setoka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Setoka

    Setoka orange segment served with strawberry and mint as 12th course of a kaiseki dinner at the Hiiragiya Ryokan in Kyoto. Setoka (せとか, Setoka) [1] is a seedless and highly sweet Japanese citrus fruit that is a tangor, a hybrid of the Murcott tangor with "Kuchinotsu No.37", [2] which in turn is a hybrid of the Kiyomi tangor and a King tangor/Willowleaf mandarin cross, "Encore No. 2".

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