Breadcrumb

Frost nucellar Eureka lemon

Citrus limon L. Burm.f.

CRC 3005 
PI 539318 
VI 21


Source

Was the second budded generation from seedling of old line Rubidoux No. RT 765.


Parentage/origins

Originated by the geneticist and breeder, H. B. Frost, at the Citrus Research Center, Riverside, California. 


Rootstocks of accession

Yuma Ponderosa lemon 


Season of ripeness at Riverside

Crop well distributed throughout year, but mainly in late winter, spring, and early summer. 


Notes and observations

As is typical of lemon trees, Eureka trees grow vigorously with a spreading and open form. Eureka lemon trees are slightly less cold-hardy and are less thorny than Lisbon lemon trees.  The new growth and flowers are tinged with purple.  Eureka lemon trees bear multiple crops per year, but the main season is late winter, spring, and early summer. The fruits are borne on the outside of the canopy and are frequently held in clusters. Eureka lemons are medium-small, elliptical in shape, and sometimes longitudinally ridged.  The fruits usually have a slight neck and a short nipple. The rind is yellow at maturity, has sunken oil glands, and is slightly textured. The flesh is pale greenish-yellow, low-seeded, and very acidic. There are many named selections of Eureka lemon, with individual characteristics that distinguish them from the original clone.


Description from The Citrus Industry Vol. 1 (1967)

"Fruit medium-small, elliptical to oblong, sometimes obovate; commonly with short neck or low collar at base; usually short but sometimes long apical mammilla or nipple; frequently surrounded with areolar furrow.  Seed content variable but usually few to none.  Color yellow at maturity.  Rind medium-thick; surface finely pitted with sunken oil glands, slightly rugose, commonly with low longitudinal ridges; tightly adherent.  Segments about 10; axis small and usually solid.  Flesh color greenish-yellow; fine-grained, tender, juicy; flavor highly acid.  Crop well distributed throughout year, but mainly in late winter, spring, and early summer. 

Tree medium in vigor and size, spreading and open in growth habit, virtually thornless; sparsely foliated (in comparison with Lisbon and others); strongly everbearing and produces fruit at the ends of long branches; precocious; productive.  Tree lacking vigor compared with most other varieties; more sensitive to cold, insect infestation, and neglect; shorter-lived. 

The fruit of the Eureka variety differs in general from that of Lisbon, the principal other variety in California, in that it is more prominently ridged and has a somewhat rougher rind surface and usually a smaller and less pronounced nipple.  The tree differences are much more marked.  In addition to those differences, the leaves are darker in color and less sharply pointed and the margins are somewhat more crenate than the Lisbon. 

The Eureka variety originated in Los Angeles, California, in a group of seedlings grown from fruit of Italian origin—the seed of which is said to have been planted in 1858.  Several years later Andrew Boyle and C. R. Workman acquired some of these seedlings and eventually they selected several that appeared to be promising.  About 1877, Workman provided Thomas A. Garey, a prominent Los Angeles nurseryman, with budwood from one of these seedlings and he propagated and introduced it under the name of Garey's Eureka (Butterfield, 1963).  Because of its precocity, thornlessness, and everbearing nature, it soon rivaled the Lisbon variety.  Both have remained the principal varieties in California and have achieved the status of major lemon varieties of the world.  Eureka ranks as a major variety in most important lemon-growing countries except Italy, Spain, and a few other Mediterranean areas.  Russo (1955), as a result of a study of varieties in California, recently expressed the opinion that Eureka has its ancestry in the Lunario variety of Italy. 

California nurserymen agree that the following clonal selections are currently the most popular: Allen, Cascade, Cook, Meek, Ross, and Wheatley or Thornton.  Within the limits of normal variation associated with environmental and disease factors, bud progenies from the parent trees of these selections are virtually indistinguishable with the exception of Ross, which is more vigorous than typical Eureka and differs in other respects.  It is probably best regarded as a separate variety of unknown origin. 

Presumably because of their greater vigor, caused in part at least by freedom from virus infection, the use of known or presumed nucellar clonal budlines during recent years has increased to the extent that virtually all Eureka lemon trees propagated in California are now seedling or nucellar clonal selections.  The only known nucellar line in use is Frost, originated by the geneticist and breeder, H. B. Frost, at the Citrus Research Center, Riverside, California.  What are presumed to be nucellar lines of some of the most popular clonal selections—Allen, Cook, Cascade, etc.—are now in use and others will soon become available." 


Availability

Commercially available in California through the Citrus Clonal Protection ProgramClick here to order budwood.

 

USDA Germplasm Resources Information Network page for Frost nucellar Eureka lemon

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