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Fruit from micropagated
Laie Gold, a new papaya variety
developed by plant physiologist
Maureen Fitch and patented by
ARS, is noted for its sweet
mango-and-coconut flavor,
thick orange-yellow flesh,
attractive globular shape,
and higher market price.
(K10916-1)

Plant physiologist Maureen
Fitch examines papaya plantlets
raised in a petri dish
by a process called
micropropagation. The plantlets
will undergo genetic testing
to see whether they will yield
so-called perfect flowers,
which will develop into fruit.
(K10923-1)

Plant physiologist Maureen
Fitch and her colleagues select
and micropropagate outstanding
papayas like this Laie Gold
tree, with its plump, sweet fruit,
at a farm on Oahu.
(K10918-1)

Flowers and young fruit of
ARS's Laie Gold papaya,
well suited for growing
on the Island of Oahu.
(K10922-1)

Horticulturist Aileen Yeh, of
the Hawaii Agriculture
Research Center, checks root
development of papaya shoots.
A healthy root system
is critical to a plant's success.
(K10927-1)

Horticulturist Aileen Yeh
and U.S. Pacific Basin
Agricultural Research Center
director Dennis Gonsalves discuss
the robust nature of
micropropagated Rainbow plants.
(K10926-1)
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While you're enjoying the sweet taste and creamy texture
of a fresh papayawhether it's in a zesty salsa, colorful fruit
salad, or refreshing shake or served alone with a splash of lime juicescientists
from the Agricultural Research
Service are busy delving into the genetic makeup of this tropical
fruit. Their goal? To ensure that there will always be a good, affordable
supply of papayas at your market.
In laboratories throughout Hawaii, where most of America's papaya crop
is grown, ARS scientists and their university and corporate colleagues
are working out a science-based strategy to streamline today's costly
replanting of papaya orchards. Other ARS experts are searching for genes
that might boost papaya's natural resistance to disease and insects.
And still other researchers are safeguarding both familiar and unusual
varieties of papayas in the nation's official papaya collection. (See
sidebar below, "Protecting the Planet's Papayas.")
Sidestepping Papaya's Costly Quirks
Papaya trees are remarkably precocious. Unlike apple trees, for
example, which typically take at least 4 years to bear fruit, papaya trees
offer delicious, ready-to-pick fruit less than a year after they're planted.
But producing perfect papayasat a profit to
growerscan be problematic. Plant physiologist Maureen M.M. Fitch of the
ARS U.S. Pacific Basin Agricultural Research Center in Aiea, Hawaii, explains
that yields typically taper off once trees reach 3 years of age. By then, the
trees have usually grown so tall that their uppermost fruit may be beyond the
reach of the picking poles that workers use to harvest the crop. This means
that most papaya orchards have to be replanted every 3 to 4 years. In addition,
papaya trees lack an anchoring taproot, so whole orchards are vulnerable to
being flattened by the 30- to 40-mile-an-hour winds that blow in from the
Pacific. All this can add to the cost of producing papayas.
Fitch is smoothing out the wrinkles in a high-tech approach to
simpler, less costly replanting. Her research could slash costs by eliminating
the current practice of cultivating five seedlings per planting hole.
Why do growers plant five seedlings for every hole? "Papaya
trees," says Fitch, "can form male flowers, female flowers, or perfect flowers,
which have both male and female flower parts." Only perfect flowers yield the
elongated, somewhat pear-shaped fruit that's preferred in the markets where
Hawaii sells its papaya crop. "Growers know that they have a 97 percent chance
of getting at least one perfect-flowered papaya tree if they plant five
seedlings per hole," she says. "That's why they plant so many extra seedlings.
"When seedlings are about 3 to 6 months old," notes Fitch, "they
show flowerbuds that reveal the kind of flowers the trees will soon bear.
Growers can check the flowerbuds and then chop down any trees that won't form
perfect flowers. Typically, growers are left with one seedling per planting
holeor sometimes none."
Growing Up in a Petri Dish
The goal of Fitch's research is to produce papaya seedlings that
are nearly certain to bear only the perfect, male-female flowers. She starts
with plantlets reared in petri dishes in the laboratory, a process called
micropropagation, and then genetically tests them to verify that they will
produce perfect flowers.
The lab test that makes this genetic screening possible was
developed at the University of Hawaii. Fitch says that, with genetically
screened plantlets, farmers should need to plant only one plantlet per hole,
making cultivation cheaper and faster.
Plantlets that pass the screening are carefully clipped of
shoots. Fitch says that each petri dish shoot can yield an average of seven
shoots per month, all of which can be used to start new plantlets. After a
stint in the greenhouse, the plantlets should be ready to go outdoors.
Preliminary results from Fitch's studies indicate that trees
that started as laboratory plantlets bear market-size fruit about 1 to 3 months
earlier than conventionally grown seedlings. They remain notably shorter in
stature, thus keeping their fruit within easier reach at harvest and making
them less vulnerable to gale-force winds. Conventional seedlings, on the other
hand, have to put on height so they won't be shaded out by other seedlings that
share the same planting hole.
Micropropagation of papaya trees isn't new. But the procedure
Fitch is fine-tuning may be the first that will be available, for free, to
growers and breeders worldwide.
Papaya's Disease Defenses
In addition to determining the type of flower a tree produces, papaya
genes mastermind other prized traits that are of keen interest to scientists
and breeders alike. For instance, ARS plant physiologist Henrik H. Albert
at Aiea and University of Hawaii graduate student Xiaohui Qui have pinpointed
more than two dozen genes that appear to bolster papaya's ability to
fend off harmful microbes such as the fungus Phytophthora palmivora,
which causes fruit and root rot. Some of these genes are similar to
other disease-resistance genes that researchers elsewhere have already
identified in other plants, such as rice. "But we also found novel genes,
not previously known to be involved in disease resistance," says Albert.
Albert and Qui did their work with Fitch, ARS plant physiologist
Paul H. Moore, and Dennis Gonsalves, director of the ARS U.S. Pacific Basin
Agricultural Research Center. Researchers from the Hawaii Agricultural Research
Center were also involved.
Genetic Profiles Compared
In related experiments, Hawaii scientists have done an exacting comparison
of the genetic profiles of more than 60 kinds of papaya, from the familiar
Papaya carica varieties that we eat to lesser known, wild-papaya
species. The analysis, conducted by Moore and Fitch at Aiea, along with
ARS horticulturist Francis T.P. Zee and several others, was more comprehensive
than earlier comparisons. And the team used newer, more precise techniques.
Their work confirmed that the varieties we buy at the supermarket are
all genetically very similar to each other. The problem with this is
that they lack the safety of a broad genetic base that would make them
better equipped to deal with natural adversity.
These new genetic studies also confirmed that ARS's papaya collection,
of which Zee is curator, apparently encompasses an impressive 80 percent
of all papaya genetic material, also called the papaya gene pool. A
next step is to use genes from the unique papayas in the collection
to help breeders enhance and safeguard today's most popular papayas.By
Marcia Wood,
Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
This research is part of Plant, Microbial, and Insect Genetic
Resources, Genomics, and Genetic Improvement, an ARS National Program (#301)
described on the World Wide Web at www.nps.ars.usda.gov.
To reach scientists named in this article, contact Marcia
Wood,USDA-ARS Information
Staff, 5601 Sunnyside Ave., Beltsville, MD 20705; phone (301) 504-1662,
fax (301) 504-1641.
"PAPAYA! High-Tech Tactics Enhance a Tropical Favorite" was
published in the January 2004 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine.
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Mature Rainbow papaya trees
on the Island of Hawaii, where
80 percent of the state's
papayas are grown.
(K10929-1)
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Protecting
the Planet's Papayas
Imagine a papaya the size of a football! In Thailand, such
hefty, flavorful papayas, weighing easily 8 or 9 pounds, are a familiar sight
at produce markets.
These mega-papayas can also be foundalong with their
familiar and other unusual cousinsat the U.S. repository for this exotic
tropical fruit.
The repository's offices, laboratories, and greenhousesalong
with some of its orchardsare tucked away in the lush Kulani rainforest
on the outskirts of Hilo, Hawaii. Formally known as the ARS National
Clonal Germplasm Repository, it is an international treasure trove of
cultivated Papaya carica varieties and their wild relatives.
Why keep these papaya seeds, cuttings, plantlets, and trees?
"To make sure that their genes remain in the breeding pool,"
says curator and horticulturist Francis T.P. Zee. Genes could vanish if wild
papayas are evicted from environments where they presently flourish. Genes can
also disappear as older commercial varieties fade away, outsold by newly
popular ones.
Commercial papayas in the collection include Hawaii's single-serving-size
"solo" varieties, like Sunrise and Sunset, each pink to salmon inside,
and the attractive golden Kapoho. These pear-shaped, 1- to 1½-pound
papayas are just the right size for one person to eat at a sitting.
The trees in the collection come from Florida, Puerto Rico,
Malaysia, Taiwan, China, and Australia, as well as from Central and South
America. "Some unusual species have pink blossoms instead of the typical
white," notes Zee, in commenting on some of the features of the different
plants in the collection. "Some resist plant viruses, while others are
extremely vulnerable to infection.
"One relative, Jacaratia spinosa, makes a nice 12- to 15-foot
ornamental tree. From Paraguay, it bears small orange fruit and is easily
produced from seed. At 4 or 5 years, it appears as stately and mature
as trees 30 or 40 years old. Our visitors from Southeast Asia think
it would be ideal for their formal gardens.
"Some papaya trees thrive in cold weather, like Carica pubescens,
from Colombia, or C. stipulata, from Ecuador. We've planted them
about 30 miles from here, at Volcano, where it's higher and colder."
The collection's primary users are plant breeders and
scientists. "Our papaya specimens were very important to the team that
developed ringspot-virus-resistant papayas," Zee says. Team members Dennis
Gonsalves, now director of the ARS U.S. Pacific Basin Agricultural Research
Center at Hilo; Maureen M.M. Fitch, plant physiologist with ARS at Aiea (see
story, p. 4); and their co-researchers are credited with helping Hawaii's
papaya industry rebound from this devastating plant pathogen.
The Hilo repository is part of a nationwide network of ARS-managed
collections.By Marcia
Wood, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
This research is part of Plant, Microbial, and Insect Genetic
Resources, Genomics, and Genetic Improvement, an ARS National Program (#301)
described on the World Wide Web at www.nps.ars.usda.gov.
Francis T.P. Zee is
at the USDA-ARS U.S. Pacific Basin
Agricultural Research Center, 920 Stainback Hwy., Hilo, HI 96720;
phone (808) 959-5833, fax (808) 959-3539.
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