A new pineapple variety named “Honey Gold” is provided. High levels of brix, total sugars, citric acid and ascorbic acid characterize the variety. The new variety bears 0-3 slips.
|
1. A new and distinct variety of Ananas comosus plant named ‘Honey Gold’ as shown and described herein.
|
Latin name: Ananas comosus.
Variety denomination: ‘Honey Gold’.
The present invention comprises a new and distinct pineapple variety of Ananas comosus, hereinafter referred to by the variety name ‘Honey Gold’. The variety has been developed by using clonal selection within the parent population. The process started at the end of 1997 using material from the hybrid Tainung 11 (also known as Perfume pineapple in Taiwan)(non patented). The original seedlings were asexually reproduced using stem cuttings and crowns (asexual seeds). The pineapple plant ‘Honey Gold’ was developed through mass selection at the research area of Corporacion de Desarrollo Agricola Del Monte, S.A.Pindeco, Buenos Aires-Puntarenas, Costa Rica. The process of mass selection took five years of consecutive plantings and selections.
The main objective of the selection program, was to obtain a pineapple variety with a nice tasting fruit, that would keep the original aroma, with fruit of an appropriate size and shape, but distinguished for having a higher concentration of ascorbic and citric acid, brix or soluble solids, an fewer plant slips, with respect to the parental line.
Personnel in Buenos Aires-Puntarenas, Costa Rica, have developed this new plant. From a group of 19 crowns (asexual seeds) (original parental population) obtained through personnel in Hong Kong, the process of sowing began in Buenos Aires Puntarenas, Costa Rica, by selecting the plants with better characteristics through three generations.
The clone selected after all this effort, resembles the original parental material, but it is distinquished by its higher sugar (TSS), citric acid, ascorbic acid levels, and also by the fewer slips per plant and fewer spines in the leaves.
The invention relates to a new and distinct variety of the Bromeliaceae, or pineapple family, which was derived by clonal selection from the hybrid Tainung 11, or Perfume pineapple, after continued five year selection and reproduction effort.
The new plant variety is characterized by smooth leaves, with occasional presence of spines on the leaf tips; by the reduced number of slips and the higher citric acid and ascorbic acid levels, and the higher soluble solids content of the fruit flesh, when compared with the parental line. The fruit is cylindrical to conic in shape, of medium size, and very resistant to skin dehydration damage. Mature fruit has an intense yellow color and a strong and sweet aroma, and a wonderful taste, characteristic of the parental line. It is susceptible to chill damage (or internal browning). Even in the absence of refrigeration, the shelf life of the fruit is very long, when compared with other varieties as evidenced by less fruit fermentation, dehydration and brown spots. This new variety produces moderate yields of fruit, best suited for the fresh market.
FIG. 1. Shows the lateral view of a plant and root system against a metric ruler.
FIG. 2. Shows a ‘Honey Gold’ plantation.
FIG. 3. Shows an overhead view of a ‘Honey Gold’ plant.
FIG. 4. Shows a close-up of an immature fruit.
FIG. 5. Shows a close-up of a mature fruit
FIG. 6. Shows a mature plant with three or less slips. Age of the plant is 354 days after planting. MA-2 is breeder's number.
The following detailed description of the new variety is based on observations of well fertilized specimens which were grown under field conditions, in the Buenos Aires region, Costa Rica, at 350 msnm, where temperatures generally range form 14° C. to 37° C., and annual rainfall averages 3251 mm.
The plants were grown at a research facility in Buenos Aires-Puntarenas, Costa Rica.
Color terminology and color designations reported herein are in accordance with Munsell Color Notations for plant tissues published by Munsell Color Macbeth, a division of Kollmorgen Corporation, Baltimore, Md., USA.
The following description was taken at harvest beginning of 2003, of the general population of this new variety, which was sowed from asexual seed. The harvest was 354 days after planting.
The fruit presents higher levels of brix, citric and ascorbic acid than mother plants. As a result of the clonal selection process, the ‘Honey Gold’ pineapple has citric acid content that is about 112% as compared to ‘Tainung 11’ and 14.3% higher Brix than ‘Tainung 11’. Ascorbic acid levels are about 28.2% over the levels observed in the original population (original selection of ‘Tainung 11’ plants). ‘Honey Gold’ variety has also fewer spines in the leaves than Tainung 11. These characteristics of the ‘Honey Gold’ plant are stable and reproduced true to type in successive generation of asexual reproduction and are shown in Table 1. Table 3 compares the new variety ‘Honey Gold’ with several other varieties and cultivars; among others is Tainung 11, which is the closest variety.
TABLE 1
Average of inheritance of characteristics in selection material for ‘Honey
Gold’ pineapple. F1 represents baseline data of the first generation grown
from the parental line. F2 generation was selected based on characteriscs
of vigor, thorniness and number of slips. F3 was selected based on
characteristics of vigor, thorniness and number of slips, but also on brix
and ascorbic acid. F4 represents ‘Honey Gold’ as developed from the
parental line by mass clonal selection. The plants of F4 generation display
stable inheritance of reduced number of slips per plant and a 40% higher
ascorbic acid content than the baseline generation.
Ascorbic
Citric
acid mg/100
Acid
Number of
Fruit Weight
Generation
ml
g/100 ml
Brix
Slips
(g)
F1
14.8
0.77
14.15
0-10
1463
F2
14.7
0.6
15.95
0-7
999
F3
21.2
1.0
15.60
0-3
757
F4
20.6
0.9
14.40
0-3
954
Table 2 depicts differences in susceptibility to pests and diseases: ‘Honey Gold’ and ‘Champaka’ are less susceptible than ‘MD2’ to Thielaviopsis sp. (common fruit rot) and Elarphia sp. (a moth species). Otherwise, all three varieties are similar in their response to pests and diseases.
TABLE 2
Susceptibility of certain commercial pineapple varieties to
pests and diseases.
Pineapple Variety
Pest and diseases
Honey Gold
MD2
Champaka
Elaphria sp.
S
S+
S
Melybug
S
S
S
(Dysmicocus
brevipes)
Thecla (Strymon
S
S
S
basilides)
Thielaviopsis
S
S+
S
paradoxa in fruit
(T.V)
Phytophtora
S
S
S
parasitica
Helicotylenchus sp.
S
S
S
Meloidegyne sp.
S
S
S
Pratylenchus sp.
S
S
S
(S = susceptible, S+ = very susceptible)
The result in Table 3 show that ‘Honey Gold’ has a longer shelf life than ‘MD2’ because color development of the shell is slower and the variety is less affected by cosmetic defects such as dehydration spots, brown spots and fruit fermentation.
TABLE 3
Comparison of some of the post harvest characteristics of
‘MD2’ vs. Honey Gold.
External Appearance (at days after harvest)
Fruit
Shell color
Dehydration
Brown Spot
Fermentation
development*
spot (%)
(%)
(%)
Days after harvest
15
21
15
21
15
21
Variety
0
15
21
dah**
dah
dah
dah
dah
dah
MD2
2
3.1
5.0
23.0
56.0
3.0
7.1
0
9.0
Honey
2
2.9
2.8
2.5
2.1
0
0
0
3.5
Gold
*Shell color was evaluated on a scale of 12-5 with 1 = green, 5 = completely yellow.
**dah = days after harvest
Table 4 compares the characteristics of export vs. local varieties. This table also gives comparison between ‘Honey Gold’ and the closes tvariety Tainung 11. The characteristics of ‘Honey Gold’ differ from those of other varieties in the following ways:
TABLE 4
Comparative characteristics of several varieties and cultivars of pineapple
Number of
Fruit weight
Ascorbic acid
Variety/
Slips
(gr0
(mg/100 ml)
Cultivar
Average
Range
Average
Range
Average
Range
MD-2(1
1.2
0-3
1820
1070-
53.06
37.00-
2560
69.06
Honey Gold
1.5
0-3
1033
450-
21.14
14.73-
1678
37.36
Champaka
1.1
1710
420-
12.91
8.10-
F153(2
3010
17.72
Champaka
1.5
2328
F152(3
CO-2(4
2-3
2059
1297-
30.8-
2590
55.50
Singapore
2-12
1000
Spanish(5
Sarawak(5
0
2000-
4000
Mauritius(5
0
500-
1500
Josephine(6
1100-
1300
Scarlett(6
1400-
2000
Red
1-3
1200-
Spanish(6
2000
Tainung 11(7
6.9
991
733-
10.40-
1269
18.50
Imperial(8
9.0
1792
Perolera(8
8-10
1800
Perolera o
10-15
1000-
Pernambuco(10
1500
Primavera(10
7-10
1300
Queen(11
4.0
500-
26.00
1000
Citric acid
Variety/
(gr/100 ml)
Brix
Cultivar
Average
Range
Average
Range
MD-2(1
0.6
0.36-0.84
15.05
12.9-17.2
Honey Gold
0.98
0.67-1.33
16.18
14.4-18.1
Champaka
0.72
0.54-0.90
14.33
11.6-17.0
F153(2
Champaka
0.73
14.97
F152(3
CO-2(4
0.42-0.91
15.0-16.7
Singapore
0.50-0.60
10.0-12.0
Spanish(5
Sarawak(5
0.30-0.65
14.0-17.0
Mauritius(5
0.40-0.60
15.0-17.0
Josephine(6
17.0-22.0
Scarlett(6
15.0-18.0
Red
12
Spanish(6
Tainung 11(7
0.50
0.40-0.60
14
13.2-15.1
Imperial(8
0.62
15.8
Perolera(8
0.64
13.1
Perolera o
14-16
Pernambuco(10
Primavera(10
0.51
13
Queen(11
0.56
14-16
1)Pindeco's historical data base and monthly research report April 2001; Bartholomew et al. Pineapple Botany, Production and Uses.
2)Pindeco's fruit historical data base. Pindeco's forcing plant weithg data base.
3)Research report PRI No 63. July 1969. Tables 16, 21 and 29.
4)Plant patent 8,863
5)Wee, Y. C. 1972. Some common pineapple cultivars of west Malaysia. Malays, Pineapple pp 7-13.
6)Bartholomew et al. 2003 The Pineapple, Botany, Production and Uses.
7)Chang, Ching-Chyn, 1995 Tainung No 13 Pineapple. Jour. Agric. Res. China 44(2):287-296.
8)Pinto da Cunha et al. O abacaxizeiro. Pineapple News Issue No 10 May 2003.
9)Pinto da Cunha et al. O abacaxizeiro. Py et al. The pineapple Cultivation and uses.
10)Pinto da Cunha et al. O abacaxizeiro. Bartholomew et al. The Pineapple Botany, Production and Uses. Del Monte pineapple germplasm collection database.
Young, Thomas R., Sauter, Hans, Morales, Juan Luis
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
PP23193, | Jun 01 2010 | FRANKIE S NURSERY LLC | Pineapple plant named ‘Franklynn’ |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
Date | Maintenance Fee Events |
Date | Maintenance Schedule |