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ARS researchers have developed a practical
management protocol that has improved consistency and reliability of fruit
production by "Kaimana" lychee trees in Hawaii.Click the image for
more information about it.
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Lychee Studies Yield Keys to Plentiful, Predictable
Harvests
By Marcia Wood
May 18, 2009 Lychee, an exotic tropical fruit, is
perhaps best known for the flavorful ice cream you can often find at Asian
restaurants. But this luscious fruit can also be eaten fresh, or made into
elegant sauces, distinctive jams or jellies, and more.
Though lychee can be grown in Hawaii, the mild, sunny climate of the Island
State doesn't precisely match that of lychee's southern China origins. To boost
farmers' chances of plentiful, predictable harvests of large, delicious lychee
in Hawaii, Agricultural Research Service
(ARS) research horticulturists
Tracie
Matsumoto and
Francis
T.P. Zee have developed and tested a regimen of pruning and fertilizing
lychee trees. They're working with a variety known as Kaimana.
Now, the scientists and their University of Hawaii colleagues are
fine-tuning their management system for Kaimana trees. Zee and Matsumoto are
with the ARS
Tropical
Plant Genetic Resources and Disease Research Unit, part of the
U.S.
Pacific Basin Agricultural Research Center in Hilo, Hawaii.
Some growers who've tried the scientists' lychee management protocol in
Hawaii have reported impressive results. For example, they've noted yields
averaging more than 100 pounds of delectable, nicely sized fruit per tree.
Many Kaimana trees that are now top performers previously produced less than
half that much fruit or, in some years, no fruit at all, according to the
researchers.
None of the proceduresprecisely timed fertilizing and
pruningare, in themselves, new to orchardists. Instead, it's the
combination, timing and specific details of each technique that make the
management system different from what many Kaimana growers have tried in the
past.
The management system is based on six years of observation and
experimentation with Kaimana trees growing on the rainy side of Hawaii Island.
Now Matsumoto is determining how to make the tactics as successful in the
island's other microclimates.
Read
more about this research in the May/June 2009 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.